Theme
of Imperialism in “Heart of
Darkness”
“Heart of
Darkness” abounds in several
themes. It has the theme of self-restraint, of the working of the subconscious
mind, of the exploration, of barbarism and primitivism and the theme of
imperialism. Conrad's handling of white imperialism was influenced by his own
visit to Congo and his rendering of Marlow’s conscious and sub-conscious
thoughts was also based upon his own reactions to what he himself witnessed in
Congo.
The keynote of the theme of
imperialism is struck at the very outset of Marlow’s narration of the ancient
Roman conquest of Britain. Their conquest was “robbery with violence” and
murder on a large scale. Marlow says that conquest can be excused only if the
conquerors perform some constructive work in the conquered country. The white
man certainly has a duty to whom he subdues and if he fails in this duty, his
government of the backward countries cannot be justified. “Power corrupts
man and absolute power corrupts absolutely.”
The white man had failed to
perform his functions in Congo. Instead of civilizing the savages, they became
exploiters. The Belgian trading companies sent their agents into the Congo for
trading purposes. The chief commodity which these Belgians found was ivory,
useless for the natives, while the white men collected ivory and sent it to
Europe. Ivory dominates the thoughts of the manger, of the brick-maker, of the
several white agents whom Marlow gives the name of “faithless
pilgrims”. Ivory not only dominates the thoughts of Mr. Kurtz but has
become his obsession. He collects more ivory than all the other agents taken
together. Ivory symbolizes the white man’s greed and their commercial mentality.
The greater the ivory collected by an agent, the greater is his achievement and
the higher is the promotion which he can expect. Nowhere do we find any service
being rendered by these white men in Congo.
The sights seen by Marlow
in Congo are very gloomy, depicting the misery of the natives, and the futility
of the white man’s seemingly useful work. He sees a lot of naked black people
moving about like ants. ‘A lot of people, mostly black and naked, moved
about like ants.”
He sees half a dozen men chained
to one another and each wearing an iron collar on his neck. These men are
criminals who have violated the laws and are being punished. Marlow feels
deeply upset at this sight. “I could see every rib, the joints of their
limbs were like knots in a rope; each had an iron collar on his
neck,
and all were connected together with a chain whose bights swung between them, rhythmically clinking.”
and all were connected together with a chain whose bights swung between them, rhythmically clinking.”
He sees black figures
crouching under the trees, leaning against the trunks, and clinging to the
earth, dying slowly. ‘They were dying slowly – it was very clear.' They
were not enemies, they were not criminals, they were nothing earthly now -
nothing but black shadows of disease and starvation,
lying confusedly in the greenish gloom. Here Marlow feels as
if he has entered into the gloomy circle of some inferno. It is obvious that
the white man’s indifference and his unconcern are responsible for this state
of affairs.
Few other sights also
indicate the hypocrisy of the white men wasting time and effort. Marlow sees
that a rock is being blasted though it does not stand in the way of the railway
line being laid. He sees some pieces of decaying machinery, a large heap of
rusty rails and a boiler lying unused in the grass. Marlow had seen a warship
firing its guns into the forest aimlessly. He found a touch of insanity in it.
This waste of effort and the unused machinery offer a sharp contrast to the
starving natives.
The futility of the white
man’s actions becomes more evident when we meet certain employers of the trading
Company. The manager of the Central Station could inspire neither respect not
love nor fear but only uneasiness. Marlow found nothing within this man. His
mind is full of fear lest he should be superseded by Mr. Kurtz. The brick-maker
is equally satirical and critical. The brick maker is described as a “papier-mâché
Mephistopheles” for his cunning. He makes no bricks but acts as a spy
for the manager. The men, loitering around the Central Station, are idlers.
They only gossip, speak ill of one another and hatch intrigues. Conrad conveys
his strong disapproval and disapprobation of these white men most
effectively.
The cannibal crew of
Marlow’s steamer is most efficient, hardworking and strong who deserve
encouragement but the way in which they are treated is disgusting. Without this
crew the steamer could not have gone ahead and yet the white bosses do not
bother whether or not these men are properly fed. The cannibal crew themselves
are exercising self-restraint and are not attacking the white men to eat their
flesh. Thus the white men are totally unconcerned about the welfare on whose
labour and toil they depend.
Mr. Kurtz, who held that
the white man should confer huge benefits upon the backward people, has done
nothing for the uplift of the natives. Rather, he has himself become a savage
in their company. ”Where there is no check on a man, the worst of him may
come out.”
He failed to exercise any
self-restraint, and begun to satisfy his various lusts without any limit. Even
in his prime of life he had written down the following words conveying an
opposite message: “Exterminate all the brutes.”
“Heart of
Darkness” conveys to us the
deceit, robberies, arson, murder, slave-trading, and cruelty in the Congo.
There is an incident of fire, and there is the long trek during which the
natives have to carry a heavy load on their heads. The chief accountant can
afford to dress perfectly when the natives around are disease-stricken and
starving. In this novel, indeed, the brutal futility of the Belgian imperialist
rule is memorably captured in image after image.
Conrad not only exposes the
futility and the failing of the Belgian imperialism over the Congo but also
reminds us of British imperialism in various countries of his time. Today white
imperialism has crumbled and most of the counties have become independent.
Conrad's accusation of imperialist rule in Congo had a valuable message for
both the exploiters and the exploited. In the business of
exploration, both exploiter and exploited are corrupted. Today
this message has only a historical interest. The evil imperialist rile has
ended, but other evils have come into existence.
Significance of the Title
of the Novel
The phrase “Heart
of Darkness” has two meanings. Literally, the title refers to the dark
continent of Africa known as the Congo. “Heart of Darkness” is
an appropriate title for the novel because Marlow describes his experiences of
the interior region of the continent which was known as Congo. The events at
the beginning and at the close of the novel occur outside Congo but the major
and the most significant events of the story take place in the Congo and on the
river Congo. The savages really belong to the heart of darkness.
