Cartoon Videos, Online Games & Downloads auf Cartoon Network. Tarzan Lord of the Jungle. Title: Tarzan Lord of the Jungle. Author: Edgar Rice Burroughs. A Project Gutenberg of Australia e. Book *. e. Book No.: 0. Language: English. Date first posted: May 2. Lord Zedd is a major villain from the Mighty Morphin Power Rangers series and recurring through Power Rangers Zeo and Power Rangers in Space. He was played by Edwin Neal, with Robert Axelrod supplying the voice. Alexander Skarsgard is practically Tarzan as Hamlet: there's no exuberance in the performance, even when he's back in the jungle swinging from tree to tree. Pictures, documents, manufacturing data, ratings, comments, features, and history for Williams 'Jungle Lord' pinball machine. Lyrics to 'Jungle' song by X AMBASSADORS: Yeah Yeah Well it's too long living in the same old lives (yeah) I feel too cold to live, too young. Rating is available when the video has been rented. Most recent update: December 2. This e. Book was produced by Richard Scott, Colin Choat and Roy Glashan. We do NOT keep any e. Books in compliance with a particular. Be sure to check the. You may copy it, give it away or re- use it under the terms. Project Gutenberg of Australia License which may be viewed online at. To contact Project Gutenberg of Australia go to http: //gutenberg. GO TO Project Gutenberg Australia HOME PAGEby. Edgar Rice Burroughs. BOOK ELEVEN IN THE TARZAN SERIESILLUSTRATED BY J. JOHNSerialized in The Blue Book Magazine, December. May 1. 92. 8First US book edition: A. C. Mc. Clurg & Co., Chicago, 1. First UK book edition: Cassell & Co., London, 1. This e- book edition: Project Gutenberg Australia, 2. BIBLIOGRAPHIC NOTEWhen writing this book Edgar Rice Burroughs made. English verb forms, usually with a complete. All erroneous verb forms. Tarzan—Lord. of the Jungle have been corrected without comment. Tarzan—Lord of the Jungle contains a. Arabic words and phrases. In the present HTML. Tarzan Lord of the Jungle, by Edgar Rice Burroughs, free ebook. The jungle.this is my domain.and I protect those who come here. For I am Tarzan, lord of the jungle. This Tarzan, Lord of the Jungle cartoon was produced by Filmation. Filmation is no longer around and many of the rights. Mc. Clurg. & Co., Chicago, 1. TABLE OF CONTENTSLIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. Almost. omnipotent, he, in the realm of his people. Dango, Sheeta, even. Numa the mighty were as naught to the pachyderm. For a hundred. years he had come and gone up and down the land that had trembled. In peace he had lived with Dango the hyena, Sheeta the leopard. Numa the lion. Man alone had made war upon him. Man, who holds. the unique distinction among created things of making war on all. Man, the ruthless; man, the. Nature has. evolved. Always during the long hundred years of his life, Tantor had. There had been black men, always. Big black warriors. Arabs with. crude muskets and white men with powerful express rifles and. The white men had been the last to come and were the. Yet Tantor did not hate men—not even white men. Hate. vengeance, envy, avarice, lust are a few of the delightful emotions. Nature's noblest work—the. Neither do they know fear as. Tantor shared this caution with his fellows and avoided. But there were no other eyes to see. Tantor drowsed in the heat of midday and Tarzan, Lord of the. Jungle, dozed upon the back of his mighty friend. A sultry air. current moved sluggishly from the north, bringing to the keen. Peace lay upon. the jungle and the two beasts were content. In the forest Fahd and Motlog, of the tribe el- Harb, hunted. Sheikh Ibn Jad of the Beny Salem fendy el- Guad. With them were. black slaves. They advanced warily and in silence upon the fresh. Arabs dwelling upon ivory, those of the black. The 'abd. Fejjuan, black Galla slave, sleek, ebon warrior, eater of raw meat. Fejjuan, as his comrades, thought of fresh meat, but also he. Habash, the land from which he had been stolen as a. He thought of coming again to the lonely Galla hut of his. Perhaps el- Habash was not far off now. For months Ibn Jad. El- Habash must be near. When he was sure of that his days. Ibn Jad would have lost his best Galla. Two marches to the north, in the southern extremity of. Abyssinia, stood the round dwelling of the father of Fejjuan. Ibn Jad had planned nearly. He but dreamed, and. The leaves of the forest drowsed in the heat above the heads of. Beneath the drowsing leaves of other trees a stone's. Tarzan and Tantor slept, their perceptive. Fejjuan, the Galla slave, halted in his tracks, stopping those. Directly. before him, seen dimly between the boles and through the foliage. The Galla slave pointed through the foliage toward a patch. Fahd raised el- Lazzary, his ancient matchlock, to his. There was a flash of flame, a burst of smoke, a roar and. As Tantor surged forward at the sound of the report Tarzan. A low- hanging limb struck the ape- man's. Terrified, Tantor thought only of escape as he ran north through. Perhaps he did not know that his friend lay helpless and. Tantor never. thought of Tarzan as one of the Tarmangani, for the white man was. Tarzan of the. Apes meant to him restful companionship, peace, happiness. Of all. the jungle beasts, except his own kind, he fraternized with Tarzan. But let us see—perhaps el- fil is hit. Fahd suddenly stopped.! Perhaps he, too, hunted el- fil and was slain by the great beast. See. he lies in the path that el- fil made. Put back thy knife, Fahd. Thou art always too eager for. But perhaps he will not come with us, and look. So with thongs of camel hide they. They had scarce done