Meriem, wife of Korak

Meriem

J. Allen St. John illustration
from The Son of Tarzan
(1st ed., 1917), depicting Meriem
First appearance The Son of Tarzan
Created by Edgar Rice Burroughs
Portrayed by Mae Giraci
Manilla Martan
Information
Aliases Jeanne Jacot
Gender Female
Title Princess
Spouse(s) Korak (husband)
Children Jackie (son)
Relatives Tarzan (father in law)
Jane (mother in law)
Dawn (granddaughter)
Nationality French

Meriem is a character in Edgar Rice Burroughs's series of Tarzan novels, and the heroine of the fourth, The Son of Tarzan. Born Jeanne Jacot, the daughter of French general Armand Jacot, she is taken captive by Arabs as a child who give her the name Meriem. She is later rescued from her captors by Korak, son of Tarzan, with whom she afterwards lives in the jungle. She is beautiful, strong, athletic, brave, daring and sensitive. She will kill for food but not for sport. The emerging relationship between the two feral teenagers is described sensitively, as the embittered boy and the abused girl learn to live and love together, saving each other from various dangers and drawing to the happy ending in which Meriem marries Korak and is reunited with her father who reveals that she is a "princess in her own right".

Meriem is an example of the "Jungle Girl" archetype, in that she lives in the forest, dressed in skins and scavenging for food, with Korak as her guide and protector. Unlike others of the type, she has a past (she is a kidnap victim) and a future—as the wife of a junior English aristocrat and heir to an African chieftaincy. The tenth Tarzan book, Tarzan and the Ant Men, introduces her young son Jackie.

Portrayal in film

In the 1920 serial The Son of Tarzan, Meriem was portrayed by Mae Giraci as a young girl, and by Manilla Martan as an adult.

External links

Wikisource has original text related to this article: