The Land That Time Forgot by Edgar Rice Burroughs (short books to read .txt) ๐
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The Land That Time Forgot opens with the discovery near Greenland of a floating thermos flask containing a manuscript by castaway Tyler Bowen, Jr. The document recounts a series of adventures that starts with a sea battle against a German U-boat and ends on a mysterious island populated by hostile prehistoric animals and people.
The second part of the book, โThe People That Time Forgot,โ continues the story with the tale of Tom Billings, who has been sent on a mission to rescue Bowen after his manuscript was discovered. He flies solo over the mountainous cliffs that encircle the island and is attacked by a monstrous flying reptile, forcing him to crash-land. Billings then attempts to make his way on foot back to the rest of his party while contending with dangerous inhabitants from different stages of human development.
The final installment of the story, โOut of Timeโs Abyss,โ reveals what happened to Bradley, a crew member who was sent on a scouting expedition earlier in the story and was never heard from again.
This trilogy of short novels was originally published serially in 1918 in Blue Book Magazine. In 1924 they were published in a single volume by A. C. McClurg. The Burroughs fan community seems to fall into two camps about whether the story comprises three separate novellas, or whether itโs a single novel divided into three parts. This production follows the 1924 edition in combining the three into a single novel.
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- Author: Edgar Rice Burroughs
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That night they dropped anchor at the mouth of a sluggish stream whose warm waters swarmed with millions of tiny tadpolelike organismsโ โminute human spawn starting on their precarious journey from some inland pool toward โthe beginningโโ โa journey which one in millions, perhaps, might survive to complete. Already almost at the inception of life they were being greeted by thousands of voracious mouths as fish and reptiles of many kinds fought to devour them, the while other and larger creatures pursued the devourers, to be, in turn, preyed upon by some other of the countless forms that inhabit the deeps of Capronaโs frightful sea.
The second day was practically a repetition of the first. They moved very slowly with frequent stops and once they landed in the Kro-lu country to hunt. Here they were attacked by the bow-and-arrow men, whom they could not persuade to palaver with them. So belligerent were the natives that it became necessary to fire into them in order to escape their persistent and ferocious attentions.
โWhat chance,โ asked Bradley, as they were returning to the boat with their game, โcould Tyler and Miss La Rue have had among such as these?โ
But they continued on their fruitless quest, and the third day, after cruising along the shore of a deep inlet, they passed a line of lofty cliffs that formed the southern shore of the inlet and rounded a sharp promontory about noon. Co-Tan and Bradley were on deck alone, and as the new shoreline appeared beyond the point, the girl gave an exclamation of joy and seized the manโs hand in hers.
โOh, look!โ she cried. โThe Galu country! The Galu country! It is my country that I never thought to see again.โ
โYou are glad to come again, Co-Tan?โ asked Bradley.
โOh, so glad!โ she cried. โAnd you will come with me to my people? We may live here among them, and you will be a great warriorโ โoh, when Jor dies you may even be chief, for there is none so mighty as my warrior. You will come?โ
Bradley shook his head. โI cannot, little Co-Tan,โ he answered. โMy country needs me, and I must go back. Maybe someday I shall return. You will not forget me, Co-Tan?โ
She looked at him in wide-eyed wonder. โYou are going away from me?โ she asked in a very small voice. โYou are going away from Co-Tan?โ
Bradley looked down upon the little bowed head. He felt the soft cheek against his bare arm; and he felt something else there tooโ โhot drops of moisture that ran down to his very fingertips and splashed, but each one wrung from a womanโs heart.
He bent low and raised the tear-stained face to his own. โNo, Co-Tan,โ he said, โI am not going away from youโ โfor you are going with me. You are going back to my own country to be my wife. Tell me that you will, Co-Tan.โ And he bent still lower yet from his height and kissed her lips. Nor did he need more than the wonderful new light in her eyes to tell him that she would go to the end of the world with him if he would but take her. And then the gun-crew came up from below again to fire a signal shot, and the two were brought down from the high heaven of their new happiness to the scarred and weather-beaten deck of the U-33.
An hour later the vessel was running close in by a shore of wondrous beauty beside a parklike meadow that stretched back a mile inland to the foot of a plateau when Whitely called attention to a score of figures clambering downward from the elevation to the lowland below. The engines were reversed and the boat brought to a stop while all hands gathered on deck to watch the little party coming toward them across the meadow.
โThey are Galus,โ cried Co-Tan; โthey are my own people. Let me speak to them lest they think we come to fight them. Put me ashore, my man, and I will go meet them.โ
The nose of the U-boat was run close in to the steep bank; but when Co-Tan would have run forward alone, Bradley seized her hand and held her back. โI will go with you, Co-Tan,โ he said; and together they advanced to meet the oncoming party.
There were about twenty warriors moving forward in a thin line, as our infantry advance as skirmishers. Bradley could not but notice the marked difference between this formation and the moblike methods of the lower tribes he had come in contact with, and he commented upon it to Co-Tan.
โGalu warriors always advance into battle thus,โ she said. โThe lesser people remain in a huddled group where they can scarce use their weapons the while they present so big a mark to us that our spears and arrows cannot miss them; but when they hurl theirs at our warriors, if they miss the first man, there is no chance that they will kill someone behind him.
โStand still now,โ she cautioned, โand fold your arms. They will not harm us then.โ
Bradley did as he was bid, and the two stood with arms folded as the line of warriors approached. When they had come within some fifty yards, they halted and one spoke. โWho are you and from whence do you come?โ he asked; and then Co-Tan gave a little, glad cry and sprang forward with outstretched arms.
โOh, Tan!โ she exclaimed. โDo you not know your little Co-Tan?โ
The warrior stared, incredulous, for a moment, and then he, too, ran forward and when they met, took the girl in his arms. It was then
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