Man’s Reason
There was one of the tribe of Tarzan
who questioned his authority, and that was Terkoz,
the son of Tublat, but he so feared the keen knife
and the deadly arrows of his new lord that he confined
the manifestation of his objections to petty disobediences
and irritating mannerisms; Tarzan knew, however, that
he but waited his opportunity to wrest the kingship
from him by some sudden stroke of treachery, and so
he was ever on his guard against surprise.
For months the life of the little
band went on much as it had before, except that Tarzan’s
greater intelligence and his ability as a hunter were
the means of providing for them more bountifully than
ever before. Most of them, therefore, were more
than content with the change in rulers.
Tarzan led them by night to the fields
of the black men, and there, warned by their chief’s
superior wisdom, they ate only what they required,
nor ever did they destroy what they could not eat,
as is the way of Manu, the monkey, and of most apes.
So, while the blacks were wroth at
the continued pilfering of their fields, they were
not discouraged in their efforts to cultivate the
land, as would have been the case had Tarzan permitted
his people to lay waste the plantation wantonly.
During this period Tarzan paid many
nocturnal visits to the village, where he often renewed
his supply of arrows. He soon noticed the food
always standing at the foot of the tree which was
his avenue into the palisade, and after a little, he
commenced to eat whatever the blacks put there.
When the awe-struck savages saw that
the food disappeared overnight they were filled with
consternation and dread, for it was one thing to put
food out to propitiate a god or a devil, but quite
another thing to have the spirit really come into
the village and eat it. Such a thing was unheard
of, and it clouded their superstitious minds with
all manner of vague fears.
Nor was this all. The periodic
disappearance of their arrows, and the strange pranks
perpetrated by unseen hands, had wrought them to such
a state that life had become a veritable burden in
their new home, and now it was that Mbonga and his
head men began to talk of abandoning the village and
seeking a site farther on in the jungle.
Presently the black warriors began
to strike farther and farther south into the heart
of the forest when they went to hunt, looking for
a site for a new village.
More often was the tribe of Tarzan
disturbed by these wandering huntsmen. Now was
the quiet, fierce solitude of the primeval forest
broken by new, strange cries. No longer was
there safety for bird or beast. Man had come.
Other animals passed up and down the
jungle by day and by night—fierce, cruel
beasts—but their weaker neighbors only
fled from their immediate vicinity to return again
when the danger was past.
With man it is different. When
he comes many of the larger animals instinctively
leave the district entirely, seldom if ever to return;
and thus it has always been with the great anthropoids.
They flee man as man flees a pestilence.
For a short time the tribe of Tarzan
lingered in the vicinity of the beach because their
new chief hated the thought of leaving the treasured
contents of the little cabin forever. But when
one day a member of the tribe discovered the blacks
in great numbers on the banks of a little stream that
had been their watering place for generations, and
in the act of clearing a space in the jungle and erecting
many huts, the apes would remain no longer; and so
Tarzan led them inland for many marches to a spot
as yet undefiled by the foot of a human being.
Once every moon Tarzan would go swinging
rapidly back through the swaying branches to have
a day with his books, and to replenish his supply
of arrows. This latter task was becoming more
and more difficult, for the blacks had taken to hiding
their supply away at night in granaries and living
huts.
This necessitated watching by day
on Tarzan’s part to discover where the arrows
were being concealed.
Twice had he entered huts at night
while the inmates lay sleeping upon their mats, and
stolen the arrows from the very sides of the warriors.
But this method he realized to be too fraught with
danger, and so he commenced picking up solitary hunters
with his long, deadly noose, stripping them of weapons
and ornaments and dropping their bodies from a high
tree into the village street during the still watches
of the night.
These various escapades again so terrorized
the blacks that, had it not been for the monthly respite
between Tarzan’s visits, in which they had opportunity
to renew hope that each fresh incursion would prove
the last, they soon would have abandoned their new
village.
The blacks had not as yet come upon
Tarzan’s cabin on the distant beach, but the
ape-man lived in constant dread that, while he was
away with the tribe, they would discover and despoil
his treasure. So it came that he spent more and
more time in the vicinity of his father’s last
home, and less and less with the tribe. Presently
the members of his little community began to suffer
on account of his neglect, for disputes and quarrels
constantly arose which only the king might settle
peaceably.
At last some of the older apes spoke
to Tarzan on the subject, and for a month thereafter
he remained constantly with the tribe.
The duties of kingship among the anthropoids
are not many or arduous.