when. Tarzan opened his eyes and looked them slowly over. He shook his. head, like some great lion, and presently his senses cleared. He. recognized the Arabs instantly for what they were. In every village that we have entered in the past. He will slay you when he. They are with us now and some of. Suppose they carry word to the fendy of this great sheikh. Not one of us will live to return to. Beled el- Guad. I wish a. That it also afforded an. Hirfa, his wife, raised not the temperature. Zeyd an iota. As the men talked the two women were busy within their apartment. In a great brazen jidda. Hirfa was placing mutton to be boiled for the next meal while Ateja. Now may. we turn north again and enter el- Habash close to the spot where the. Nimmr. It is. known to the people of this far south Habash. Fejjuan, himself an. Habashy, though he has never been there, heard of it as a boy. We. shall take prisoners among them and, by the grace of Allah, we. Naught but flesh and blood Habush. The treasure is ours for. There, each Friday, the pieces of. It is Fahd and Motlog. It is not unknown to Arab slave raiders. Why, then. came you to my country, knowing I do not permit my people to be. Then, too, was. I not present when your henchmen fired a shot at el- fil? Is that peaceful trading for ivory? You are raiders and poachers.! If they shot el- fil it must be that they mistook him for. Thou shalt have an. Sudan. That will I arrange for. Let us go our way and when we return. Come, cut. these bonds! Thou art in our. power and remember that dead enemies are harmless. Should we free him. If we keep him prisoner and an escaped slave carries word. The night will be. A slim knife between his ribs were enough. There be faithful. Habush among us who will do our bidding, nor speak of the matter. They can prepare a trench from the bottom of which a dead. Tarzan may not reach out to harm us. Thou. shalt attend to the whole matter. Then will it be done secretly and. The blessings of Allah be upon thee! Beneath the small flitting tent where his. Tarzan still struggled with the bonds that. At times he lay listening to the night. He knew. when Numa passed and Sheeta the leopard; and then from afar and so. Without the beyt of Ibn Jad Ateja. Zeyd. They stood. I doubt his. loyalty to thy father, and not his alone, but another whose name I. Upon occasions I have seen them muttering. It is not necessary even to. I hate him even as I hate. Fahd.? Is he not also my father's brother? If that bond. does not hold him loyal to Ibn Jad, who hath treated him well, why. I pretend loyalty for him? Nay, I think him a traitor to my. Ibn Jad seems blind to the fact. We are a long way from. Tollog. being next of blood, would assume the sheikhly duties and honors. I. think he hath won Fahd's support by a promise to further his suit. Ibn Jad, for I have noticed that Tollog exerts himself. Fahd in the hearing of my father.! Silence fell again upon the. The. weird, uncanny cry that had unnerved them was not repeated. Fearfully the foremost looked within. Ibn Jad pressed forward. Camest thou, Sheikh Ibn Jad, to disturb my. Tomorrow it is the thought of Ibn Jad to release. They would that when you are released you. I have no desire to remain in thy lice infested. Yet there was one far off in the jungle. Tantor the elephant. Again. he raised his trunk aloft and trumpeted loudly. His little eyes. gleamed redly wicked as, a moment later, he swung off through the. Slowly silence fell upon the menzil of. Sheikh Ibn Jad as the Arabs and their slaves sought their sleeping. Only the sheikh and his brother sat smoking in the sheikh's. Fejjuan would be as good as. He. will do well for one. Tell them that. you heard a noise in the direction of his hejra and that when you had come to learn. In the morning we shall tell the others that he escaped. Leave his cut bonds within the hejra as proof. The former entered the apartment of his harem and the latter. Through the jungle came Tantor the elephant and from his path. Even Numa the lion slunk growling to. Into the darkness of the hejra. Tollog, the sheikh's brother; but Tarzan, lying with an ear. Ibn Jad. Tarzan. heard other sounds as well and, as he interpreted these others, he. Tollog and was convinced when. For what purpose but the taking of his. Beduin visit Tarzan at this hour of the night? As Tollog, groping in the dark, entered the tent Tarzan sat. Beduin the horrid. Tollog stood. The Beduin halted, aghast. Art thou being. attacked? Tarzan smiled and remained silent. He listened but heard. Running quickly to his own beyt he made a light in a paper lantern and. Peering. within, the lantern held above his head, Tollog saw the ape- man. There was no wild beast! It was thou, Nasrany, who made the fearful. Tarzan's question but laid aside his musket and drew. In the dim light of the paper lantern Tarzan watched these. He saw the cruel expression upon the malevolent face. To the ears of the ape- man came the sound of a. Arab oath. Then Tollog launched a blow at Tarzan's. The prisoner swung his bound wrists upward and struck the. Beduin's knife arm away, and simultaneously he struggled to his. With an oath, Tollog struck again, and again Tarzan fended the. Beduin upon the side of the head and sent him. Tollog was instantly up and at him again, this time with the. Tollog. leaped quickly around Tarzan to strike him from behind. In his effort to turn upon his knees that he might face his. Tollog's mercy. A vicious smile bared. Beduin.! He turned quickly and a shriek. Tollog, the sheikh's brother, was raised high aloft and hurled off.
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