The Cave Girl: Difference between revisions
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==Plot== |
==Plot== |
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⚫ | Waldo Emerson Smith-Jones, a upper class [[milquetoast]], is swept overboard during a South Seas voyage which he he has undergone for his health. Stranded on a jungle island, he at first encounters violent [[missing link]] types, then meets a beautiful girl, Nadara, also on the run. In an uncharacteristic gesture, he saves her from the grasp of one of the ape men. Mistaking his frightened screams for [[war cry|war cries]], she calls him Thandar ("the brave one"). She teaches him her language, how to swim, how to fish, and basic woodcraft. But Nadara warns him that a newcomer to her tribe must fight the strongest men. When they reach her home village, he is horrified to find her tribe are [[Caveman|cave-dwellers]] out of the [[Paleolithic]] era, not much better than the first tribe. Afraid of having to fight one of the menfolk, he vanished. |
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{{Long plot|date=April 2024}} |
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With time, Smith-Jones grows more healthy due to the constant physical demands of primitive living. For six months he trains himself and makes some weapons. A modern ship stops at the island, but Waldo surprises himself by deciding to stay until he can ensure Nadara's safety. He gives the crew a letter for his mother and returns to the jungle. |
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Reaching the caves of Nadara's tribe, he finds them empty. The tribe routinely moves to new caves. He finds the tribe's new home. Nadara's father charges Waldo to give her a packet of her deceased mother's things. Waldo tracks and finds Nadara, and kills the brutal man chasing her. She is uninterested in the packet, discarding it unopened as she knows her tribal mother had no possessions. Then they see a ship approaching the island. As he realizes that he loves her, and how harshly society would treat her, the two agree to head for the hills. The ship's search party finds the packet that Nadara discarded. The contents identify a married noble couple from the outside world, who disappeared on a voyage less than twenty years previously. |
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Waldo |
Waldo realizes that his love for Nadara is such that he wants her to have everything he can offer. By now the ship is gone. They return to Nadara's tribe. On his deathbed, her father explains that her mother was a woman who died shortly after birth to Nadara. Waldo decides that living with Nadara under primitive moral customs would be wrong, and decides not to take her as his wife until they can return to civilization. He teaches her English in preparation and introduces the tribe to [[agriculture]] and permanent houses and [[consent of the governed]], after which they choose him as their king. With the help of new shields and weapons, they fight off a raid by the ape-like tribe. One ape-man returns that night and kidnaps Nadara. An [[earthquake]] allows her to escape, but when she has returns home, she finds it destroyed, with her people gone. She thinks that Waldo has died. |
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Nadara then encounters Smith-Jones' mother and father, who, having received the letter, have come with a search party to the island to look for him. She explains Waldo's (supposed) death. The ship departs, but a storm blows it back towards the islands, where she encounter a [[cannibal]] tribe. |
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Waldo teaches the tribe about rule by [[consent of the governed]], and they choose him as their king. He begins to introduce them to concepts such as agriculture and permanent housing. He has them make spears and shields, and they successfully fight off a raid by the ape-like tribe. However, one ape-man returns that night and kidnaps Nadara. Away from the caves, an earthquake frightens him and he releases her. When she returns to the cliff dwellings, she finds them in ruins. She cannot locate Waldo's cave nor lift the rocks she finds, so she assumes that everyone is dead, and leaves the next day to find a new home. |
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Waldo, who survived the earthquake, and built a small boat to use to go search for Nadara, and encounters [[pirate]]s, as well as the cannibal island and then meets his parents. After a reunion, the party sets off to [[Honolulu]]. The ship's captain presents Nadara with the found packet as a wedding present, not realizing her connection to it. They discover her noble heritage, and she and Waldo marry. |
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Back in the States, Waldo's parents decide to send another search mission after they receive his letter. His mother and father both come along. They find Nadara being chased by an ape-man, who they quickly kill. She explains Waldo's death in the earthquake, and Mr. Smith-Jones decides to bring her home. However, his wife is hostile to Nadara. The ship departs, but a storm blows it back towards the islands. When Stark, the first officer, grabs Nadara on the deck late at night, he kidnaps her overboard to a nearby shore. Upon returning to consciousness, she quickly escapes him, but they are captured by a tribe of cannibals. Stark is killed but she is treated considerately. |