There are other features of
the novel too, justifying the title “Heart of Darkness”. One
such feature is the description of the wild scenery of the thick, impenetrable
jungle, and the suggestive picture of the natives not fully visible to the
white men sailing over the river Congo. At one point in the novel Marlow says
that sailing up the river Congo was like traveling back to the earliest
beginnings of the world. He then refers to the great silence of the
impenetrable forests where the air was warm, thick, heavy and sluggish. Marlow
perceived no joy in the brilliance of the sunshine in that region. The long
stretches of the water-way ran on into a mob of wooded islands. One could lose
one’s way on that river as one might lose one’s way in a desert. The stillness
prevailing there was not the stillness of peace but of a relentless force brooding
over some mysterious purpose. Now, a description of this kind occurs later when
Marlow tells us that the night came suddenly and seemed to strike him blind.
Then, about three in the morning, Marlow heard a loud splash as though a gun
had been fired. When the sun rose, there was a white fog, very warm and damp,
and more blinding than the night. The fog remained there like something solid.
A little later in the morning the fog lifted as a shutter lifts. Marlow then
had a glimpse of the towering multitude of trees, of the immense jungle, and of
the blazing little ball of the sun hanging over it, all perfectly still. And
then the white fog came down again. There are other descriptive passages of the
same kind in the book, too.
The barbarism of the natives
reinforces the effect of these descriptive passages and intensifies the
atmosphere of mystery and fear. Reading about the natives, we get an even
stronger impression that we are in the midst of darkness. On one occasion, the
natives, seeing Marlow’s steamer sailing up the river, draw near the river-bank
in order to launch an attack upon the intruders. Marlow on this occasion hears
a muffled rattle, then a very loud cry, as of infinite desolation. This cry
gives rise to a feeling of terror in the hearts of all the white men. Then the
attack by the natives actually begins. The white men then hit back by firing
their rifles. In the fighting, the helmsman of the steamer is killed with a
spear hurled at him by a native. It is the backwardness and the ignorance of
the natives which creates the effect of darkness. The natives have merely
attacked the steamer because they have received instructions to do so from
their supremo, Mr. Kurtz. The personality of Mr. Kurtz is very important
because it is he who sums up the whole essence of the barbarism and the
savagery of the natives. Marlow has conveyed to us the demonic character of Mr.
Kurtz by the use of highly suggestive phrases. Instead of civilizing the
natives, Mr. Kurtz has himself become barbarian. Mr. Kurtz has begun to
identify himself with the savages. He has been presiding over their midnight
dances which always end with “unspeakable rites”. In Marlow’s
opinion, Mr. Kurtz has taken a high place among the devils of the land. He has
been experiencing “abominable satisfaction”, and he has been
gratifying without restraint his “various lust”. In short, Mr.
Kurtz has become part of the darkness of the Congo.
The phrase “Heart
of Darkness” has yet another meaning. It also stands for an
exploration of the depths of Marlow’s own mind or soul. The human mind may also
be regarded as a kind of Dark Continent whose exploration is even more
difficult than the exploration of Congo. The book called “Heart of
Darkness” may be treated as a journey by Marlow into his own sub-conscious
mind or into the sub-conscious mind of all mankind. Marlow’s journey into the
Congo is metaphorically a psychological and anthropological might-journey. The
book called“Heart of Darkness” is symbolically the story of an
essentially solitary journey involving a profound spiritual change in the
voyager. Marlow prepares us for such a journey at the very outset. But it is,
at the same time, a psychological and mystical journey. Marlow also tells us
indirectly that, by paying close attention to the surface reality of the story
and its external details, we would be able to arrive at an inner meaning. Thus
Conrad is here able to blend morality and adventure in a unique manner, as he
has done in some of his other novels as well.
There are many passages in
the course of Marlow’s narration in which he gives us glimpses of his own mind.
At one point he tells us in explicit terms that he has always hated and
detested lies because he has always found a taint of death and a flavour of
mortality in lies. In the same context, Marlow also says that it is not
possible for any man to convey to others the life-sensation of any period of
all existence. He says:“We live, as we dream – alone.”
At another point Marlow
says that the mind of man is capable of anything because everything is in it.
In order to endure the stark realities of human life, a man should possess an
inner strength. What a man needs is a deliberate belief, at yet another point
in the novel, Marlow tells us of the effect on his own mind of the savage sight
of human skulls hanging from the tops of the posts fixed to the ground outside
Mr. Kurtz's residence. Later, Marlow tells us of the effect on his mind of Mr.
Kurtz’s arguments defending his action in slipping away from the ship’s cabin
into the jungle. Towards the end of the novel, Marlow tells us the working of
his own mind when several persons come to him, one after the other, claiming
the packet or papers and the photograph which, Mr. Kurtz had given him for safe
custody; and he also reveals to us the working of his mind when he goes the
meet Mr. Kurtz’s Intended. In all these cases, Marlow tells us not about his
conscious thoughts but also tries to probe his sub-conscious mind. This
subconscious mind is also the heart of darkness which Marlow or Conrad tries to
explore.
A critic, commenting upon
the title of the novel, says that the “darkness” here is many
things: it is the unknown; it is the subconscious; it is also a moral darkness;
it is evil which swallows up Mr. Kurtz and it is the spiritual emptiness which
he sees at the centre of existence; but above all it is mystery itself, the
mysteriousness of man’s spiritual life.
Character
of Kurtz in Heart of Darkness
Kurtz, "a
universal genius", is a musician by profession. He also wrote for
newspapers. Physically Kurtz "looked
at least seven feet long." He had a family; his mother and his fiance.
Kurtz wanted to earn money for his family. Therefore, he decided to join the
Company and went to Africa. Marlow feels for Kurtz that he was poor enough to
go out into that dark wilderness: "He
had given me some reason to infer that it was his impatience of comparative
poverty that drove him out there". Once in Africa, Kurtz had realized
the importance of making money through ivory and it was not possible without
savagery, a practice of the "torchbearers
of Europe" that wanted to "exterminate all the brutes" for
snatching ivory and making them work as slaves.
