Man and Man
Tarzan of the Apes lived on in his
wild, jungle existence with little change for several
years, only that he grew stronger and wiser, and learned
from his books more and more of the strange worlds
which lay somewhere outside his primeval forest.
To him life was never monotonous or
stale. There was always Pisah, the fish, to
be caught in the many streams and the little lakes,
and Sabor, with her ferocious cousins to keep one
ever on the alert and give zest to every instant that
one spent upon the ground.
Often they hunted him, and more often
he hunted them, but though they never quite reached
him with those cruel, sharp claws of theirs, yet there
were times when one could scarce have passed a thick
leaf between their talons and his smooth hide.
Quick was Sabor, the lioness, and
quick were Numa and Sheeta, but Tarzan of the Apes
was lightning.
With Tantor, the elephant, he made
friends. How? Ask not. But this is
known to the denizens of the jungle, that on many
moonlight nights Tarzan of the Apes and Tantor, the
elephant, walked together, and where the way was clear
Tarzan rode, perched high upon Tantor’s mighty
back.
Many days during these years he spent
in the cabin of his father, where still lay, untouched,
the bones of his parents and the skeleton of Kala’s
baby. At eighteen he read fluently and understood
nearly all he read in the many and varied volumes
on the shelves.
Also could he write, with printed
letters, rapidly and plainly, but script he had not
mastered, for though there were several copy books
among his treasure, there was so little written English
in the cabin that he saw no use for bothering with
this other form of writing, though he could read it,
laboriously.
Thus, at eighteen, we find him, an
English lordling, who could speak no English, and
yet who could read and write his native language.
Never had he seen a human being other than himself,
for the little area traversed by his tribe was watered
by no greater river to bring down the savage natives
of the interior.
High hills shut it off on three sides,
the ocean on the fourth. It was alive with lions
and leopards and poisonous snakes. Its untouched
mazes of matted jungle had as yet invited no hardy
pioneer from the human beasts beyond its frontier.
But as Tarzan of the Apes sat one
day in the cabin of his father delving into the mysteries
of a new book, the ancient security of his jungle
was broken forever.
At the far eastern confine a strange
cavalcade strung, in single file, over the brow of
a low hill.
In advance were fifty black warriors
armed with slender wooden spears with ends hard baked
over slow fires, and long bows and poisoned arrows.
On their backs were oval shields, in their noses
huge rings, while from the kinky wool of their heads
protruded tufts of gay feathers.
Across their foreheads were tattooed
three parallel lines of color, and on each breast
three concentric circles. Their yellow teeth
were filed to sharp points, and their great protruding
lips added still further to the low and bestial brutishness
of their appearance.
Following them were several hundred
women and children, the former bearing upon their
heads great burdens of cooking pots, household utensils
and ivory. In the rear were a hundred warriors,
similar in all respects to the advance guard.
That they more greatly feared an attack
from the rear than whatever unknown enemies lurked
in their advance was evidenced by the formation of
the column; and such was the fact, for they were fleeing
from the white man’s soldiers who had so harassed
them for rubber and ivory that they had turned upon
their conquerors one day and massacred a white officer
and a small detachment of his black troops.
For many days they had gorged themselves
on meat, but eventually a stronger body of troops
had come and fallen upon their village by night to
revenge the death of their comrades.
That night the black soldiers of the
white man had had meat a-plenty, and this little remnant
of a once powerful tribe had slunk off into the gloomy
jungle toward the unknown, and freedom.
But that which meant freedom and the
pursuit of happiness to these savage blacks meant
consternation and death to many of the wild denizens
of their new home.
For three days the little cavalcade
marched slowly through the heart of this unknown and
untracked forest, until finally, early in the fourth
day, they came upon a little spot near the banks of
a small river, which seemed less thickly overgrown
than any ground they had yet encountered.
Here they set to work to build a new
village, and in a month a great clearing had been
made, huts and palisades erected, plantains, yams
and maize planted, and they had taken up their old
life in their new home. Here there were no white
men, no soldiers, nor any rubber or ivory to be gathered
for cruel and thankless taskmasters.
Several moons passed by ere the blacks
ventured far into the territory surrounding their
new village. Several had already fallen prey
to old Sabor, and because the jungle was so infested
with these fierce and bloodthirsty cats, and with lions
and leopards, the ebony warriors hesitated to trust
themselves far from the safety of their palisades.
