News Flash! Tarzan and Jane actually had sex. Sure this is something
we all assume they did (how else were they passing all that time in
their treehouse?), but the MGM movies of the 30s and 40s couldn’t
obviously show us steamy jungle love so we just had to assume what went
on in the dark. Yet in 1939 MGM released Tarzan Finds a Son where Jane and Tarzan find a little baby in a crashed plane who they adopt. So sex luckily averted.
Now back in 1915 Edgar Rice Burroughs wrote The Son of Tarzan
and though we never got any explicit sex scenes between Jane and Tarzan
it is clear in this fourth book that Jack Clayton is their biological
son. Though unlike the MGM movies, where it kind of looks like Jane and
her ape lover are living in sin, the books make it clear that Jane and
Tarzan are married.
The Son of Tarzan begins with the return of the villainous Alexis Paulvitch who escaped death in the The Beasts of Tarzan
by running off into the jungle while is partner was being eaten by a
leopard, but unfortunately Paulvitch almost immediately ran into a local
tribe that he and his partner Rokoff had not treated to fairly. So
Paulvitch spends ten years as a captive of this tribe of cannibals who
decided to spend years torturing him instead of eating him. Eventually
he either escapes or is freed and is found by the crew of “Marjorie W”
and while laying over at a nearby island they come across Akut, the ape
friend of Tarzan. Akut is looking for Tarzan and examines all the faces
of the crew which he then joins for the voyage back to London to
continue his search for his master.
While in London the tutor of
Jack Clayton, the Son of Tarzan, is not having it easy as his young
charge is more interested in reading about jungle adventures and
pretending to be an ape than he is in studying. Young Jack has no
knowledge of his father’s jungle life, Jane even forbids him going to
the zoo, so we are not sure just exactly where Jack got this love for
the wild. Even Tarzan mentions to Jane that his jungle history is not
hereditary but the author seems to write this book as if it were. When
Jack hears of a super intelligent ape at a London music hall he sneaks
out of the house, Jane had refused his request to see the act, and ends
up befriending the ape who of course turns out to be Akut. Now Paulvitch
is still in possession of the ape and when he learns that Jack is the
son of his most hated enemy he plans his revenge, but his plan is sadly
moronic as it entails killing Jack and framing the ape. All that happens
is that Akut leaps to his friend’s aid and tears out Paulvitch’s
throat. This plan would never have worked because even if he succeeded
in killing the boy Tarzan could have asked the ape what actually
happened and then Tarzan would have then murdered the hell out of
Paulvitch. So unless this was a murder suicide plan it was poorly
planned.
Now ten year old boys are not brilliant thinkers so Jack
decides that he and Akut must flee to Africa to escape his friend from
being put down for killing Paulvitch, and with him disguising Akut as
his wheelchair bound grandmother they somehow pull it off. This first
quarter of the novel is the least credulous. Not only do we have Jack
Clayton inexplicably being a lover of jungle adventure but while
spending afternoons visiting Akut at Paulvitch’s apartment he managed to
learn to speak with the ape. Lost outposts of Atlantis I can buy but a
small boy learning to speak the language of the apes in a matter of days
is ridiculous. Burroughs clearly wants to make a second Tarzan but this
origin story has more holes than cheese grater.
When
the two finally get to Africa a thief tries to rob and kill Jack and
thus Akut must once again come to rescue and he kill the intruder, and
once again Jack decides to flee instead explaining to the authorities
what actually happened. This I can understand as he’s just a stupid kid
who has lived a rather sheltered life, and the glimpses we get of Jane
we find out that she has done her best to make sure her son never gets
jungle fever, so some of this is on her as forbidding a kid something is
almost a sure fire way to make them want it. After a few nights in the
very inhospitable jungle Jack realizes that his parents are probably a
bit destroyed by their missing son, but when he tries to return to
civilization he encounters natives who upon seeing a naked white boy
trying to talk to their women and children they chase after him with
spears. From this he concludes that all blacks are evil. Later he tries
to contact white men in a safari but these turn out to be villainous
ivory poachers who immediately fire upon the boy when he appears in
their path. Jack decides to give up on mankind all together and he an
Akut attempt to join a tribe of Great Apes, but this goes poorly as the
newly elected king ape chases them away. Disgusted with everybody Jack
decides that he and Akut are just fine by themselves, now going by the
ape name Korak which means killer the boy and the ape strike out on
their own. So like his father before him he spends his days running
through the treetops while occasionally harassing the local natives.