Kurtz is also a symbol of European
plundering and loot in the heart of Africa, Congo. Kurtz roamed about and discovered
villages and a lake "but mostly his
expeditions had been for ivory". Kurtz had a "good lot of
cartridges" and "he raided
the country" and "Kurtz
got the tribe to follow him" and "they adored him". Kurtz came to the natives "with thunder and lightning, you
know-and they had never seen anything like it-and very terrible. He could be
very terrible". The Russian tells that Kurtz had power and such a
strong influence in the town that he could get anything that he liked. He was a
king without crown: "there was
nothing on earth to prevent him killing whom he jolly well pleased".
Kurtz is also represents the lust of
wealth and the madness of European civilization which didn't spare its
brotherly human races from its devilish plans. The Russian that nursed and
served Kurtz during his illness was also not spared by him. The Russian reminds
Marlow that "you can't judge Mr.
Kurtz as you would an ordinary man". He tells him an instance of
Kurtz' lust for ivory: "I had a
small lot of ivory the chief of that village near my house gave me. You see I
used to shoot game for them. Well, he wanted it, and wouldn't hear reason. He
declared he would shoot me unless I gave him the ivory and then cleared out of
the country".
Kurtz is a victim of the clash between
the new and the old. The "wilderness
had found him out early, and had taken on him a terrible vengeance for the
fantastic invasion". He further told Marlow that it seemed that the
wilderness whispered to Kurtz and "the
whisper had proved irresistibly fascinating. It echoed loudly within him
because he was hollow at the core". Kurtz could not distinguish the
difference between truth and reality. He went after ivory, the shadow, and
forgot of the real happiness of life which existed merely in living peacefully
with nature. So, if Kurtz was caught by lust of his inner darkness, he was also
captured by the gloomy revenge of the outer wilderness.
Kurtz is the truth of which is
discovered by Marlow while Kurtz was unable to ascertain the reality of his own
being; he seemed to have understood it very late though. The truth forced Kurtz
to go back into the village by leaving the rescue boat of Marlow. His attempt
failed because Marlow followed him in this savage and dreadful night: "I tried to break the spell-the heavy,
mute spell of the wilderness-that seemed to draw him to its pitiless breast by
the awakening of forgotten and brutal instincts, by the memory of gratified and
monstrous passions". Marlow brought him back but he could not bring
back his soul, his yearning and his will of staying back in the dark of Congo: "You are interrupting my plans now...
I will return. I...."
The Europeans' expeditions and
enlargement of their empires led to colonization of the weaker and vaster
nations. Once under the influence of the advanced Europeans, the natives of
these backward lands began suffering in the clutches of imperialism which
undoubtedly brought some mechanization and industry to the occupied areas but
it also treated real owners of the land as mere "brutes" and "savages".
They were yoked and used like animals as Marlow witnesses them "moving like ants". The
author shows the cruel practices used for extraction of valuable raw
materials.
Character
Sketch of Marlow
The character of Marlow has a deep
significance in the novel, "Heart
of Darkness" because it is him that brings out the truth of European
civilizations in Africa and the harsh facts of imperialistic forces are
revealed to the audience. This character, though a persona to the novelist,
does have certain characteristics which deserve appreciation though he does not
claim his nobility at any stage of the novel. He seems to have been an honest
narrator of a tale of horror, pain and agony of human existence. He unveils the
dark practices carried out in the name of trade and welfare: "The conquest of the earth, which mostly means the taking it
away from those who have a different complexion or slightly flatter noses than
ourselves, is not a pretty thing when you look into it too much".
Marlow, a seaman, was out of job for a
certain period. He needed a ship but got none. A childhood desire to visit the
African river which resembled "an
immense snake uncoiled, with its head in the sea" invited his thirst
of wandering and he approached establishment for his appointment out there. He
got appointed quite smoothly owing to two things: his aunt's relations in the
higher administration and the murder of one of the ship captains of the company
in Congo. So, they hired Marlow. However, he relates that while his stay in the
company office in England, he found "something
ominous in the atmosphere" and "something
not quite right". The most noticeable thing was two women knitting
wool that he remembers as: "Often
far away there I thought of these two, guarding the door of Darkness, knitting
black wool as for a warm pall".
His reporting of the wilderness
of Africa:
Marlow reports that the landscape
"seemed to beckon with a
dishonouring flourish before the sunlit face of the land a treacherous appeal
to the lurking death, to the hidden evil, to the profound darkness of its
heart". Marlow calls the land of Congo "prehistoric" and he
considered himself among "the first
of men taking possession of an accursed inheritance, to be subdued at the cost
of profound anguish and of excessive toil". Soon they reached land. He
observed some natives with gestures: "The
prehistoric man was cursing us, praying to us, welcoming us-who could
tell"? Marlow refers to the practices of dark ages with the deeds of
Europeans in Congo: "we were travelling
in the night of first ages, of those ages that are gone, leaving hardly a
sign-and no memories".
We are made aware of the two-way misery
of African natives: they were being eaten up by their poverty and hunger as
well as by the unstirred anger of the white men that killed them without any
resort. The blacks were escaping the invading whites and in doing so, they were
being slaughtered either by hunger or they were being caught by the "civilized" white man that yoked
them for drudgery. The natives are also enemies of each other. There is tribal
system and utterly divided Africa which lured was engulfed in darkness and
invited a rather graver darkness of greed and lust from outside its heart. The
Europeans did come to rescue "ivory"
in the name of humanity which never existed in their hearts.
On his way to Africa, jointly conquered
by the British and the French, Marlow observed a new world. This world was full
of agonies and pangs of mankind yet unheard in the rather straightforward
civilized world from where he had hailed. He observed a French warship firing
in the woods while "nothing could happen" there but they still
believed that "there was a camp of
natives...enemies". Marlow feels that "there was a touch of insanity in the proceeding". On reaching
the Company office in the country, Marlow observes the misery of the natives
that were set to work by the company: "I
could see every rib, the joints of their limbs were like knots in a rope; each
had an iron collar on his neck, and all were connected together with a chain
whose bights swung between them, rhythmically clinking." By seeing
these black men, he understands that "these
men could by no stretch of imagination be called enemies."
