Previous Classics Club Spin has introduced me to an interesting book – One Flew over the Cuckoo’s Nest - which
I have dreaded, but glad (more relieved, actually) that I have read it at last.
This time the spin brought me another surprise - a book I regarded as a
romantic adventure of an ape man (I remember watching Tarzan on TV when I was a
kid), but rather different than last year's, this book appeared to be more
serious than just a teenage lit. Here is why…
Heredity
theme
Regular
readers of my blog must have been familiar with my 'obsession' with Émile Zola,
and the heredity and evolution theme in his monumental works: the
Rougon-Macquart cycle. Thus you can imagine how excited I was when realizing
that Tarzan of the Apes is more than an entertaining adventure/love story, it
is also an interesting (more interesting even, perhaps, than Zola's) analysis
on the theory of heredity and evolution. A gentleman by birth, but an ape by
education, Tarzan is. It is thoroughly exciting to see how he begins to realize
by instinct his superiority compared to his peers, how he learns cunning
tricks, how he starts making calculations and strategies, and of course, how he
teaches himself to read and write, by help of books in the cabin - John
Clayton's library.
Self
learning
Tarzan
taught himself to read and write from a shelf-full of books, which John Clayton
has, thankfully, brought with him, when he and Lady Alice decided to sail to
his new post in British West Africa. I can imagine, how little Tarzan spent
hours in the little cabin, diligently memorizing words and syllables from
picture books, until he could fluently structure sentences, though he have
never heard the pronunciation. The first proof of his study was the note he stuck
on the door of the cabin which was found by the group of Professor and Jane
Porter, signed by "Tarzan".
Frankly
speaking, this signature was where I have detected the first flaw in Burroughs'
heretofore genius scientific facts in the story. Immediately I thought: if
Tarzan was the name Kala and the other apes called him in their 'tongues', and
he has never heard before English words pronounced, then how could he write his
name as T.a.r.z.a.n ? You know what I mean? But, if it is a flaw, it is of no
significance, compared to how much Burroughs has influenced and impressed us
with a touching, humorous, and adventurous stories.
Man
vs animal
"Being
a man, he [Tarzan] sometimes killed for pleasure, a thing which no other animal
does; for it has remained for man alone among all other creatures to kill
senselessly and wantonly for the mere pleasure of inflicting suffering and
death." How much truth there is in this sentence! How often do we boast of
human's superiority from animal, that we might forget that we, human, often
behave even worse than animal - above quote is the proof.
People are
often picking animal for an insult or verbal abuse, or even for bullying
others. So, next time someone does that to me or my friends, I'll remind
him/her using above argument. Man could be worse than animal, when he chose to
do so. Tarzan, as a man-beast, highlighted the good sides and bad sides of human
beings. The conflict in Tarzan, between wanting to self-develop himself and
being disgusted at moral corruption of his kind, is what eventually shape him
to a noble character. So, real nobility is not what man is born into, but what
man decides to be, when he has choices to be other than that.
John
Clayton, the Lord Greystoke, and his wife Lady Alice, were the embodiment of
the true nobility, and Tarzan, while being educated as and to be an ape, he
also inherited this nobility from his parents. On the other hand, though he
inherited human's cunning way of views from his biological parents, yet he
grown up in the nature, and so, by combining these two aspects in him, he
evolved to be an almost perfect human being.
Back
to Nature
Tarzan is
one reminder, thus, to the world, that man should have intimate relationship
with the Nature to better himself. I believe that spending much time in the
nature enables us to reflect on the simplicity of God's creation, and to remind
us of what we were created to be, in the first place.
This book
has been an easy and entertaining read, but at the same time, an unexpected
one.
4 to 5