THIS ESSAY MAINLY DISCUSSES THE SYMBOLIC VALUE AND CONTENT OF CONRAD'S MAJOR NOVEL
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Heart of Darkness; a Symbolic Sea Quest” By: Mahmood Azizi-Instructor of English Language and Literature at the Department of English, University of Mazandaran
A Short Introduction to the Life of Joseph Conrad While Joseph Conrad's work is often included in the canon of great English literary texts, he was not a native speaker. He was born Joseph Teodor Konrad Nalecz Korzeniowski, the son of minor Polish nobility, in a part of Poland then under Russian rule. After taking part in a failed nationalist revolution, his father and mother were exiled to Vologda, a small town in northeast Russia. The hostile conditions soon affected Conrad's parents' health, and they both died by the time Conrad was eleven. He was placed in the care of his maternal uncle, Thaddeus Bobrowski.
As a child, Conrad was fascinated by travel and adventure. In one of his final essays, Geography and Some Explorers, he describes his obsession with maps and the "blank spaces," yet to be explored. Conrad begged to be allowed to go to sea, which his family considered a rejection of his social and cultural background. At seventeen, he joined the French merchant navy.
During twenty years at sea, Conrad visited much of the world. He was a gun-runner, had a disastrous love affair, and attempted suicide. His escapades formed the basis of many of his subsequent novels. He eventually transferred to the British merchant navy and in 1886 became a British citizen.
Conrad traveled to the Belgian Congo in 1890. He had already begun to write, and spent much of the journey writing his first novel, Almayer's Folly. Soon after the Congo journey, he decided to leave the sea and concentrate on his writing. He died of a heart attack in 1924.
Like Eliot, Joyce, and other modernist authors, Conrad is nihilistic in that he disrupts the idea of any final meaning or truth. Heart of Darkness, written in 1899, seems to herald the pessimism of the first years of the new century and appears to prophesy the sense of emptiness, dislocation, and desolation felt by the generation of writers who survived the First World War.
"Heart of Darkness: a Symbolic Sea Quest" The journey in Heart of Darkness traverses not only the capricious waters spanning our physical world, but also the paradoxical ocean which exists in the heart of man and all of mankind. Through Marlow's somewhat fanatical eyes we view the enigma that is humanity, and the blurred line between light and dark. It is a voyage into the deepest recesses of the human heart and mind, leading to epiphany, enlightenment, and finally spiraling downwards into the crevices of a hell existing within each and every one of us. Although through Marlow Conrad depicts a journey into the Congo, his use of symbolism and wordplay divulge that it is something much more profound.
The Heart of Darkness as an entirety is one immense Metaphor, whose numerous annexes can be either convoluted or self-evident. Almost every action, object, and character in Conrad's book has a deeper, more relevant meaning behind it, serving to bring the reader ever closer to the conclusion that the voyage is indeed an inward one. The first major indication of this is the posture of Marlow as he recounts his journey into the Congo. According to the narrator, "he had the pose of a Buddha preaching in European clothes and without a lotus-flower." This lotus position is one typically used for meditation, which is in fact defined as a spiritual journey promoted by a lucidity of thought. Successful meditation leads to a more discerning understanding of human nature and allows one to contemplate the innermost workings of the mind. Therefore Marlow's stance capitalizes on his true destination, insinuating from the very first pages that his journey is actually within himself.
From the start of Marlow's tale there are a myriad of symbols relating to the unchartered places of the subconscious, and the journey intended to discover them. For instance, Marlow is lead to a room by two silent women spinning black wool (The women represent the Fates of Greek mythology, who spin a skein of wool which symbolizes a person's life. The fact that these women's thread is black creates an ominous sense of foreboding.). There his attention is drawn to a map and he finds himself enthralled by a large river coursing through the heart of Africa. He notices that the river resembled a snake, and that it was "fascinating." For some odd reason, this long, sinuous river tempted him, despite its reptilian connotations, which already alerts the reader to danger ahead. The river is akin to the serpent in the biblical story of Adam and Eve, offering the unwitting pair a forbidden fruit - wisdom, and a dark knowledge of oneself.