People were dying of fever amid the
dancing season of death and gloom. Still they continued the dark trade in the
heart of Africa, Congo. Marlow declares Africa "prehistoric" because he finds no development or progress
except natural wilderness engulfing man. There were either thick forests or
rivers. Life seemed to have been in the very beginnings there. The rotten and
damned place was by no means worth living but white men were "being held there captive by a
spell...of course you may be too much of a fool to go wrong-too dull even to
know you are being assaulted by the powers of darkness". Marlow tells
during all the voyages there was silence and wilderness and the "word ivory would ring in the air for a
while-and on we went again into the silence". The white men were dying
but they were not willing to leave the spot either owing to their greed or the
spell of the dark place of Africa.
Journey
to Sub-consciousness
The
novel “Heart of Darkness” clearly shows the influence of
psychology and psychiatry which were emerging as developed sciences in Conrad’s
time. “Heart of Darkness” gives us vivid descriptions of
Marlow’s outward experiences in the Congo and of the thoughts and ideas which
crossed the mind during his stay in Congo.
Marlow
appears not only as a man of action but also as a thinker who reflects upon
everything that he observes. He is a meditative man who always keeps examining
his own thoughts arising in his mind. Thus the book is to be treated as
Marlow’s exploration of his conscious and sub-conscious mind. The phrase “Heart of
Darkness” means the interior of the Congo and also the inmost depths
of the human mind.
The novel
gives us the internals and the externals. The externals are the scenes,
incidents and the persons with whom Marlow meets while the internals are Marlow
own thoughts which rise in his sub-conscious. In the beginning, Marlow is
described sitting in the pose of a Buddha. He tells that the city of Brussels
made him think of a “whited sepulchre”. When speaking about his
encounter with the two knitting-women, he also describes his mental reaction to
them: “Hail, old knitter of black wool. Those who are about to die salute
you!”
After seeing
the knitting-women and after meeting his aunt, Marlow feels as if, instead of
going to the centre of a continent, he is starting for the centre of the earth.
He describes his reactions to the doctor who examines him that during his
travels through the Congo he really became a subject for a psychiatrist.
'The old doctor felt my pulse,
evidently thinking of something else the while. "Good, good for
there,"
he mumbled, and then with a certain eagerness asked me whether I would let him measure my head.
he mumbled, and then with a certain eagerness asked me whether I would let him measure my head.
Being a
passenger on a steamer, Marlow had no duties to perform and he felt his
isolation among the members of the crew. Then on seeing a warship firing into
the forest aimlessly, he finds the action of the warship unintelligible and
feels a touch of insanity in it. Later, he sees half a dozen black men linked
together with a chain. This sight produces a deep effect on Marlow, giving rise
to awful thoughts in his mind. ”I could see every rib, the joints of their
limbs were like knots in a rope; each had an iron collar on his neck, and
all were connected together with a chain whose bights swung between them, rhythmically
clinking.”
Marlow’s
encounter with the manager of the Central Station and the brick-maker also
gives rise to many thoughts in his mind. The manager seems to be a man with
nothing inside him, while the brick-maker appears to be cunning. He makes no
bricks but acts as a spy for the manager. He further says that no man can
convey to others a dream-sensation or the life-sensation of his existence.
Marlow then adds: “We live, as we dream – alone.”
Marlow
continues to meditate upon whatever he sees and overhears. At the very outset
he says that, in performing the daily duties, a man comes to know the surface
reality of life. In command of a steamer on river Congo, Marlow feels like a
blind-folded man driving a motor-van over a bad road. Then Marlow describes his
reactions to the scenery which he witnesses. He says: “We penetrated deeper
and deeper into the heart of darkness.”
Marlow
discovers a book on the subject of seamanship in the deserted hut. Such a book
being found in that hut was something wonderful, says Marlow; but still more
surprising were the notes written in pencil in the margin. The notes seemed to
be in cipher. Later, Marlow learns that the notes were written not in cipher
but in the Russian language. Here Marlow also observes that no man in this
world is safe from trouble at any stage in his life.
Marlow’s
reflections upon his cannibal crew are also noteworthy. Marlow feels amazed to
find that, in spite of their gnawing hunger, they did not kill the white men on
board. Marlow looks at these cannibals with great curiosity. He asks whether it
was superstition, patience, fear, or some kind of primitive honour, which
prevented those cannibals from attacking the white men. Marlow says: “It
takes a man all his inborn strength to fight hunger properly.”
Then Marlow
gives reflections upon the helmsman killed by a native. The gloomy and scary
expression in the dead helmsman’s eyes haunts Marlow. He says that the helmsman
had been lacking self-restraint. There are also Marlow’s reflections upon Mr. Kurtz.
He has been told that Mr. Kurtz had collected, more ivory than all the other
agents taken together. Mr. Kurtz was gifted with eloquence.
Marlow also
gives his own intriguing reactions in telling the facts about Mr. Kurtz. Mr.
Kurtz has now become an embodiment of evil. To Marlow it seems that Mr. Kurtz
has taken a high seat among the devils of the land. Mr. Kurtz's repute has
begun to cast upon Marlow’s mind. Marlow later became a devoted friend of Mr.
Kurtz and begins to admire him despite his demonic character. Mr. Kurtz
was “the nightmare of his choice”. When Mr. Kurtz has slipped
away from the ship into the forest, Marlow shows his loyalty by bringing him
back. When Mr. Kurtz fiancée asks him what Mr. Kurtz's last words before death
had been, Marlow tells her a lie and says: "The last word he pronounced
was – your name."
As Mr. Kurtz
had done no favour to Marlow, this loyalty can only be taken as Marlow’s own
response to the primitivism and barbarism. If Marlow had stayed for some time
longer in the Congo, he too would have followed the same path which Mr. Kurtz
had begun to tread. It is here that we really find Marlow’s subconscious mind
working. Marlow has been able to convey to us indirectly and subtly the
influence of Mr. Kurtz’s primitivism upon himself. In the last one-third of the
novel Marlow tires to lay bare his sub-conscious mind.
