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The Complete Tarzan Collection

Page 198

by Edgar Rice Burroughs


  25. HOME

  Within an hour of the fall of Lu-don and Mo-sar, the chiefs and principal warriors of Pal-ul-don gathered in the great throneroom of the palace at A-lur upon the steps of the lofty pyramid and placing Ja-don at the apex proclaimed him king. Upon one side of the old chieftain stood Tarzan of the Apes, and upon the other Korak, the Killer, worthy son of the mighty ape-man.

  And when the brief ceremony was over and the warriors with upraised clubs had sworn fealty to their new ruler, Ja-don dispatched a trusted company to fetch O-lo-a and Pan-at-lee and the women of his own household from Ja- lur.

  And then the warriors discussed the future of Pal-ul-don and the question arose as to the administration of the temples and the fate of the priests, who practically without exception had been disloyal to the government of the king, seeking always only their own power and comfort and aggrandizement. And then it was that Ja-don turned to Tarzan. "Let the Dor-ul-Otho transmit to his people the wishes of his father," he said.

  "Your problem is a simple one," said the ape-man, "if you but wish to do that which shall be pleasing in the eyes of God. Your priests, to increase their power, have taught you that Jad-ben-Otho is a cruel god, that his eyes love to dwell upon blood and upon suffering. But the falsity of their teachings has been demonstrated to you today in the utter defeat of the priesthood.

  "Take then the temples from the men and give them instead to the women that they may be administered in kindness and charity and love. Wash the blood from your eastern altar and drain forever the water from the western.

  "Once I gave Lu-don the opportunity to do these things but he ignored my commands, and again is the corridor of sacrifice filled with its victims. Liberate these from every temple in Pal-ul-don. Bring offerings of such gifts as your people like and place them upon the altars of your god. And there he will bless them and the priestesses of Jad-ben-Otho can distribute them among those who need them most."

  As he ceased speaking a murmur of evident approval ran through the throng. Long had they been weary of the avarice and cruelty of the priests and now that authority had come from a high source with a feasible plan for ridding themselves of the old religious order without necessitating any change in the faith of the people they welcomed it.

  "And the priests," cried one. "We shall put them to death upon their own altars if it pleases the Dor-ul-Otho to give the word."

  "No," cried Tarzan. "Let no more blood be spilled. Give them their freedom and the right to take up such occupations as they choose."

  That night a great feast was spread in the pal-e-don-so and for the first time in the history of ancient Pal-ul-don black warriors sat in peace and friendship with white. And a pact was sealed between Ja-don and Om-at that would ever make his tribe and the Ho-don allies and friends.

  It was here that Tarzan learned the cause of Ta-den's failure to attack at the stipulated time. A messenger had come from Ja-don carrying instructions to delay the attack until noon, nor had they discovered until almost too late that the messenger was a disguised priest of Lu-don. And they had put him to death and scaled the walls and come to the inner temple court with not a moment to spare.

  The following day O-lo-a and Pan-at-lee and the women of Ja- don's family arrived at the palace at A-lur and in the great throneroom Ta-den and O-lo-a were wed, and Om-at and Pan-at-lee.

  For a week Tarzan and Jane and Korak remained the guests of Ja- don, as did Om-at and his black warriors. And then the ape-man announced that he would depart from Pal-ul-don. Hazy in the minds of their hosts was the location of heaven and equally so the means by which the gods traveled between their celestial homes and the haunts of men and so no questionings arose when it was found that the Dor-ul- Otho with his mate and son would travel overland across the mountains and out of Pal-ul-don toward the north.

  They went by way of the Kor-ul-ja accompanied by the warriors of that tribe and a great contingent of Ho-don warriors under Ta-den. The king and many warriors and a multitude of people accompanied them beyond the limits of A-lur and after they had bid them good-bye and Tarzan had invoked the blessings of God upon them the three Europeans saw their simple, loyal friends prostrate in the dust behind them until the cavalcade had wound out of the city and disappeared among the trees of the nearby forest.

  They rested for a day among the Kor-ul-ja while Jane investigated the ancient caves of these strange people and then they moved on, avoiding the rugged shoulder of Pastar-ul-ved and winding down the opposite slope toward the great morass. They moved in comfort and in safety, surrounded by their escort of Ho-don and Waz- don.

  In the minds of many there was doubtless a question as to how the three would cross the great morass but least of all was Tarzan worried by the problem. In the course of his life he had been confronted by many obstacles only to learn that he who will may always pass. In his mind lurked an easy solution of the passage but it was one which depended wholly upon chance.

  It was the morning of the last day that, as they were breaking camp to take up the march, a deep bellow thundered from a nearby grove. The ape-man smiled. The chance had come. Fittingly then would the Dor-ul-Otho and his mate and their son depart from unmapped Pal- ul-don.