In the afternoon comes Thaka, possibly,
to complain that old Mungo has stolen his new wife.
Then must Tarzan summon all before him, and if he
finds that the wife prefers her new lord he commands
that matters remain as they are, or possibly that
Mungo give Thaka one of his daughters in exchange.
Whatever his decision, the apes accept
it as final, and return to their occupations satisfied.
Then comes Tana, shrieking and holding
tight her side from which blood is streaming.
Gunto, her husband, has cruelly bitten her!
And Gunto, summoned, says that Tana is lazy and will
not bring him nuts and beetles, or scratch his back
for him.
So Tarzan scolds them both and threatens
Gunto with a taste of the death-bearing slivers if
he abuses Tana further, and Tana, for her part, is
compelled to promise better attention to her wifely
duties.
And so it goes, little family differences
for the most part, which, if left unsettled would
result finally in greater factional strife, and the
eventual dismemberment of the tribe.
But Tarzan tired of it, as he found
that kingship meant the curtailment of his liberty.
He longed for the little cabin and the sun-kissed
sea—for the cool interior of the well-built
house, and for the never-ending wonders of the many
books.
As he had grown older, he found that
he had grown away from his people. Their interests
and his were far removed. They had not kept pace
with him, nor could they understand aught of the many
strange and wonderful dreams that passed through the
active brain of their human king. So limited
was their vocabulary that Tarzan could not even talk
with them of the many new truths, and the great fields
of thought that his reading had opened up before his
longing eyes, or make known ambitions which stirred
his soul.
Among the tribe he no longer had friends
as of old. A little child may find companionship
in many strange and simple creatures, but to a grown
man there must be some semblance of equality in intellect
as the basis for agreeable association.
Had Kala lived, Tarzan would have
sacrificed all else to remain near her, but now that
she was dead, and the playful friends of his childhood
grown into fierce and surly brutes he felt that he
much preferred the peace and solitude of his cabin
to the irksome duties of leadership amongst a horde
of wild beasts.
The hatred and jealousy of Terkoz,
son of Tublat, did much to counteract the effect of
Tarzan’s desire to renounce his kingship among
the apes, for, stubborn young Englishman that he was,
he could not bring himself to retreat in the face
of so malignant an enemy.
That Terkoz would be chosen leader
in his stead he knew full well, for time and again
the ferocious brute had established his claim to physical
supremacy over the few bull apes who had dared resent
his savage bullying.
Tarzan would have liked to subdue
the ugly beast without recourse to knife or arrows.
So much had his great strength and agility increased
in the period following his maturity that he had come
to believe that he might master the redoubtable Terkoz
in a hand to hand fight were it not for the terrible
advantage the anthropoid’s huge fighting fangs
gave him over the poorly armed Tarzan.
The entire matter was taken out of
Tarzan’s hands one day by force of circumstances,
and his future left open to him, so that he might
go or stay without any stain upon his savage escutcheon.
It happened thus:
The tribe was feeding quietly, spread
over a considerable area, when a great screaming arose
some distance east of where Tarzan lay upon his belly
beside a limpid brook, attempting to catch an elusive
fish in his quick, brown hands.
With one accord the tribe swung rapidly
toward the frightened cries, and there found Terkoz
holding an old female by the hair and beating her
unmercifully with his great hands.
As Tarzan approached he raised his
hand aloft for Terkoz to desist, for the female was
not his, but belonged to a poor old ape whose fighting
days were long over, and who, therefore, could not
protect his family.
Terkoz knew that it was against the
laws of his kind to strike this woman of another,
but being a bully, he had taken advantage of the weakness
of the female’s husband to chastise her because
she had refused to give up to him a tender young rodent
she had captured.
When Terkoz saw Tarzan approaching
without his arrows, he continued to belabor the poor
woman in a studied effort to affront his hated chieftain.
Tarzan did not repeat his warning
signal, but instead rushed bodily upon the waiting
Terkoz.
Never had the ape-man fought so terrible
a battle since that long-gone day when Bolgani, the
great king gorilla had so horribly manhandled him
ere the new-found knife had, by accident, pricked
the savage heart.
Tarzan’s knife on the present
occasion but barely offset the gleaming fangs of Terkoz,
and what little advantage the ape had over the man
in brute strength was almost balanced by the latter’s
wonderful quickness and agility.
In the sum total of their points,
however, the anthropoid had a shade the better of
the battle, and had there been no other personal attribute
to influence the final outcome, Tarzan of the Apes,
the young Lord Greystoke, would have died as he had
lived—an unknown savage beast in equatorial
Africa.