The
big difference between this book and the preceding three novels is that
much of this book deals with a secondary character, almost with equal
time as the title character. Now Jane does take up a good portion of The Beasts of Tarzan but the love interest in The Son of Tarzan
exceeds that by quite a wide margin, and is also a more fascinating and
complicated character than Jane has been thus far. It’s in chapter five
that we are introduced to Meriem, little girl who is kidnapped by the
cruel Sheik Amor ben Khatour. A French Foreign Legion officer had seen
to the hanging of the Sheik’s nephew, who was a notorious desert
marauder, and for revenge the Sheik kidnap the officer’s child to raise
as his own. The little girl is routinely beaten by Mabuno, who is kind
of her evil nanny, and mentally and physically tortured by her abductor
“father” Sheik Khatour. Meriem is not broken by the horrible life she is
forced to suffer through, she instead gives all the love she wishes she
had to an ugly doll named Geeka. She pours her heart and soul out to
this little doll which will break the heart of most readers. Of course
it’s only a matter of time before her and Korak cross paths.
Though
stronger than most men Korak is still just a young boy and when he does
rescue Meriem from the Sheik they become like brother and sister not
young lovers. At first Meriem is terrified of this new life of jungle
survival, but soon she becomes accustomed to it, even to the point of
being able to travel through the trees as good as Korak does. As years
pass these two kids grow up at different rates of maturity and events
will shift each of their perspectives of the other, but love is
something neither of them fully understand. This section of the book is
leaps and bounds better than the relationship we got between Tarzan and
Jane. In Tarzan of the Apes it is clear that Jane’s
attraction was first purely physical and that a woman of High Society
would actually marry a man who was a savage as the animals he lived with
was always a bit of a stretch. But in the case of Korak and Merriam
their relationship is allowed to grow organically over time and though
there will be circumstances that will alter aspects of this, mostly the
belief that one or the other is dead, there is no doubt that they will
end up together.
The book does have its fair share of villains;
Sheik Amor ben Khatour who originally kidnapped Meriem, we have Kovodu a
native chieftain who captures Meriam when he goes after Korak and Akut
as a reprisal for all their raids, and then there is the two Swedes Carl
Jenssen and Sven Malbihn, the ivory poachers who had chased off young
Korak, they return and try and snatch Meriem for the reward her real
father offers. Unfortunately Meriem’s beauty has one of the Swedes
thinking more of rape than he is reward. And it's not just lascivious
Swedes that endanger Meriem's virtue as she meets Hon. Morison Baynes, a
British aristocrat who promises to show her the world but really wants
to get into her pants.
This story is mostly about Korak and Meriem
but it is no surprise that Tarzan and Jane do show up eventually, and
it is in this book that we learn that Tarzan aka John Clayton Lord
Greystoke, has a massive estate in Africa. He enforces his own laws
concerning hunting and the treatment of the natives. Safaris have to ask
him permission before big game hunting in Tarzan’s territory, and
heaven help them if they poach ivory or treat their native bearers
properly. The weakest character unfortunately is Jane; she is relegated
to the role of the disapproving housewife who wanted to keep her son far
from the world that spawned her husband. In later books Jane will a
become badass jungle warrior in her own right but their is no evidence
of that here. In fact Meriem becomes almost an equal to Korak in jungle
craft and tree running skills which should really shame Jane.
Will
the fair maid Meriem ever be re-united with her real father? Will she
see Korak as anything other than a fearless big brother? Can these two
survive when so many people are out to kill, capture or rape them? What
has Tarzan and Jane been doing all these years? These questions and more
are all answered in The Son of Tarzan making it a
fantastic read for fans of the genre, and only the clunky beginning
keeps this from being one of Burroughs’s best books.
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