  He still carried the spear that Jane had made, which he had prized so highly because it was her handiwork that he had caused a search to be made for it through the temple in A-lur after his release, and it had been found and brought to him. He had told her laughingly that it should have the place of honor above their hearth as the ancient flintlock of her Puritan grandsire had held a similar place of honor above the fireplace of Professor Porter, her father.

  At the sound of the bellowing the Ho-don warriors, some of whom had accompanied Tarzan from Ja-don's camp to Ja-lur, looked questioningly at the ape-man while Om-at's Waz-don looked for trees, since the gryf was the one creature of Pal-ul-don which might not be safely encountered even by a great multitude of warriors. Its tough, armored hide was impregnable to their knife thrusts while their thrown clubs rattled from it as futilely as if hurled at the rocky shoulder of Pastar-ul-ved.

  "Wait," said the ape-man, and with his spear in hand he advanced toward the gryf, voicing the weird cry of the Tor-o-don. The bellowing ceased and turned to low rumblings and presently the huge beast appeared. What followed was but a repetition of the ape-man's previous experience with these huge and ferocious creatures.

  And so it was that Jane and Korak and Tarzan rode through the morass that hems Pa-ul-don, upon the back of a prehistoric triceratops while the lesser reptiles of the swamp fled hissing in terror. Upon the opposite shore they turned and called back their farewells to Ta-den and Om-at and the brave warriors they had learned to admire and respect. And then Tarzan urged their titanic mount onward toward the north, abandoning him only when he was assured that the Waz-don and the Ho-don had had time to reach a point of comparative safety among the craggy ravines of the foothills.

  Turning the beast's head again toward Pal-ul-don the three dismounted and a sharp blow upon the thick hide sent the creature lumbering majestically back in the direction of its native haunts. For a time they stood looking back upon the land they had just quit—the land of Tor-o-don and gryf; of ja and jato; of Waz-don and Ho-don; a primitive land of terror and sudden death and peace and beauty; a land that they all had learned to love.

  And then they turned once more toward the north and with light hearts and brave hearts took up their long journey toward the land that is best of all - home.

  THE END

  GLOSSARY

  From conversations with Lord Greystoke and from his notes, there have been gleaned a number of interesting items relative to the language and customs of the inhabitants of Pal-ul-don that are not brought out in the story. For the benefit of those who may care to delve into the derivation of the proper names used in the text, and thus obtain some slight insight into the language of the race, there is appended an incomplete glossary taken from some of Lord Greystoke's notes.

  A point of par
ticular interest hinges upon the fact that the names of all male hairless pithecanthropi begin with a consonant, have an even number of syllables, and end with a consonant, while the names of the females of the same species begin with a vowel, have an odd number of syllables, and end with a vowel. On the contrary, the names of the male hairy black pithecanthropi while having an even number of syllables begin with a vowel and end with a consonant; while the females of this species have an odd number of syllables in their names which begin always with a consonant and end with a vowel.

  A

  Light

  Ab

  Boy

  Ab-on

  Acting gund of Kor-ul-ja

  Ad

  Three

  Adad

  Six

  Adadad

  Nine

  Adaden

  Seven

  Aden

  Four

  Adenaden

  Eight

  Adenen

  Five

  A-lur

  City of Light

  An

  Spear

  An-un

  Father of Pan-at-lee

  As

  The sun

  At

  Tail

  Bal

  Gold or golden

  Bar

  Battle

  Ben

  Great

  Bu

  Moon

  Bu-lot (moon face)

  Son of chief Mo-sar.

  Bu-lur (moon city)

  The city of the Waz-ho-don

  Dak

  Fat

  Dak-at (fat tail)

  Chief of a Ho-don village

  Dak-lot (fat face)

  One of Ko-tan's palace warriors

  Dan

  Rock

  Den

  Tree

  Don

  Man

  Dor

  Son

  Dor-ul-Otho (son of god)

  Tarzan

  E

  Where

  Ed

  Seventy

  En

  One

  Enen

  Two

  Es

  Rough

  Es-sat (rough skin)

  Chief of Om-at's tribe of hairy blacks

  Et

  Eighty

  Fur

  Thirty

  Ged

  Forty

  Go

  Clear

  Gryf

  "Triceratops. A genus of huge herbivorous

  dinosaurs of the group Ceratopsia. The skull

  had two large horns above the eyes, a median

  horn on the nose, a horny beak, and a great

  bony hood or transverse crest over the neck.

  Their toes, five in front and three behind,

  were provided with hoofs, and the tail was

  large and strong." Webster's Dict. The gryf of

  Pal-ul-don is similar except that it is

  omnivorous, has strong, powerfully armed jaws

  and talons instead of hoofs.