But there was that which had raised
him far above his fellows of the jungle—that
little spark which spells the whole vast difference
between man and brute—Reason. This
it was which saved him from death beneath the iron
muscles and tearing fangs of Terkoz.
Scarcely had they fought a dozen seconds
ere they were rolling upon the ground, striking, tearing
and rending—two great savage beasts battling
to the death.
Terkoz had a dozen knife wounds on
head and breast, and Tarzan was torn and bleeding—his
scalp in one place half torn from his head so that
a great piece hung down over one eye, obstructing
his vision.
But so far the young Englishman had
been able to keep those horrible fangs from his jugular
and now, as they fought less fiercely for a moment,
to regain their breath, Tarzan formed a cunning plan.
He would work his way to the other’s back and,
clinging there with tooth and nail, drive his knife
home until Terkoz was no more.
The maneuver was accomplished more
easily than he had hoped, for the stupid beast, not
knowing what Tarzan was attempting, made no particular
effort to prevent the accomplishment of the design.
But when, finally, he realized that
his antagonist was fastened to him where his teeth
and fists alike were useless against him, Terkoz hurled
himself about upon the ground so violently that Tarzan
could but cling desperately to the leaping, turning,
twisting body, and ere he had struck a blow the knife
was hurled from his hand by a heavy impact against
the earth, and Tarzan found himself defenseless.
During the rollings and squirmings
of the next few minutes, Tarzan’s hold was loosened
a dozen times until finally an accidental circumstance
of those swift and everchanging evolutions gave him
a new hold with his right hand, which he realized
was absolutely unassailable.
His arm was passed beneath Terkoz’s
arm from behind and his hand and forearm encircled
the back of Terkoz’s neck. It was the
half-Nelson of modern wrestling which the untaught
ape-man had stumbled upon, but superior reason showed
him in an instant the value of the thing he had discovered.
It was the difference to him between life and death.
And so he struggled to encompass a
similar hold with the left hand, and in a few moments
Terkoz’s bull neck was creaking beneath a full-Nelson.
There was no more lunging about now.
The two lay perfectly still upon the ground, Tarzan
upon Terkoz’s back. Slowly the bullet
head of the ape was being forced lower and lower upon
his chest.
Tarzan knew what the result would
be. In an instant the neck would break.
Then there came to Terkoz’s rescue the same
thing that had put him in these sore straits—a
man’s reasoning power.
“If I kill him,” thought
Tarzan, “what advantage will it be to me?
Will it not rob the tribe of a great fighter?
And if Terkoz be dead, he will know nothing of my
supremacy, while alive he will ever be an example
to the other apes.”
“KA-GODA?” hissed Tarzan
in Terkoz’s ear, which, in ape tongue, means,
freely translated: “Do you surrender?”
For a moment there was no reply, and
Tarzan added a few more ounces of pressure, which
elicited a horrified shriek of pain from the great
beast.
“KA-GODA?” repeated Tarzan.
“KA-GODA!” cried Terkoz.
“Listen,” said Tarzan,
easing up a trifle, but not releasing his hold.
“I am Tarzan, King of the Apes, mighty hunter,
mighty fighter. In all the jungle there is none
so great.
“You have said: `KA-GODA’
to me. All the tribe have heard. Quarrel
no more with your king or your people, for next time
I shall kill you. Do you understand?”
“HUH,” assented Terkoz.
“And you are satisfied?”
“HUH,” said the ape.
Tarzan let him up, and in a few minutes
all were back at their vocations, as though naught
had occurred to mar the tranquility of their primeval
forest haunts.
But deep in the minds of the apes
was rooted the conviction that Tarzan was a mighty
fighter and a strange creature. Strange because
he had had it in his power to kill his enemy, but
had allowed him to live—unharmed.
That afternoon as the tribe came together,
as was their wont before darkness settled on the jungle,
Tarzan, his wounds washed in the waters of the stream,
called the old males about him.
“You have seen again to-day
that Tarzan of the Apes is the greatest among you,”
he said.
“HUH,” they replied with
one voice, “Tarzan is great.”
“Tarzan,” he continued,
“is not an ape. He is not like his people.
His ways are not their ways, and so Tarzan is going
back to the lair of his own kind by the waters of the
great lake which has no farther shore. You must
choose another to rule you, for Tarzan will not return.”
And thus young Lord Greystoke took
the first step toward the goal which he had set—the
finding of other white men like himself.