Development Of Marlow And Kurtz example essay topic
For the story to be effective as a whole, both Marlow and Kurtz must be seen as the main characters. Joseph Conrad develops the moral character of the main characters simultaneously even though Marlow and Kurtz don't even contact one another until the very end of the story. Conrad cultivates the characteristics of Marlow and Kurtz throughout the story so the reader knows that these men are like most average people in their thinking and their behaviors. The story is seen through Marlow, but the focus all the way through the story is on Kurtz, almost from the moment Marlow reaches the first station in Africa. Kurtz's character really begins to develop around the time Marlow reaches the central station, and he becomes known as an "exceptional man, of the greatest importance". The reader can see the ambition that drives the characters through the words of others.
Even after Kurtz's death, when Marlow tells Kurtz's fianc'e of his death, he lies to her about him because the truth "would have been to dark- to dark altogether". The reader can see that Marlow still thought very highly of Kurtz even though Marlow knew just what lurked beneath the surface. The reader sees Marlow himself as being a respected man "the worst that could be said of him was that he did not represent his class... Marlow was not the typical seaman". And wherever Marlow went he heard of Kurtz and Marlow was excited to meet him and it almost became his goal.
An example of this is when Marlow gets the steamboat close to the camp that Kurtz is on and the natives attack and the manager comments "And by the way, I suppose Mr. Kurtz is dead". Marlow hears this and "for the moment that was the dominant thought. There was a sense of extreme disappointment; as though I found out I had been striving after something altogether without substance. I couldn't have been more disgusted if I had traveled all this way for the sole purpose of talking with Kurtz".
The reader can see that what drove Marlow through the black of Africa was not only his adventurous spirit or wealth, but also the chance at meeting the legend he had heard so much about. Through this example the reader can see that Marlow and Kurtz are truly just men like anyone else. However, in the dark of Africa Kurtz's inner darkness is exposed and Marlow sees Kurtz for who he really is as well as the company and men in general. Through the development of Marlow and Kurtz, the reader can see they are not just two psychopaths but there is an inner darkness that resides within us all. The reader sees the characters inner darkness through many events in the story. 3 The darkness is apparent in the symbolism that Conrad uses in the story to build on the reader's specific perception of the men of the company and the Congo of Africa.
One of the first examples of symbolism in Conrad's writing is when Marlow's aunt notifies him that he has gotten the position as captain of the riverboat for the company so he then travels to the city that "always makes me think of a whited sepulcher". White has always represented good and something dark or black has always represented something evil, the "whited sepulcher" is something presented as beautiful and pure on the outside but inside it is evil. Another example of symbolism is when Marlow came across a painting in the central station. He "noticed a small sketch in oils, on a panel, representing a women draped and blindfolded carrying a lighted torch... the effect of the torchlight on the face was sinister". The reader can see from this example that the painting represents the black slaves being pushed around by the white people and the unfair treatment inflicted upon the blacks by the whites, and the effects on the black people were "sinister".
Marlow's journey up the Congo River to the different stations was, in a way, a journey inside of himself. He thought a lot more of the black people then any of the white people and looked down on the way that the blacks were treated. All of the symbolism throughout the story has something to do with darkness; every symbol helps to accentuate the main idea behind the story. The symbolism in the story helps to tie in with the dark tones that underlie the story. The tone throughout the story allows the reader to really get a feel for what Marlow and the other characters are experiencing and it places direct emphasis on the theme of 4 the story.
From the moment Marlow gets to the first company station he sees the treatment of the natives and "stands horror struck". The savagery of the white people is evident from then on, whether it was a "carrier dead in harness" or a "middle aged Negro with a bullet hole in his forehead". Marlow is disgusted with all of this because he knows they should have been treated better. The cruel treatment of the blacks by the white men played a very important part of the theme of the story because without these obscene acts against the natives the theme would really not exist. The tone in the African jungle is dark and adds to reader's feeling of the story.
Before Marlow leaves the city where the company's offices are located he "felt as though, instead of going to the center of a continent, I were about to set off for the center of the earth". The author also portrays the forest as being "primeval", the river as being a "black creek", and makes many other allegories to this same negative effect. When Marlow arrives at the site where Kurtz is supposed to be he says that "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 was looking at the land and the people that Kurtz had used as puppets. The reader can see this is the point when Marlow finally starts to see Kurtz for who he really is and the darkness in the men around them both. The story is shrouded in darkness, and the dark tone is evident in almost any word that Marlow speaks or anything he sees.
Joseph Conrad develops the characters of this story and fills the story with tone and symbolism to drive home the message that he meant to convey to the reader. This 5 message or main idea is that civilization has suppressed a part of every man that is dark and evil but given the right circumstances it becomes evident in us all. Overall, I found this story very fascinating, however, it didn't cater to my personal literary tastes.