  Coloration: face yellow with blue bands

  encircling the eyes; hood red on top, yellow

  underneath; belly yellow; body a dirty slate

  blue; legs same. Bony protuberances yellow

  except along the spine—these are red.

  Tail conforms with body and belly. Horns, ivory.

  Gund

  Chief

  Guru

  Terrible

  Het

  Fifty

  Ho

  White

  Ho-don

  The hairless white men of Pal-ul-don

  Id

  Silver

  Id-an

  One of Pan-at-lee's two brothers

  In

  Dark

  In-sad

  Kor-ul-ja warrior accompanying Tarzan,

  Om-at,and Ta-den in search of Pan-at-lee.

  In-tan

  Kor-ul-lul left to guard Tarzan

  Ja

  Lion

  Jad

  The

  Jad-bal-lul

  The golden lake

  Jad-ben-Otho

  The Great God

  Jad-guru-don

  The terrible man

  Jad-in-lul

  The dark lake

  Ja-don (lion-man)

  Chief of a Ho-don village and father of Ta-den

  Jad Pele ul Jad-ben-Otho

  The valley of the Great God

  Ja-lur (lion city)

  Ja-don's capital.

  Jar

  Strange

  Jar-don

  Name given Korak by Om-at

  Ja-to

  Saber-tooth hybrid

  Ko

  Mighty

  Kor

  Gorge

  Kor-ul-gryf

  Gorge of the gryf

  Kor-ul-ja

  Name of Es-sat's gorge and tribe

  Kor-ul-lul

  Name of another Waz-don gorge and tribe

  Ko-tan

  King of the Ho-don

  Lav

  Run or running

  Lee

  Doe

  Lo

  Star

  Lot

  Face

  Lu

  Fierce

  Lu-don (fierce man)

  High priest of A-lur

  Lul

  Water

  Lur

  City

  Ma

  Child

  Mo

  Short

  Mo-sar (short nose)

  Chief and pretender

  Mu

  Strong

  No

  Brook

  O

  Like or similar

  Od

  Ninety

  O-dan

  Kor-ul-ja warrior accompanying Tarzan,

  Om-at, and Ta-den in search of Pan-at-lee

  Og

  Sixty

  O-lo-a (like-star-light)

  Ko-tan's daughter

  Om

  Long

  Om-at (long tail)

  A black

  On

  Ten

  Otho

  God

  Pal

  Place; land; country

  Pal-e-don-so (place where men eat)

  Banquet hall

  Pal-ul-don (land of man)

  Name of the country

  Pal-ul-ja

  Place of lions

  Pan

  Soft

  Pan-at-lee

  Om-at's sweetheart

  Pan-sat (soft skin)

  A priest

  Pastar

  Father

  Pastar-ul-ved

  Father of Mountains

  Pele

  Valley

  Ro

  Flower

  Sad

  Forest

  San

  One hundred

  Sar

  Nose

  Sat

  Skin

  So

  Eat

  Sod

  Eaten

  Sog

  Eating

  Son

  Ate

  Ta

  Tall

  Ta-den (tall tree)

  A white

  Tan

  Warrior

  Tarzan-jad-guru

  Tarzan the Terrible

  To

  Purple

  Ton

  Twenty

  Tor

  Beast

  Tor-o-don

  Beastlike man

  Tu

  Bright

  Tu-lur (bright city)

  Mo-sar's city

  Ul

  Of

  Un

  Eye

  Ut

  Corn

  Ved

  Mountain

  Was

  Black

  Waz-don

  The hairy black men of Pal-ul-don

  Waz-ho-don (black white men)

  A mixed race

  Xo
t

  One thousand

  Yo

  Friend

  EDGAR RICE BURROUGHS

  TARZAN AND THE GOLDEN LION

  BOOK 9 IN THE TARZAN SERIES

  Serialized in Argosy All-Story Weekly, December 9, 1922— January 20, 1923

  First Book Edition—A.C. McClurg & Co., Chicago, 1923

  TABLE OF CONTENTS

   Chapter 1. The Golden Lion

   Chapter 2. The Training Of Jad-bal-ja

   Chapter 3. A Meeting Of Mystery.

   Chapter 4. What The Footprints Told

   Chapter 5. The Fatal Drops

   Chapter 6. Death Steals Behind

   Chapter 7. "You Must Sacrifice Him"

   Chapter 8. Mystery Of The Past

   Chapter 9. The Shaft Of Death

   Chapter 10. Mad Treachery

   Chapter 11. Strange Incense Burns

   Chapter 12. The Golden Ingots

 

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