Also, throughout the journey, there are repeated references to both life and death. Uncannily, these two are always intertwined. For example, there is a theme of bones which is constantly recurring in Marlow's story. The Swede mentions a man who died, and whose skeleton was left sprawled on the ground until the grasses began to grow up through his ribcage. The grass represents life, and of course, the skeleton represents death. These two are woven together. Also, there is Kurtz's obsession with ivory (dental bone), and according to Marlow he has the appearance of the object of his fixation. From Marlow's description, Kurtz bears a skeletal resemblance even when he is alive. Conrad's frequent symbolic combinations of life and death is probably one of his numerous parallels to light and dark, echoing the fact that the two must exist stimultaneously - there cannot be without the other.
Conrad's book is based on the presence of light and dark within everyone, and in Marlow's journey the question is often posed of which is predominant. There are times when darkness usurps the light, others when it is the opposite. However, the darkness (evil) usually tends to prevail. Conrad is implying that a sense of evil resides in the core of every human, and therefore reigns at the centre of humanity, however veiled by morals, civilization and refinement. This is one of the main facts Marlow ascertains on his journey, for he sees darkness everywhere, even when there is light.
Just as the line between light and dark is indistinct, the barrier segregating civilization from savagery is equally obscure. In Africa, Marlow repeatedly encounters natives, and his crew is comprised of twenty cannibals. As they progress deeper into the heart of the forest, we can take note that black people are dehumanized. They are perpetually referred to in animalistic terms, and are treated as such. However, it is these "savages" who survive and thrive in the heart of darkness, and whose ways eventually engulf Kurtz. There is also the indication here that technology, civilization, and refinement have been rendered useless. For instance, Marlow encounters a graveyard of "dead" Machinery, rusted over and obsolete. Also, his vessel sinks to the bottom of the river, forcing him to remain at one of the stations for a long Period of time. Every character thought to be at the pinnacle of cultivation and etiquette either dies or becomes corrupted by his surroundings (Kurtz, Fresleven). It is apparent that civilization is utterly futile in such surroundings.
Kurtz serves as a prime example of a civilized gentleman who capitulates to his barbaric side due to his environment. Regardless of the respect and admiration showered upon him by his peers, not to mention the jealousy, he was at heart a hollow man, consumed by his greed for ivory. This is probably why he gave in so readily to his primitive instincts, partaking in the horrendous rituals of the natives, and letting his dark essence become the hub of his actions. Kurtz is also symbolic of the evil within our society, for people saw him as the "emissary of science and progress." He represents the person found deep within the recesses of our subconscious, the core of darkness ever-present beneath the gauzy layers of refinement and civility. "One evening coming in with a candle I was startled to hear him say a little tremulously, 'I am lying here in the dark waiting for death.' The light was within a Foot of his eyes." In this quote we can see that, symbolically, Kurtz is so overcome by darkness that he is blind to light. This is also embodied in an oil painting done by Kurtz, depicting a blindfolded woman surrounded by darkness but carrying a torch which casts a sinister light over her face. The blindfolded woman can be taken as a common Western symbol of justice and liberty, things that man has created to differentiate himself from the beasts and savages. The fact that the woman is enshrouded in darkness with only insufficient torchlight to guide her says a lot about the nature of our society.
The culmination of Marlow's journey leads into the heart of darkness, or in a more worldly sense, Hell. Heart of Darkness fosters the allusion that hell is within us, that it is the evil existing deep inside our souls. Marlow visits this place when he finally encounters Kurtz, and his innocent morals are challenged. He views firsthand the inhumanity man is capable of, and the journey begins to take on all the properties of a nightmare. When Kurtz himself is lying on his deathbed, he sees into his own heart, looks his personal hell in full view, and utters things which give Marlow a grim revelation as to what lies within that black abyss. Kurtz's final words, as he ends his voyage into his bitter core, are "The horror, the horror!" referring to what he sees inside himself.
