The Octopus : A story of California by Frank Norris
page 24 of 771 (03%)
page 24 of 771 (03%)
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too late. To write of the past was not what he desired. Reality
was what he longed for, things that he had seen. Yet how to make this compatible with romance. He rose, putting on his hat, offering the old man a cigarette. The centenarian accepted with the air of a grandee, and extended his horn snuff-box. Presley shook his head. "I was born too late for that," he declared, "for that, and for many other things. Adios." "You are travelling to-day, senor?" "A little turn through the country, to get the kinks out of the muscles," Presley answered. "I go up into the Quien Sabe, into the high country beyond the Mission." "Ah, the Quien Sabe rancho. The sheep are grazing there this week." Solotari, the keeper of the restaurant, explained: "Young Annixter sold his wheat stubble on the ground to the sheep raisers off yonder;" he motioned eastward toward the Sierra foothills. "Since Sunday the herd has been down. Very clever, that young Annixter. He gets a price for his stubble, which else he would have to burn, and also manures his land as the sheep move from place to place. A true Yankee, that Annixter, a good gringo." After his meal, Presley once more mounted his bicycle, and |
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