But one day, Kulonga, a son of the
old king, Mbonga, wandered far into the dense mazes
to the west. Warily he stepped, his slender
lance ever ready, his long oval shield firmly grasped
in his left hand close to his sleek ebony body.
At his back his bow, and in the quiver
upon his shield many slim, straight arrows, well smeared
with the thick, dark, tarry substance that rendered
deadly their tiniest needle prick.
Night found Kulonga far from the palisades
of his father’s village, but still headed westward,
and climbing into the fork of a great tree he fashioned
a rude platform and curled himself for sleep.
Three miles to the west slept the tribe of Kerchak.
Early the next morning the apes were
astir, moving through the jungle in search of food.
Tarzan, as was his custom, prosecuted his search
in the direction of the cabin so that by leisurely
hunting on the way his stomach was filled by the time
he reached the beach.
The apes scattered by ones, and twos,
and threes in all directions, but ever within sound
of a signal of alarm.
Kala had moved slowly along an elephant
track toward the east, and was busily engaged in turning
over rotted limbs and logs in search of succulent
bugs and fungi, when the faintest shadow of a strange
noise brought her to startled attention.
For fifty yards before her the trail
was straight, and down this leafy tunnel she saw the
stealthy advancing figure of a strange and fearful
creature.
It was Kulonga.
Kala did not wait to see more, but,
turning, moved rapidly back along the trail.
She did not run; but, after the manner of her kind
when not aroused, sought rather to avoid than to escape.
Close after her came Kulonga.
Here was meat. He could make a killing and
feast well this day. On he hurried, his spear
poised for the throw.
At a turning of the trail he came
in sight of her again upon another straight stretch.
His spear hand went far back the muscles rolled,
lightning-like, beneath the sleek hide. Out
shot the arm, and the spear sped toward Kala.
A poor cast. It but grazed her side.
With a cry of rage and pain the she-ape
turned upon her tormentor. In an instant the
trees were crashing beneath the weight of her hurrying
fellows, swinging rapidly toward the scene of trouble
in answer to Kala’s scream.
As she charged, Kulonga unslung his
bow and fitted an arrow with almost unthinkable quickness.
Drawing the shaft far back he drove the poisoned
missile straight into the heart of the great anthropoid.
With a horrid scream Kala plunged
forward upon her face before the astonished members
of her tribe.
Roaring and shrieking the apes dashed
toward Kulonga, but that wary savage was fleeing down
the trail like a frightened antelope.
He knew something of the ferocity
of these wild, hairy men, and his one desire was to
put as many miles between himself and them as he possibly
could.
They followed him, racing through
the trees, for a long distance, but finally one by
one they abandoned the chase and returned to the scene
of the tragedy.
None of them had ever seen a man before,
other than Tarzan, and so they wondered vaguely what
strange manner of creature it might be that had invaded
their jungle.
On the far beach by the little cabin
Tarzan heard the faint echoes of the conflict and
knowing that something was seriously amiss among the
tribe he hastened rapidly toward the direction of
the sound.
When he arrived he found the entire
tribe gathered jabbering about the dead body of his
slain mother.
Tarzan’s grief and anger were
unbounded. He roared out his hideous challenge
time and again. He beat upon his great chest
with his clenched fists, and then he fell upon the
body of Kala and sobbed out the pitiful sorrowing
of his lonely heart.
To lose the only creature in all his
world who ever had manifested love and affection for
him was the greatest tragedy he had ever known.
What though Kala was a fierce and
hideous ape! To Tarzan she had been kind, she
had been beautiful.
Upon her he had lavished, unknown
to himself, all the reverence and respect and love
that a normal English boy feels for his own mother.
He had never known another, and so to Kala was given,
though mutely, all that would have belonged to the
fair and lovely Lady Alice had she lived.
After the first outburst of grief
Tarzan controlled himself, and questioning the members
of the tribe who had witnessed the killing of Kala
he learned all that their meager vocabulary could
convey.
It was enough, however, for his needs.
It told him of a strange, hairless, black ape with
feathers growing upon its head, who launched death
from a slender branch, and then ran, with the fleetness
of Bara, the deer, toward the rising sun.
Tarzan waited no longer, but leaping
into the branches of the trees sped rapidly through
the forest. He knew the windings of the elephant
trail along which Kala’s murderer had flown,
and so he cut straight through the jungle to intercept
the black warrior who was evidently following the tortuous
detours of the trail.