Racism in Heart of Darkness
Joseph Conrad develops
themes of personal power, individual responsibility, and social justice in his
novel Heart of Darkness. His book
has all the trappings of the conventional adventure tale – mystery, exotic
setting, escape, suspense, unexpected attack. Chinua Achebe concluded, “Conrad, on the other hand, is undoubtedly
one of the great stylists of modern fiction and a good story-teller into the
bargain”. Yet, despite Conrad’s great story telling, he has also been
viewed as a racist by some of his critics. Achebe, Singh, and Sarvan, although
their criticisms differ, are a few to name. Normal readers usually are good at
detecting racism in a book. Achebe acknowledges Conrad camouflaged racism
remarks, saying, “But Conrad chose his
subject well – one which was guaranteed not to put him in conflict with
psychological pre- disposition…” Rereading of Heart of Darkness, with a curious eye, suggests some racism Conrad
felt toward the natives that one does not spot usually. Racism is portrayed in
Conrad’s book, but one must acknowledge that back in the eighteen hundreds
society conformed to it. Conrad probably would have been criticized as being
soft hearted rather than a racist back in his time. Conrad constantly referred
to the natives, in his book, as black savages, niggers, brutes, and “them”, displaying ignorance toward the
African history and racism towards the African people. Conrad wrote, “Black figures strolled out listlessly… the beaten nigger groaned somewhere”.
“They passed me with six inches, without a glance, with the complete,
deathlike indifference of unhappy savages. Achebe, also, detected Conrad’s
frequent use of unorthodox name calling, “Certainly
Conrad had a problem with niggers. His in ordinate love of that word itself
should be of interest to psychoanalysts” Conrad uses Marlow, the main
character in the book, as a narrator so he himself can enter the story and
tells it through his own philosophical mind. Conrad used “double speak” throughout his book. Upon arriving at the first
station, Marlow commented what he observed. “They were dying slowly – it was very clear. They were not enemies, they
were not criminals, they were nothing earthly now, nothing but black shadows of
disease and starvation lying confusedly in the greenish gloom”. Marlow felt
pity toward the natives, yet when he met the station’s book keeper he changed
his views of the natives. “Moreover I
respected the fellow. Yes. I respected his collars, his vast cuffs, his brushed
hair. His appearance was certainly great demoralization of the land he kept up
his appearance”. Marlow praised the book keeper as if he felt it’s the
natives’ fault for living in such waste. The bureaucracy only cared about how
he looked and felt. The bookeeper did not care for the natives who were
suffering less than fifty feet from him. He stated the natives weren’t
criminals but were being treated as if they were, but at the same time he respected
the book keeper on his looks instead of despising him for his indifference.
Conrad considered the Africans inferior and doomed people. Frances B. Singh, author of ‘The
Colonialistic Bias of Heart of Darkness’ said “The African natives, victims of Belgian exploitation, are described as
‘shapes,’ ‘shadows,’ and ‘bundles of acute angles,’ so as to show the
dehumanizing effect of colonialist rule on the ruled”. Another similar
incident of “double speak” appeared
on the death of Marlow’s helmsman. Marlow respected the helmsman, yet when the
native’s blood poured into Marlow’s shoes, “To tell you the truth, I was morbidity anxious to change my shoes and
socks”. How can someone respect yet feel disgusted towards someone? Singh
looks into this question by stating, “The
reason of course, is because he (Marlow) never completely grants them (natives)
human status: at the best they are a species of superior hyena”. As I have
mentioned before, Conrad was not only racist but also ignorant. He would often
mix ignorance with racism when he described the natives. “They howled and leaped and spun and made horrid faces, but what
thrilled you was just the thought of their humanity – like yours – the thought
of your remote kinship with this wild and passionate uproar. Ugly. “The prehistoric man was cursing us, praying
to us, welcoming us – who could tell?”
The end result of Conrad’s
ignorance of not knowing the behavior of African people concluded his division
of the social world into two separate categories: “us,” the Europeans, and “them,”
the Africans. Achebe concludes Conrad’s ignorance towards the natives by
stating, “Heart of Darkness projects the
image of Africa as ‘the other world,’… a place where man’s vaunted intelligence
and ferment are finally mocked by triumphant bestiality”. “Heart of Darkness was written, consciously
or unconsciously, from a colonialistic point of view”. Conrad didn’t write
his book to the extreme of racism. Overall, the natives appeared better humans
than the Europeans in Heart of Darkness. Conrad’s ignorance led to his
conformity to racism. His ignorance of not completely “granting the natives human status” leads him to social
categorization. C. P. Sarvan wrote in his criticism, quoting Achebe, “Racism
and the Heart of Darkness,” “Conrad sets up Africa ‘as a foil to Europe, a
place of negations… in comparison with which Europe’s own state of spiritual
grace will be manifest.’ Africa is ‘the other world…”
Theme of Self Restraint in
Heart of Darkness
Self-restraint is certainly
one of the themes of the novel “Heart of Darkness”. Self-restraint
is only a subsidiary or secondary theme. This theme has been handled by Conrad
very skillfully, and almost subtly, so that it does not project itself on our
attention or undermine the other themes.
The white men who have gone
to the Congo for trade show no self-restraint but unlimited greed. They are all
there to collect ivory; and ivory has begun to dominate their thoughts. Ivory
has become their obsession. The manager has begun to feel jealous of Mr. Kurtz
because Mr. Kurtz collects more ivory than all the other agents put together.
The desire of these men for ivory knows no bounds.
Then, all these men seek
power and authority; and they show no self-restraint in this aim. The most
striking example of greed and self-aggrandizement is to be found in Mr. Kurtz
who knows no self-restraint at all. Mr. Kurtz becomes the embodiment of the
passion for ivory and for power. Many times he was heard saying: “my ivory,
my station, my intended, my career, my …”
Indeed, Mr. Kurtz has become
a devil seeking wealth in the form of ivory and seeking power in the form of
control over the natives. He has collected all the ivory in the Congo. On one
occasion he got ready even to kill his friend, the Russian, because he was having
a small quantity of ivory which he did not wish to part with and which Mr.
Kurtz had demanded from him. Mr. Kurtz's passion for power also knows no
bounds. He has been acquiring more and more power over the savages till he has
become in their eyes a god. If any native rebels against his authority, Mr.
Kurtz has him executed. The time comes when nothing on earth can prevent him
from killing whomsoever he wants to kill. And he still has more plans for his
self-aggrandizement.