The journey Marlow undertakes is seemingly in our own world, something which we reside in yet know so little about. We delude ourselves into believing that we can tame and subdue it, and that it will readily succumb and be molded to our good intentions. However, just as trying to harness the dark and primal nature within ourselves is impossible, this is an equally unattainable fantasy. Conrad's world is an embodiment of humanity, its ocean is its heart, and its impenetrable forest is its mind. Through Marlow's epiphany it is revealed that at the mouth of every river, at the core of every grove, subsists a perpetual darkness encased in light.
Below is a list of the most noteworthy symbols found throughout Heart of Darkness, as well as their meanings and implications in the novel.
· Congo River - Marlow's journey on the Congo River can be said to represent a journey into one's inner spirit. As Marlow progresses further up the river in his search for Kurtz, he begins to learn more and more about himself. He comes to realize that he probably has more in common with the natives than the smug Europeans who have come to civilize them. At the end of his journey, Marlow learns that everyone has a dark side to them, but that some people can conceal it better than others.
· ivory - The ivory symbolizes greed and the destructive nature of man. The managers and agents of the Company are so obsessed with obtaining ivory that they forget about their morals and so-called civilized ways.
· white worsted - Marlow discovers the white worsted wrapped around a negro's neck at the Outer Station. The fabric can be said to represent the attempt of the Europeans to colonize the natives, and the strangling effect it has on them.
· Kurtz's painting - The painting at the Central Station is perhaps the most extensive symbol in the novel. The painting is of a blindfolded woman carrying a lighted torch, which distorts her face. The woman likely symbolizes the Europeans who have come to civilize the natives. The torch she carries represents the European customs and values that they try to force upon the native Africans. The woman is blindfolded because the Europeans cannot "see" the negative effects that their customs have on the natives. Her face has become distorted because, to the natives, the European customs seem rather repulsive.
· Eldorado Exploring Expedition - This group is symbolic of the Whites' search for something that cannot be attained. Eldorado is historically known as a city of gold that never actually existed. However, the prosperity that could possibly be gained was so overwhelming for this group that they felt compelled to risk their lives for it.
· candle on the steamship - Marlow brings a candle into Kurtz's quarters as Kurtz is dying on the ship. The candle is symbolic of Kurtz's losing struggle for life. When Kurtz finally submits to death, Marlow blows out the candle.
· General Manager - The manager symbolizes all the immorality of European colonization. It is no coincidence that he ran the most disorganized and deplorable station in the region. The manager led his station not through intelligence and acumen, but rather, through his ability to stay healthy and invoke uneasiness. He was not interested in actually colonizing the region. His only concern was to attain as much ivory as possible.
· Kurtz - Kurtz represents man's dark side and what can happen when it envelops you completely. Kurtz's prolonged exposure to the untamed regions of the Congo has removed all his ties to civilization. He no longer feels satisfied with just being a mere mortal, so instead transforms himself into an omnipotent being. Kurtz's descent into madness is firmly established with his disturbing final words, "The horror! The horror!"
Joseph Conrad, the Art of Writing In Prose
Joseph Conrad, born Dec. 3 1857 Josef Teodor Konrad Korzeniowski, is an English novelist and short-story writer of Polish descent. His works are admired for the richness of his prose and the insightful depiction of human character in extraordinary situations. The basis of many of the characters, locations and events depicted in his novels stem from his own experience. Although most of his works are considered fiction, they have an underlying, autobiographical nature. This autobiographical nature of his work provides his characters, locations and events with a degree of accuracy that imparts additional reality to the stories. And with his masterful use of the English language, he is thus able to reflect his own life in the power of his prose.