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In the meantime, it seems that Waldo is indeed alive, though he lay unconscious and trapped in his cave a long time. He discovers from a caveman that Nadara left on a ship, and determinedly builds a tiny boat to go after her. After a storm, he is washed ashore on a new island and saves a pirate king from a cannibal. One of the pirates tells of a white goddess at a cannibal temple inland, so Waldo goes to search for Nadara. He rescues her, but they are pursued all the way to the coast. His pirate friends have left, so they are forced to use his little boat again. When they reach land, they are captured by more pirates, who then bring them to a modern boat - his father's ship. It also is being held by the pirates, who are awaiting their leader's return. Waldo's parents initially do not recognize him, but after they do, Waldo's mother reconciles with Nadara. When the pirate king arrives, he recognizes Waldo as his savior and releases the entire group. They sail to Honolulu, and the ship's captain presents Nadara with the found packet as a wedding present, not realizing her connection to it. They discover her noble heritage, and she and Waldo marry. |
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==Reception== |
==Reception== |
Revision as of 02:21, 25 April 2024
Author | Edgar Rice Burroughs |
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Cover artist | J. Allen St. John |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Genre | Fantasy, Lost World |
Publisher | A. C. McClurg |
Publication date | 21 March 1925 |
Media type | Print (Hardback) |
Pages | 323 |
The Cave Girl is a lost world novel by American writer Edgar Rice Burroughs. Originally published in two separate stories, The Cave Girl begun in February 1913 and published by "All-Story" in July, August, and September 1913; and The Cave Man begun in 1914 and published by "All-Story Weekly" throughout March and April 1917.[1] The book version was first published by A. C. McClurg on 1925-03-21. In August 1949, Dell Paperback published a version with a map captioned "Wild Island Home of Nadara the Cave Girl Where Violence and Bloodshed Rule."[1]
Plot
Waldo Emerson Smith-Jones, a upper class milquetoast, is swept overboard during a South Seas voyage which he he has undergone for his health. Stranded on a jungle island, he at first encounters violent missing link types, then meets a beautiful girl, Nadara, also on the run. In an uncharacteristic gesture, he saves her from the grasp of one of the ape men. Mistaking his frightened screams for war cries, she calls him Thandar ("the brave one"). She teaches him her language, how to swim, how to fish, and basic woodcraft. But Nadara warns him that a newcomer to her tribe must fight the strongest men. When they reach her home village, he is horrified to find her tribe are cave-dwellers out of the Paleolithic era, not much better than the first tribe. Afraid of having to fight one of the menfolk, he vanished.
With time, Smith-Jones grows more healthy due to the constant physical demands of primitive living. For six months he trains himself and makes some weapons. A modern ship stops at the island, but Waldo surprises himself by deciding to stay until he can ensure Nadara's safety. He gives the crew a letter for his mother and returns to the jungle.
Reaching the caves of Nadara's tribe, he finds them empty. The tribe routinely moves to new caves. He finds the tribe's new home. Nadara's father charges Waldo to give her a packet of her deceased mother's things. Waldo tracks and finds Nadara, and kills the brutal man chasing her. She is uninterested in the packet, discarding it unopened as she knows her tribal mother had no possessions. Then they see a ship approaching the island. As he realizes that he loves her, and how harshly society would treat her, the two agree to head for the hills. The ship's search party finds the packet that Nadara discarded. The contents identify a married noble couple from the outside world, who disappeared on a voyage less than twenty years previously.
Waldo realizes that his love for Nadara is such that he wants her to have everything he can offer. By now the ship is gone. They return to Nadara's tribe. On his deathbed, her father explains that her mother was a woman who died shortly after birth to Nadara. Waldo decides that living with Nadara under primitive moral customs would be wrong, and decides not to take her as his wife until they can return to civilization. He teaches her English in preparation and introduces the tribe to agriculture and permanent houses and consent of the governed, after which they choose him as their king. With the help of new shields and weapons, they fight off a raid by the ape-like tribe. One ape-man returns that night and kidnaps Nadara. An earthquake allows her to escape, but when she has returns home, she finds it destroyed, with her people gone. She thinks that Waldo has died.
Nadara then encounters Smith-Jones' mother and father, who, having received the letter, have come with a search party to the island to look for him. She explains Waldo's (supposed) death. The ship departs, but a storm blows it back towards the islands, where she encounter a cannibal tribe.
Waldo, who survived the earthquake, and built a small boat to use to go search for Nadara, and encounters pirates, as well as the cannibal island and then meets his parents. After a reunion, the party sets off to Honolulu. The ship's captain presents Nadara with the found packet as a wedding present, not realizing her connection to it. They discover her noble heritage, and she and Waldo marry.
Reception
Floyd C. Gale of Galaxy Science Fiction in 1963 described The Cave Girl as "a typical Burroughs adventure yarn" and among the rarest of his books before it was reprinted.[2]
Copyright
The copyright for this story has expired in the United States and, thus, now resides in the public domain there.
References
- ^ a b Tarzan.com
- ^ Gale, Floyd C. (October 1963). "Galaxy's 5 Star Shelf". Galaxy Science Fiction. pp. 119–123.