Nor does Mr. Kurtz show any self-restraint
in the satisfaction of his primitive instincts which have begun to dominate
him. Mr. Kurtz has become an active sharer in the demonic practices of the
savages. He presides over their midnight dances which always end with “unspeakable
rites” includIing sex-orgies, sadistic and masochistic practices,
human sacrifice and other obnoxious acts. He indulgence in all such proceedings
has assumed vast scope and has begun enjoying “abominable
satisfactions”. He now gives a free outlet to his “monstrous
passions” in the company of the savages.
Mr. Kurtz shows no
self-restraint even in his desire for possessing things and for owning things.
Indeed, his sense of ownership and proprietorship has assumed abnormal
proportions. He has developed a feeling that everything belongs to him. And yet
there is emptiness in his soul. His mind is by no means insane, but his soul
has certainly gone mad. He is “hollow at the core”, as Marlow puts it.
And yet this man is able to stir feelings of friendship and respect in Marlow.
Here we are faced with a paradox.
There is also a lack of
self-restraint in the Russian who has developed an attitude of worship towards
Mr. Kurtz. The Russian, a highly intelligent and well-educated man, begins to
adore Mr. Kurtz. According to the Russian, Kurt’s has taught him many things
and has enabled him to look into the essence of things. The Russian regards Mr.
Kurtz as one of the immortals. Surprisingly Marlow himself develops an attitude
of respect towards Mr. Kurtz. He has discovered that Kurtz is hollow at the
core and has taken a high place among the devils of the land. And yet Marlow
himself falls under Mr. Kurtz's influence. When Mr. Kurtz has slipped away from
the ship’s cabin into the forest, Marlow follows him to bring him back. Marlow
writes: “I did not betray Mr. Kurtz – it was ordained. I should never betray
him – it was written I should be loyal to the nightmare of my choice.”
Marlow also says that Mr.
Kurtz had conquered his soul which is totally untainted by selfishness. Marlow
interpret Mr. Kurtz's last words as indicative of Mr. Kurtz's victory over the
evil within him. Thus we can safely affirm that even Marlow shows a lack of
self-restraint in his feelings of admiration and regard for Mr. Kurtz.
This theme of self-restraint
finds expression also in the manner in which Marlow has depicted the cannibal
crew on his steamer. These cannibals were very hungry, and they could easily
have killed some of the white men on board the steamer and consumed their flesh
but they showed self-restraint. This self-restraint on the part of the
cannibals is quite puzzling and highly commendable, though surprising. In
respect of self-restraint the cannibals score a point over the civilized white
men. Even the white manager of the Central Station shows restraint in his
mental make-up. He refrains from giving orders to Marlow and says that Marlow
has the right to decide whether he should continue the voyage to the Inner
Station or stop for a few hours to find out whether the savages would attack
the steamer.
According to an eminent
critic, restraint or self-restraint is a major theme in “Heart of
Darkness”.Mr. Kurtz has no restraint because he has no urgent work to do
and has no belief. Mr. Kurtz's extremism and faith are the opposite of true belief
which is needed to tackle darkness. On account of this lack of moral equipment
and his greed of money and power, Mr. Kurtz is unable to cope with the forces
of savagery and evil within him. Mr. Kurtz's only defence is his eloquence but
this is not enough. These heads, stuck to the poles show that Mr. Kurtz lacked
restraint in the gratification of his various lusts. The native helmsman,
steering Marlow’s steamer, also showed a lack of restraint which results in his
murder.
“In fact nobody in the
story has any real restraint except the most savage of all men, the
half-starved cannibals on board the steamer who amaze Marlow by the fact that
they restrained themselves from tucking into the pilgrims.”
This true restraint on the
part of the cannibals is incomprehensible to Marlow. Our critic further says
that Marlow’s failure to solve this mystery and many other mysteries in the
story is linked to a lack of restraint in the language which Marlow uses.
Marlow occasionally employs excessive rhetoric, thus showing his lack of
restraint in the use of language also.
Significance of the Congo
River
For Marlow, the journey on
the Congo River is one of the most difficult and ominous journeys he will ever
take. The fact that it takes him around and not completely into the jungle is
significant of Marlow's psychological journey as well. He never really goes on
land but watches the shore from the outside. The only time he goes on shore he
finds a wasteland. For Marlow the jungle of the Congo is representative of evil
that man is capable of. In Heart of Darkness, it seems that the further Marlow
travels into the jungle, the deeper he looks into himself. All this time is
spent on the Congo River as he looks from the outside. This is symbolic as he
is looking at his soul from the outside but never really sees himself until he
goes on land to get Kurtz. When he arrives on land is symbolic of when he looks
the deepest into himself. He goes to find Kurtz on his deathbed and is given
the choice to take over for him as a god among an African tribe. Marlow is
faced with the ultimate choice between good and evil. For a moment it is
uncertain what choice Marlow will make. But, unlike Kurtz, Marlow picks the
good over evil, as he rescues Kurtz back to the steamer. The fact that Marlow sailed
along the Congo River, around the jungle, and not actually into the jungle is
an important symbol also. Marlow never walks the path that Kurtz did to
self-destruction. He went around the jungle to avoid getting captured by evil.
Kurtz was a decent Englishman until he gave into the desires of his heart of
darkness. Kurtz spent all his time in the jungle and eventually forgot all of
his self-control, manners, and upbringing. He truly looked in the deepest part
of himself and found that his evil desires would reign. This is symbolic
because he was deep inside the jungle. In this respect Conrad uses to men to
show the reader both the good and bad of humankind. He shows the true evil and
good that man is capable of If proper restraints had been there would Kurtz
have done things differently? The fact that no one was around to keep Kurtz in
check helped him succeed in becoming capable of the immense evil he became.
