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Tarzan of the Apes 1
IN ENGLAND, A. D. 1886
Lord Greystoke was
summoned by the
government to suppress Arab slave trading in
British Africa.
2 "You, my dear lady?
Impossible! You would be in a wild country absolutely unattended. You could not even take your maid."
3 "Is courage only for
men, then?"
4 "John, tell him we
will go."
5
CHAPTER II
PERIOD 1907.
6 TARZAN - - The
Boy.
... GORDON GRIFFITH
7 Off the coast of Africa,
the ship's captain was
killed in a mutiny --
8 "-- and the lives of Lord
and Lady Greystoke were saved by a sailor named Binns."
9 They were set ashore
by the mutineers
at the edge of the almost impenetrable jungle.
10 Attempting escape to
rejoin the Greystokes,
Binns was captured by Arab slave traders.
11 Only the leopard outside
the door heard the
cries of the new-born heir of Greystoke.
12 Before the child was
a year old Lady
Alice passed away.
13 Kerchak, the Ape, Kala's
mate and head of the
tribe, was in a frenzy of rage at the death of their baby.
14 And Kala, the Ape,
nursed the son of
an English nobleman.
15 Happy with Kerchak's
tribe, Tarzan did not
dream he was different from the apes.
16 Until one day in the
mysterious depths of
the pool he glimpsed a vision that set his little English brain to wondering.
17 Kala loved this child of
another race who had
filled the place of the offspring Nature denied her.
18 And Tarzan gave freely
to Kala the affection
that might have gone to his mother, Lady Alice.
19 Hatred of the British for their
fight against the slave
trade, the chance to persecute a Christian -- the motive of revenge - - these brought on Binns ten years of tortured agony.
20 Clothes! At the bottom
of his little English
heart survived a longing for them.
21 In his discovery of the
cabin Tarzan had no
idea it once had been his home -- since Kala had no words to convey that thought.
22 The wonderful weapon
which would trans-
form him from a weakling to the master of the beasts.
23 The return of the Arabs
to the old locality
brought to Binns the resolution to escape and join the Greystokes.
24 The apes' deadly
enemy -- the
gorilla.
25 "I wonders if they died
a thinkin' old Binnsey broke 'is promise to 'em."
26 "It's a kid's fist as made
that. It must be their young 'un!"
27 "I couldn't keep my word
to you, Ma'am, until too late. I'll find this kid o' yours and take 'im back to England."
28 Nursed by Tarzan to
returning strength,
Binns taught the eager boy his slight knowledge of the printed word.
29 Tarzan's whole faith
was placed in his first
human friend, who set out with his young charge to reach England.
30 "Escape if you can, Kid;
I'm off across the jungle to the coast, then to England - to look up yer folks."
31
CHAPTER III
PERIOD TODAY
32 TARZAN - - THE
MAN.
... ELMO LINCOLN
33 A group of scientists and
relatives of Tarzan's par-
ents had finally decided to investigate Binns story of
the jungle waif.
34 "Seeing the monkey in
his native haunts will be like gazing into your past."
35 "You talk as if I were
proof of Darwin's theory."
36 Jane's maid, Esmerelda.
37 The death of Kala.
38 In superstitious awe of
the strange white being
who killed their chief, the natives for days made offerings to appease his wrath.
39 On the shore described
by Binns.
40 Tantor, Tarzan's
friend.
41 "Binns told the truth,
for here's the proof."
42 "No, by jove! Binns
lied about the child! Look here!"
43 "These finger prints might
have been valuable evidence, for they never change from infancy to old age. But the skull is proof enough that the baby died."
44 "Oh, I'm disappointed
in you."
45 "Come now! You're not
angry; you and I are to be married before long."
46 "I wonder if that could
be Tarzan, and the man for whom we're looking."
47 Struggling with his
shyness, the girl's
magnetism kept Tarzan constantly near her, seeing but unseen.
48 "It was killed by a giant
white man dressed only in skins above his waist. He must be the man we seek."
49 "When we find this man,
I am sure that we will end this mystery."
50 While the weary searchers
wander near the native
village, and into new and unsuspected danger.
51 "The Whites are coming
to attack us!"
52 The council of war.
53 Whipping themselves
into a frenzy, the
negroes prepare to repel their fancied enemies.
54 The nearness of the clinging
form, the warm touch of
the first woman he had ever known, thrilled Tarzan with a new emotion and every throbbing pulse-beat spurred him to take her for his own.
55 "Tarzan is a man, and
men do not force the love of women."
56 As Kala, the Ape, had
comforted his childish
fears, so Tarzan comforted the woman he loved.
57 - - and thru the long night, the strong guarded the weak, and his great love and courage shielded her from all harm.
58 While the anxious rescue
party continued their
perilous and seemingly hopeless quest.
59 "Tarzan!"
THE END.
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