At his side was the hunting knife
of his unknown sire, and across his shoulders the
coils of his own long rope. In an hour he struck
the trail again, and coming to earth examined the
soil minutely.
In the soft mud on the bank of a tiny
rivulet he found footprints such as he alone in all
the jungle had ever made, but much larger than his.
His heart beat fast. Could it be that he was
trailing a man—one of his own race?
There were two sets of imprints pointing
in opposite directions. So his quarry had already
passed on his return along the trail. As he
examined the newer spoor a tiny particle of earth
toppled from the outer edge of one of the footprints
to the bottom of its shallow depression—ah,
the trail was very fresh, his prey must have but scarcely
passed.
Tarzan swung himself to the trees
once more, and with swift noiselessness sped along
high above the trail.
He had covered barely a mile when
he came upon the black warrior standing in a little
open space. In his hand was his slender bow
to which he had fitted one of his death dealing arrows.
Opposite him across the little clearing
stood Horta, the boar, with lowered head and foam
flecked tucks, ready to charge.
Tarzan looked with wonder upon the
strange creature beneath him—so like him
in form and yet so different in face and color.
His books had portrayed the negro, but how different
had been the dull, dead print to this sleek thing of
ebony, pulsing with life.
As the man stood there with taut drawn
bow Tarzan recognized him not so much the negro
as the Archer of his picture book—
A stands for Archer
How wonderful! Tarzan almost
betrayed his presence in the deep excitement of his
discovery.
But things were commencing to happen
below him. The sinewy black arm had drawn the
shaft far back; Horta, the boar, was charging, and
then the black released the little poisoned arrow,
and Tarzan saw it fly with the quickness of thought
and lodge in the bristling neck of the boar.
Scarcely had the shaft left his bow
ere Kulonga had fitted another to it, but Horta, the
boar, was upon him so quickly that he had no time
to discharge it. With a bound the black leaped
entirely over the rushing beast and turning with incredible
swiftness planted a second arrow in Horta’s back.
Then Kulonga sprang into a near-by tree.
Horta wheeled to charge his enemy
once more; a dozen steps he took, then he staggered
and fell upon his side. For a moment his muscles
stiffened and relaxed convulsively, then he lay still.
Kulonga came down from his tree.
With a knife that hung at his side
he cut several large pieces from the boar’s
body, and in the center of the trail he built a fire,
cooking and eating as much as he wanted. The
rest he left where it had fallen.
Tarzan was an interested spectator.
His desire to kill burned fiercely in his wild breast,
but his desire to learn was even greater. He
would follow this savage creature for a while and
know from whence he came. He could kill him at
his leisure later, when the bow and deadly arrows were
laid aside.
When Kulonga had finished his repast
and disappeared beyond a near turning of the path,
Tarzan dropped quietly to the ground. With his
knife he severed many strips of meat from Horta’s
carcass, but he did not cook them.
He had seen fire, but only when Ara,
the lightning, had destroyed some great tree.
That any creature of the jungle could produce the
red-and-yellow fangs which devoured wood and left
nothing but fine dust surprised Tarzan greatly, and
why the black warrior had ruined his delicious repast
by plunging it into the blighting heat was quite beyond
him. Possibly Ara was a friend with whom the
Archer was sharing his food.
But, be that as it may, Tarzan would
not ruin good meat in any such foolish manner, so
he gobbled down a great quantity of the raw flesh,
burying the balance of the carcass beside the trail
where he could find it upon his return.
And then Lord Greystoke wiped his
greasy fingers upon his naked thighs and took up the
trail of Kulonga, the son of Mbonga, the king; while
in far-off London another Lord Greystoke, the younger
brother of the real Lord Greystoke’s father,
sent back his chops to the club’s CHEF because
they were underdone, and when he had finished his
repast he dipped his finger-ends into a silver bowl
of scented water and dried them upon a piece of snowy
damask.
All day Tarzan followed Kulonga, hovering
above him in the trees like some malign spirit.
Twice more he saw him hurl his arrows of destruction—once
at Dango, the hyena, and again at Manu, the monkey.
In each instance the animal died almost instantly,
for Kulonga’s poison was very fresh and very
deadly.
Tarzan thought much on this wondrous
method of slaying as he swung slowly along at a safe
distance behind his quarry. He knew that alone
the tiny prick of the arrow could not so quickly dispatch
these wild things of the jungle, who were often torn
and scratched and gored in a frightful manner as they
fought with their jungle neighbors, yet as often recovered
as not.
No, there was something mysterious
connected with these tiny slivers of wood which could
bring death by a mere scratch. He must look
into the matter.
That night Kulonga slept in the crotch
of a mighty tree and far above him crouched Tarzan
of the Apes.
When Kulonga awoke he found that his
bow and arrows had disappeared. The black warrior
was furious and frightened, but more frightened than
furious. He searched the ground below the tree,
and he searched the tree above the ground; but there
was no sign of either bow or arrows or of the nocturnal
marauder.
Kulonga was panic-stricken.
His spear he had hurled at Kala and had not recovered;
and, now that his bow and arrows were gone, he was
defenseless except for a single knife. His only
hope lay in reaching the village of Mbonga as quickly
as his legs would carry him.
That he was not far from home he was
certain, so he took the trail at a rapid trot.
From a great mass of impenetrable
foliage a few yards away emerged Tarzan of the Apes
to swing quietly in his wake.
Kulonga’s bow and arrows were
securely tied high in the top of a giant tree from
which a patch of bark had been removed by a sharp
knife near to the ground, and a branch half cut through
and left hanging about fifty feet higher up.
Thus Tarzan blazed the forest trails and marked his
caches.
As Kulonga continued his journey Tarzan
closed on him until he traveled almost over the black’s
head. His rope he now held coiled in his right
hand; he was almost ready for the kill.
The moment was delayed only because
Tarzan was anxious to ascertain the black warrior’s
destination, and presently he was rewarded, for they
came suddenly in view of a great clearing, at one
end of which lay many strange lairs.
Tarzan was directly over Kulonga,
as he made the discovery. The forest ended abruptly
and beyond lay two hundred yards of planted fields
between the jungle and the village.
Tarzan must act quickly or his prey
would be gone; but Tarzan’s life training left
so little space between decision and action when an
emergency confronted him that there was not even room
for the shadow of a thought between.
So it was that as Kulonga emerged
from the shadow of the jungle a slender coil of rope
sped sinuously above him from the lowest branch of
a mighty tree directly upon the edge of the fields
of Mbonga, and ere the king’s son had taken a
half dozen steps into the clearing a quick noose tightened
about his neck.
So quickly did Tarzan of the Apes
drag back his prey that Kulonga’s cry of alarm
was throttled in his windpipe. Hand over hand
Tarzan drew the struggling black until he had him
hanging by his neck in mid-air; then Tarzan climbed
to a larger branch drawing the still threshing victim
well up into the sheltering verdure of the tree.
Here he fastened the rope securely
to a stout branch, and then, descending, plunged his
hunting knife into Kulonga’s heart. Kala
was avenged.
Tarzan examined the black minutely,
for he had never seen any other human being.
The knife with its sheath and belt caught his eye;
he appropriated them. A copper anklet also took
his fancy, and this he transferred to his own leg.
He examined and admired the tattooing
on the forehead and breast. He marveled at the
sharp filed teeth. He investigated and appropriated
the feathered headdress, and then he prepared to get
down to business, for Tarzan of the Apes was hungry,
and here was meat; meat of the kill, which jungle
ethics permitted him to eat.
How may we judge him, by what standards,
this ape-man with the heart and head and body of an
English gentleman, and the training of a wild beast?
Tublat, whom he had hated and who
had hated him, he had killed in a fair fight, and
yet never had the thought of eating Tublat’s
flesh entered his head. It could have been as
revolting to him as is cannibalism to us.
But who was Kulonga that he might
not be eaten as fairly as Horta, the boar, or Bara,
the deer? Was he not simply another of the countless
wild things of the jungle who preyed upon one another
to satisfy the cravings of hunger?
Suddenly, a strange doubt stayed his
hand. Had not his books taught him that he was
a man? And was not The Archer a man, also?
Did men eat men? Alas, he did
not know. Why, then, this hesitancy! Once
more he essayed the effort, but a qualm of nausea
overwhelmed him. He did not understand.
All he knew was that he could not
eat the flesh of this black man, and thus hereditary
instinct, ages old, usurped the functions of his untaught
mind and saved him from transgressing a worldwide
law of whose very existence he was ignorant.
Quickly he lowered Kulonga’s
body to the ground, removed the noose, and took to
the trees again.