Marlow had his shipmates there to keep him responsible. When he left the
steamboat there wasn't anyone to restrain Marlow. He was face to face with
himself and his human desires, but as he looked at Kurtz and what the evil had
done to him he saw the consequences of choosing evil. If Marlow hadn't seen the
consequences would he have acted differently? In the beginning of the novel,
Marlow talks of things as if they are happening far away from him and not
actually happening close by which represents that he is on the outside looking
in. He also talks about a fog that settles over the river. This fog represents
a distortion of what lies ahead. As he makes his decisions based on what he
thinks is right but really he has no idea of what will happen to him or his
crew. As the novel progresses the reader will start to understand all of these
themes and symbols that the Congo River represents. It represents the shedding
of layers of the soul and taking a look into the desires of the heart. By the
end it seams as though the reader has taken a look into their own soul to find
out what ultimately dominates them. Will they find themselves to be a Marlow; a
person who exercises their capacity for good, or will they find themselves to
be a Kurtz; a person capable of an immense heart of darkness?
Symbolism
in ‘Heart of Darkness’
The
complexity with profundity of most of the modern writers leads them to fill
their wirings with greater significance than we find on the surface. Symbolism
means a deeper meaning in what has been written than meets the eye. “Heart
of Darkness” is replete with symbols. Every person and everything
means more than what we find on a superficial view. The novel is based on the
facts of history as well as on the facts of Conrad's own life; but Conrad has
tried to convey the evasive and elusive truth underlying both the historical
facts and his personal experiences.
Almost every
character in “Heart of Darkness” has some symbolic
significance. The central figure Mr. Kurtz, firstly,
symbolizes the greed and the commercial and corrupt mentality of
the western countries. Secondly, he symbolizes the white
man’s love for power. “Power corrupts man and absolute
power corrupts absolutely.”
Thirdly, the change,
which comes over him during his stay among the savages, symbolizes the influence
of barbarism upon a civilized man. It also symbolizes the
irresistible influences of barbarism upon a civilized man cut off from
civilized society. “Where there is no check on a man, the worst of him may
come out.”
Finally, Mr. Kurtz symbolizes the repentant
sinner. Mr. Kurtz's desire to collect the maximum quantity of ivory
conveys the exploitation of the backward people of Congo by the white
colonizers.
Marlow too has a symbolic role in
the novel. Firstly, he symbolizes the spirit of
adventure and a love of knowledge. Secondly,
he symbolizes the thoughtful observer of human life and
the thoughtful student of human nature. He also symbolizes
a philosophical approach to human life by constantly
meditating upon what he observes. To some extent, he too symbolizes the influence
of savagery because his own primitive instincts have been awakened
when he heard a lot about Mr. Kurtz’s way of life and then by his close
personal contact with that man.
The subsidiary
characters too possess symbolic significance. There is the manager of
the Central Station. It is wrong to say that he symbolizes inefficiency. If he
had been inefficient, he would not have been able to continue at his post. He
symbolizes spiritual emptiness. If he is unable to inspire
respect or love or fear, it is because he is spiritually barren and
hasno originality and no solid ideas in
his head, though he can do his manager’s work like a machine.
The brick-maker acts
as a “papier-mâché Mephistopheles” and symbolizes cunning
and trickery. There are numerous white agents or traders loitering
around the Central Station because they are idle. These men are described by
Marlow as “faithful pilgrims”.
The cannibal
crew on Marlow’s steamer really symbolizes efficiency because
they do not shirk work. More than efficiency, they symbolize self-restraint
because they do not try to satisfy their hunger by killing and eating white
men’s flesh.
The knitting
women in the beginning of the story symbolize the Fates who
determine the future of every human being on the earth. These knitting women
symbolize the danger which lies in store for Marlow. In the outer room the
two women knitted black wool, feverishly.
The
majestic-looking native woman, who appears on the riverbank
when Mr. Kurtz is being taken away, symbolizes a woman’s strong devotion and
steadfast loyalty to her lord and lover.
Mr. Kurtz's
fiancée also symbolizes loyalty but her loyalty is that of an
innocent, inexperienced woman who is deluded by false appearances and does not
know the ways of the world. The fiancée symbolizes the hold of an illusion upon
a woman’s mind.
The Russian symbolizes
inquisitiveness or the desire to learn. But he also symbolizes loyalty and
fidelity, the two virtue which Marlow also symbolizes.
Many sights
seen by Marlow also possess symbolic significance. The French
warship firing aimlessly into the forest, and the rock being
blasted with gun powder but without any purpose symbolize the sense of futility
and an aimless endeavor. Ivory symbolizes the white
men’s greed.
Then there is
the sight of one over-worked and starved native labourers dying
slowly of disease and starvation. The condition of these men symbolizes the
sufferings of the natives who do not receive any sympathy from the white
colonizers. “They were dying slowly … They were not enemies, they were
not criminals, they were nothing earthly now, - nothing but black shadows of
disease and starvation.’
The chain-gang with
half a dozen native men chained to one another, and each wearing an iron collar
round his neck, symbolize the white man’s sway over the ignorant backward
people without any concern for their welfare.“… the joints of their limbs
were like knots in a rope; each had an iron collar on his neck, and all
were connected together with a chain whose bights swung between them, rhythmically clinking.
were connected together with a chain whose bights swung between them, rhythmically clinking.
The
description of the natural scenery also serves a
symbolic purpose. The scenery is wild and awe-inspiring. The silence of the
woods and the abundance of trees symbolizes mystery and horror. Marlow has
given us many pictures of the thick, dense, matted forests. “And the river
was there – fascinating – deadly – like a snake.”
The city
of Brussels symbolizes the inner corruption and degeneracy of
white man’s civilization. Brussels seems to Marlow to be the white sepulcher –
something outwardly pleasant and holy but inwardly rotten.
Finally,
Marlow’s whole journey into the Congo has symbolic
significance besides its literal meaning. It may be regarded as a journey into
subconscious mind of Marlow in particular and of mankind in general. “Heart
of Darkness” is the story of a journey involving spiritual change in
the voyager. Symbolically, Marlow’s journey into the Congo is an arduous
physical activity or adventure. The literal meaning of ‘heart of
darkness’ is the inmost region of Congo; but symbolically this phrase
means the inmost region of man’s mind or soul. As Marlow stands for Conrad, the
novel becomes a kind of Conrad’s exploration of his own mind during his visit
to the Congo in 1890. “In the business of exploration, both exploiter and
exploited are corrupted.’
