Lion Adventure - Enemies

Enemies

  • King Ku- King Ku is the giant Tsavo District Officer. From the moment of the Hunts' arrival, Ku appears to want them dead, forbidding the aid of their safari team in the hope that a man-eater lion would kill them. It is Ku who cuts the trail line of their balloon prior to the huge storm, casting Hal and Roger dangerously adrift and almost resulting in their deaths. At the end of the novel, after the capture of Black Mane the man-eater lion, King Ku apologises, citing that his irrational hate of white people had been caused by the murders of his wife and children, for which he believed whites to be responsible. As King Ku eventually discovered, his family had actually been killed by a member of the black Mau Mau, after Ku had refused to take an oath to kill whites.
  • Dugan- Dugan is a hunter who had previously been employed to kill man-eating lions. When he failed on numerous occasions, shooting innocent and harmless animals, he was fired, though he resents Hal and Roger for taking his job. Out of desire to discredit the boys and reclaim his job, he shoots an innocent lion and blames it on Hal and Roger. He also unties the flaps of their tent in the hope that a man-eater would enter and kill them. When Dugan accidentally shoots a valued cow of the Gula village, he tries to hide his mistake, but the villagers track him down and put him on the first train to Nairobi, threatening to kill him if he ever returns.
  • Basa- A young man from the village of Gula, Basa's father was killed by Black Mane the man-eater lion. Because the lion had first attacked Hal and Roger and they had escaped, Basa blames the boys for his father's death, vowing revenge. Basa eventually attacks Hal with a knife, but he is overpowered. Hal uncovers the true reason for Basa's frustration - he wishes to build a school in his village, but cannot acquire the required funds. Hal generously offers to fund the school himself, and Basa is immediately overjoyed.

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Famous quotes containing the word enemies:

    There is not a more prudent maxim, than to live with one’s enemies as if they may one day become one’s friends; as it commonly happens, sooner or later, in the vicissitudes of political affairs.
    Philip Dormer Stanhope, 4th Earl Chesterfield (1694–1773)

    You may have enemies whom you hate, but not enemies whom you despise. You must take pride in your enemy: then your enemy’s successes will be your successes as well.
    Friedrich Nietzsche (1844–1900)

    Where there is no style, there is in effect no point of view. There is, essentially, no anger, no conviction, no self. Style is opinion, hung washing, the calibre of a bullet, teething beads.... One’s style holds one, thankfully, at bay from the enemies of it but not from the stupid crucifixions by those who must willfully misunderstand it.
    Alexander Theroux (b. 1940)