Conrad is renowned for his powerful, and often romanticized depiction of a life at sea. It is a life with which he is very familiar. His life at sea began in 1875 firs as a passenger, then as an apprentice on a French merchant ship. A subsequent voyage as a steward on the Saint-Antoine to the West Indies, along the coast of Venezuela provided the setting for Nostromo (1904). The first mate aboard the Saint-Antoine, Dominic Cervoni, is the model for the hero of the novel.
1878 saw Conrad arrive in England for the first time, speaking only a few words in English. After passing examinations for second mate, he joined the Palestine on a voyage to Bangkok. Repairs caused by a storm and a collision with a boat in the North Sea interrupted the voyage. After these delays, the vessel attempted to reach its destination once more, making it as far as the coast of Indonesia before catching fire and sinking.
The events of this voyage are depicted in Youth (1898). Conrad changed the Palestine to Judea, but kept the original names of the captain and the first mate. The voyage took Conrad to the Far East for the first time. This setting provided him with material for later works, which in turn gave Conrad a reputation for portraying exotic places.
In 1884 Conrad sailed on the Narcissus from Bombay to Dunkirk. The voyage provided the material for The Nigger of Narcissus (1897). As mate on the Highland Forrest bound for the Far East again, Conrad's capitain was John McWhirr. Capitain McWhirr was later depicted as the central, Heroic character of the same name in Typhoon (1901).
During the voyage on the Highland Forrest, Conrad was injured by a falling spar. This incident was later recalled in Lord Jim (1900). Following his recovery in Singapore, he signed on as first mate aboard the Vidar, a steam ship trading amongst the native settlements of Malaysia. The interior river journeys on the Vidar formed the basis of The End Of The Tether (1902). This setting was also used for his first novels; Almayer's Folly (1895), An Outcast Of The Islands (1896) and Lord Jim.
Conrad unexpectedly obtained his first command in 1888 of the baroque Otago, sailing from Bangkok to Port Adelaide, after the previous captain died at sea. The events surrounding his first command appointment and the subsequent voyage are closely recalled in The Shadow Line (1916) and Falk (1903).
Pursuing his fascination with the African Continent, Conrad signed on as second in command, then in command of the S.S. Roi de Belges, a steam boat on the Congo in 1890. The impressions of this and subsequent trips on the Congo form the basis of Heart Of Darkness (1902). This is one of Conrad's best known works owing to Francis Ford Coppola's Aplocaplypse Now, which closely follows the novel's original plot and characters, in a different time setting.
Conrad's career and life on the sea ended in 1894. He settled in the southeast corner of England and commenced his literary career.
The Recurring Symbols of Light and Darkness
Throughout his narrative in Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness, Charlie Marlow characterizes events, ideas, and locations that he encounters in terms of light or darkness. Embedded in Marlow's parlance is an ongoing metaphor equating light with knowledge and civility and darkness with mystery and savagery. When he begins his narrative, Marlow equates light and, therefore, civility, with reality, believing it to be a tangible expression of man's natural state. Similarly, Marlow uses darkness to depict savagery as a vice having absconded with nature. But as he proceeds deeper into the heart of the African jungle and begins to understand savagery as a primitive form of civilization and, therefore, a reflection on his own reality, the metaphor shifts, until the narrator raises his head at the end of the novel to discover that the Thames seemed to 'lead into the heart of an immense darkness.'' The alteration of the light-dark metaphor corresponds with Marlow's cognizance that the only 'reality', 'truth', or 'light' about civilization is that it is, regardless of appearances, unreal, absurd, and shrouded in 'darkness'.
Marlow uses the contrast between darkness and light to underscore the schism between the seemingly disparate realms of civility and savagery, repeatedly associating light with knowledge and truth; darkness with mystery and deceptive evil. When Marlow realizes that his aunt's acquaintances had misrepresented him to the Chief of the Inner Station, Marlow states, 'Light dawned upon me', as if to explicitly associate light with knowledge or cognizance. It is significant then, that Marlow later associates light with civilization. He describes the knights-errant who went out from the Thames to conquer the vast reaches of the world as having brought light into the darkness, flanked with figurative torches alongside their swords, 'bearers of a spark from the sacred fire." That Marlow directly correlates knowledge and light, and light and civilization, necessarily implies that Marlow seeks to correlate knowledge and civilization. In a word, Marlow's delineation of the British imperialists implies that he understands civilization to be logical and rational, while he understands primitive social organizations to be backward and crude.
As Marlow proceeds deeper into the heart of the African jungle and begins to understand savagery as a primitive form of civilization and, therefore, a reflection on his own reality, the light-dark metaphor shifts. For example, when Marlow goes wandering in the jungle, he has contrasting experiences in the sunshine and in the shade that are ironic in light of the established metaphor. Contemplating the colonialists in the jungle, he remarks:
'I've seen the devil of violence, and the devil of greed, and the devil of hot desire; but, by all the stars! These were strong, lusty, red-eyed devils, that swayed and drove men - men, I tell you. But as I stood on the hillside, I foresaw that in the blinding sunshine of that land I would become acquainted with a flabby, pretending, weak-eyed devil of a rapacious and pitiless folly. How insidious he could be, too, I was only to find out several months later.'
That the 'blazing sunlight' would proffer to Marlow the realization that the civilized colonialists were little more than 'flabby, pretendingÖ devils' is ironic. In keeping with the established metaphor, it would be logical for him to glimpse the intelligence and inherent goodness of the colonialists in the sunlight. The pun on the metaphor continues when Marlow departs the sunshine for the shade and is aloud to partake of the natives in their 'natural' habitat: the darkness. We would expect to see the natives in all their wanton savagery, but instead the darkness is 'gloomy' and filled with a 'mournful stillness' . As Marlow describes, 'Black shapes crouched, lay, sat between trees, leaning against trunks, clinging to the earth, half coming out, half effaced with dim light, in all the attitudes of pain, abandonment, and despair.' Note that Marlow describes the emaciated natives as being 'half effaced with dim light'. He is just beginning to see the realities of civilization and progress, and the reality that the natives are not 'the enemy' or madly insane, but are sick, starving, dying, helpless, and weak; the partiality and dimness of the light reflects his half-awareness. As if to ensure the reader's cognizance of the pun, fate would have it that as Marlow departs for the station from the shade, he runs into one of the colonialists: 'I saw a high starched collar, white cuffs, a light alpaca jacket, snowy trousers, a clear silk necktie, and varnished boots.' The contrast between the starving, deprived, wretched natives and this overfed, overdressed man parodies the man, while his dress ('white', 'snowy', 'light', 'clear', 'varnished') again makes a pun of Marlow's understanding of light (the man's tie also stands in august contrast to the absurd white worsted the black man had wrapped around his neck in the shade ). These pun provides a context for Marlow's use of the metaphor later to critique the colonialists treatment of the savages: noticing a painting of Lady Justice in the manager's station, Marlow observes: 'The background was somber, almost black. The movement of the woman was stately, and the effect of the torchlight on the face was sinister.' With this, the metaphor has come full circle, and Marlow's understanding of civilization has been fundamentally altered.
We've now established that Marlow's perception of reality in regards to civilization changes: what he initially thinks of as rational and good, he concludes is irrational and evil. It remains to be shown that Marlow believes Kurtz to have been anything short of fundamentally evil. When Marlow first learns of Kurtz's activities in the jungle, he attributes Kurtz's moral downfall to his disconnect with civilization and reality, blaming the 'dark', 'mysterious' forces of the jungle for Kurtz's actions: 'Önever, never before, did this land, this river, this jungle, the very arch of this blazing sky, appear to me so hopeless and so dark, so impenetrable to human thought, so pitiless to human weakness.' Marlow gradually becomes aware that perhaps Kurtz's actions were quite natural, however, and reflect not a madman's sick abortion of human nature, but rather reflect human nature itself. Take, for example, Marlow's reaction to Kurtz's cannibalistic brutality: 'ÖI seemed at one bound to have been transported into some lightless region of subtle horrors, where pure, uncomplicated savagery was a positive relief, being something that has a right to exist - obviously - in the sunshine.' Savagery itself is not shocking to Marlow, but he is unable to reconcile its uninhibited, unapologetic treatment (manifested here by its existence in the light of day). This implies that Marlow understands savagery as something that exists in society, just not in a tangible, explicit form. Kurtz's government, less removed from its original formulation, is therefore a truer reflection on 'reality' than the trappings of civilization. When the harlequin warns Marlow not to judge Kurtz's brutality because Marlow can't understand the 'conditions' that led Kurtz to impale heads upon stakes outside his house, Marlow reflects: 'I shocked him excessively by laughing. Rebels! What would be the next definition I was to hear? There had been enemies, criminals, workers - and these were rebels.' But the harlequin's justification for Kurtz's actions is not unlike the justification individuals from all walks of life posit to justify the brutality of the sovereigns under which they are socialized. To further the Irony, Marlow stops just short of mocking the savages in their militaristic procession: 'Some of the pilgrims behind the stretcher carried his arms - two shot-guns, a heavy rifle, and a light revolver-carbine - the thunderbolts of that pitiful Jupiter.' And yet such displays are common in civil societies: carrying arms in the name of gods: flags, leaders; against individuals who might otherwise be brothers, but who happen to live on the wrong side of a collectively imagined border or believe in a different deity at the head of their collectively understood religion. In these ways, the natives
become a reflection of how absurdly we give up our bodies and our thoughts to the Durkheimian group, and shed light on the reality that is human nature.
This realization terrifies Marlow, as indicated by his pronouncement: "I don't want to know anything of the ceremonies used when approaching Mr. Kurtz,...Curious, this feeling came over me that such details would be more intolerable than those heads drying on the stakes under Mr. Kurtz's windows." Marlow is forced to conclude, however, that any partition between the reality of civilization and the seeming unreality of primitive savagery is diaphanous at best.
As Marlow comes to understand Kurtz's 'society' as a reflection on all civilizations, and Kurtz's actions as a reflection of the evil that resides in the hearts of all men, he must necessarily conclude that all civilizations are, in some small way, shrouded in darkness. His ultimate conclusion about societies is that they are a form of escapism from the darkness of human nature,: 'When you have to attend to [menial tasks], to the mere incidents of the surface, the reality - the reality, I tell you - fades. The inner truth is hidden - luckily, luckily. But I feel it all the same [Ö]" That the surface realities of social man's life are little but absurd trappings of civilization is evidenced by the socialization of the savages to the colonialist 'white' government. Marlow describes and parodies three savages who have, in Rousseau's tradition, accepted the yoke of the colonialist on the condition that they have power enough to enslave their fellow Africans. The most explicit instance of this mocking comes from his description of one of his shipmates: 'He was an improved specimen; he could fire up a vertical boilerÖto look at him was as edifying as seeing a dog in a Parody of breeches and a feather hat, walking on his hind-legs.' Marlow's parody of this man parallels his ironical lauding of civilization, describing a large, seemingly meaningless hole in the slope of a hill as perhaps being 'Öconnected with the philanthropic desire of giving criminals something to do.' Civilization, then, can be said to be a form of iridescent escapism that protects us from the reality buried under its surface.
In the end, Marlow is fatalistic about his findings, gazing around London and realizing that perhaps it is better that individuals should be filled with petty delusions than for Marlow to preach to them like some deluded, living Thomas Marley. In the end, however, Marlow's message is heard by his listeners, as the narrator raises his head at the end of the novel to discover that the Thames seemed to 'lead into the heart of an immense darkness,'' thus accepting, like Marlow, that the moral to be gained from Kurtz's experience is that the only 'reality', 'truth', or 'light' about civilization is that it is, regardless of appearances, unreal, absurd, and shrouded in 'darkness'.
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