In short, the
imperial exploitation of the Congo has effectively been conveyed through a
symbolic description of numerous scenes and situations.
Feminist
Perspective of Heart of Darkness
In Joseph Conrad’s novel Heart of Darkness, Marlow’s
view of women embodies the typical 19th century view of women as the inferior
sex. There are only three relatively minor female characters in Heart of
Darkness: Marlow’s aunt, Kurtz’s mistress, and Kurtz’s "Intended."
Marlow mentions these female characters in order to give the literal aspect of
his tale more substance. While they definitely play specific roles in the
story, they do not relate with the primary theme of the story. The
primary theme focuses more on how Marlow’s journey into the heart
of darkness contrasts the "white"
souls of the black people and the "black"
souls of the whites who exploit them, and how it led
to Marlow’s self-discovery.
In the beginning of Marlow’s story, he tells how he,
"Charlie Marlow, set the women to
work--to get a job." He tells this in the context that he was so
desperate to travel in the trade industry that he did what was unthinkable in
those times: he asked a woman for financial assistance. The woman, his aunt,
also transcended the traditional role of women in those times by telling Marlow
that she would be delighted to help him and to ask her for help whenever he
needed it. This incident did not have much to do with the symbolic theme of the
story; it simply served to tell the reader how Marlow managed to be able to
travel to the Congo. On a higher level, it was intended by Conrad to illustrate
Marlow’s opinion of women’s inferior role
in society, which embodied traditional 19th century
society.
The two other female characters are not mentioned
until much later in the story, after Marlow has arrived at the Inner Station.
When Marlow reaches this point in his tale, he jumps ahead and tells a little
bit about The Intended, Kurtz’s fianceé who was to
marry Kurtz when he returned. The Intended woman does not appear until the very
end of the novelette, in which Marlow visits her and lies to her about Kurtz’s
dying words. The Intended had a more significant role in the story than
Marlow’s aunt; however, her role as a whole was somewhat limited and did not affect
the main theme of the story.
The third female character, Kurtz’s African
mistress, is briefly mentioned two times near the end of the novel. She appears
while Marlow is talking to the Russian, and the Russian growls at her and says
she makes mischief. She appears a bit later on when Marlow and Kurtz depart on
the steamboat, and is not scared off when Marlow blows the whistle. She
stretches her arms out towards the steamer, and that is the last time she is
seen.
The limited depiction of female characters in Joseph
Conrad’s Heart of Darkness and the way in which the three female characters are
referred to by Marlow reflect Marlows view of women as inferior. Marlow’s
opinion of women manifests the typical 19th century views of women. While the
women do play key roles in the plot of the story, they do not influence the
main theme of the story, which is of Marlow’s exploration of the darkness which
is inherent in the human soul. This darkness is evident in the savage blacks,
but more so in the savage treatment of blacks by whites who call themselves
civilized.
Narrative
Technique in Heart of Darkness
The final
years of 19th century saw a change not only in theme but also in the technique
of narration. The change in the narrative technique was twofold – the distancing
of the author from the text and a scrambling up of the narrative in terms of
chronology. Heart of Darkness, utilizes both these techniques and its narrative
technique is in perfect harmony with the theme of psychological degeneration
depicted in the book In other to prevent Kurtz’s moral fall from lapsing into
obtrusive judgment of the author, Conrad presented Kurtz through the eye of at
least one other character whom we can guess and from an opinion about. The
story opens as a nameless narrator aboard the cruising yawl Nellie, anchored in
the Thames River in England, begins to relate secondhand the story of Charlie
Marlow's river voyage in the Belgian Congo.
The story in
Heart of Darkness is narrated by Marlow, the first person narrator. The ‘care’ of the story is almost primitive
in its simplicity. Kutrz, an ivory trader from a European country, ventures
into Congo which lies in the heart of the ‘dark continent’ Africa. He soon
becomes a very efficient agent but in his bid for exploiting the natures and
gradually adopts their savagery, totems and taboos. He wields more power over
them that he refuses to leave their company even when he is fill and needs
life-saving medicines. But ultimately under compulsion by the European he
boards their boat only to die with the words ‘horror’, ‘horror’ on his lips.
The entire
tale is narrated by Marlow who is also the narrator in other Conradian novels
like Chance, Lord Jim, and Youth. Initially Marlow, too had been awed by the
success of Kurtz no longer remains the ‘disembodied voice’ of a genius but a human being to
be judged and commented upon. Marlow had his own system of values and judgment
predominant among them being human discipline__ restraint. Thus while speaking
of the Negro who jumps up when their boat is attacked by tribal and is killed.
Marlow comments on Kurtz: He had no restraint, no restraint__ just like
Kurtz___ a tree swayed by the wind.
Again the
rituals Kurtz participates in are ‘unspeakable rites’. Marlow makes his own
exploration of what he feels is the moral fall of Kurtz: “The thing is was to know what
he belonged to how man Powers of darkness claimed him for their own.”
If Marlow is
the first narrator the second narrator a sailor who hears the tale of Kurtz
from Marlow and provides his own perspective on both Kurtz and Marlow and even
describes his personal reactions. Initially, like Marlow he too, sees
everything merged into one colour but gradually with the unraveling of Marlow’s
tale, the truth becomes clear. He is, in a way, the audience whom the author is
trying to convince.
The verbal
nature of Marlow’s tale makes for yet another narration device- the disjunction
in the true sequence. Although Conrad’s departure from accepted time sequence
is not as radical as that of Joyce, Faulkner and Woolf, it is nevertheless a
determined step in that direction. The second narrator’s account is not
immediate and current but refracted by the memory of a past and distant time.
This reconstruction of the past is not linear for there are stray comments about
things yet to be realized such as Marlow’s future visit of Kurtz’s ‘Intended’.
Thus we find
that the narrative technique in Heart of Darkness involves not only a
dislocation of time but also two narrators__ an immediate witness and a frame
narrator who recounts the heard tale. This serves to give the tale authenticity
distances it from any obtrusive authorial design and provides multiple
perspectives on the same phenomenon or character.
Excellent work for students of all English language and literature.... Thanks sir
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