Heart of Darkness Characters
Charlie Marlow
Character
Analysis
Marlow is a British seaman whose obsession with Africa brings him into
the interior on the Company's steamboat.
Marlow and Kurtz
The way
Marlow obsesses about Kurtz, we almost expect Kurtz to file a restraining order
on the guy. (Or, we would if Kurtz weren't already half-dead by the time Marlow
meets him.)
But it
wasn't always like that. When Marlow first hears about Kurtz, he's not
"very interested in him" (1.74). But when he hears the story about
Kurtz turning back to the jungle, his ears prick up: he "[sees] Kurtz for
the first time" (2.2) as a solitary white man among black men. And then,
just a few paragraphs later, Marlow is actually excited to see the guy, saying
that, for him, the journey has become entirely about meeting Kurtz. The boat,
he says, "crawled towards Kurtz—exclusively" (2.7).
Weird. What
was it about that story of Kurtz returning to the jungle that tickled Marlow's
fancy? True, we've already seen that he's kind of obsessed with the jungle and
its people. But at the same time he's drawn in by this primitive wilderness,
he's terrified by it. It's thrilling but horrifying, kind of like Saw XVIII.
(What, they haven't made that one yet?) Kurtz has done what Marlow can only
dream of: refuse to return to the luxury and comfort of Europe and choose
instead to pursue fortune and glory.
But Marlow's
roller coaster of love doesn't doesn't end there. Once he actually meets the
guy, he starts to resent him. Apparently, all that cultish adoration that the
harlequin and the native Africans have for Kurtz turns Marlow's stomach:
"He's no idol of mine" (3.6). And then he seems to decide that Kurtz
is actually just childish—a helpless and selfish man who has ignorant dreams of
becoming rich and powerful. (Note that when Marlow drags him back to the tent
after Kurtz tries to escape, he's "not much heavier than a child"
(3.29).)
Why the
backpedaling? Well, we think that Marlow wants to differentiate himself from
the brainwashed men around him—just like we claimed to hate Arcade Fire back in
2005 even though we secretly thought that Funeral was a great record. He
also seems angry that he's effectively at Marlow's mercy, deep in the African
interior. Or—to give Marlow some credit—maybe he really does believe that Kurtz
is dangerous.
And then, at
the end, Marlow seems to come back around to admiration. After Kurtz dies while
gasping out the words "The horror! The horror!" (3.33), Marlow
decides that these are words of self-realization, that maybe Kurtz has finally
faced up to his horrible deeds and the depravity of human nature. "Kurtz
was a remarkable man," Marlow says, because he "had something to
say" and simply "said it" (3.48).
Marlow only
spends a few days with Kurtz, but he still says that he "knew [Kurtz] as
well as it's possible for one man to know another" (3.54). (Talk about a
whirlwind romance.) But when Kurtz's Intended asks Marlow whether he admired
Kurtz, Marlow never answers. We never find out what he would have said—but we
do know that, when the fiancée suggests that Marlow loved the man, Marlow is
left in "appalled dumbness" (3.57).
So, by the
end of the story, does Marlow respect Kurtz? Admire him? Fear him? You tell us.
He sure doesn't.
The Same But Different
This whole
love me-love me not melodrama should be simple: Marlow admired Kurtz right up
until he found out that the man put heads on sticks, at which point he stopped
admiring him. Great. Let's all pack up and go home.
Er, not so
fast. If you go home now, you'll you'll miss out on what makes Heart of
Darkness just so darn awesome and powerful: Marlow is just like Kurtz.
Yep: our protagonist, our loveable, sympathetic Marlow, is just like the
crazed, cult-inspiring, heads-on-sticks-owning devil-man. Oh, the horror!
We'll start with the basics:
- Like Kurtz, Marlow comes from an upper middle class white European family.
- Both are, how do we say, arrogant: Marlow considers himself above the manager, the uncle, and the brickmaker while Kurtz establishes himself in an unparalleled seat of power among the native Africans.
- Both have streaks of obsession in them: Marlow becomes obsessed with Africa and finding Kurtz, while Kurtz stops at nothing to acquire as much ivory as possible.
- Both have powerful connections that allow them access to positions of power within the Company.
- Both men lose touch with reality—Kurtz in the fantasy of his own power and Marlow in the dream-like world of the jungle.
- Both men have eerily similar reactions to their forays to the interior of Africa. Marlow and Kurtz, despite their desire to conquer the wilderness, become victims of it: When Marlow observes native Africans dancing at the shore, he wonders why he doesn't go ashore "for a howl and a dance" (2.8). Later, he discusses Kurtz presiding over some "midnight dances" that ended in "certain unspeakable rites" (2.29).
- And finally, both men are described as gods—Kurtz as Jupiter and Marlow as Buddha (3.10, 3.87).
So, here's
another million-dollar question for you: is Marlow ultimately able to
differentiate himself from Kurtz?
Marlow and the Native Africans
For the most
part, Marlow comes across as a nice guy, if not a particularly ethical one.
He's no saint, or he's a helpless one, as he does nothing about the horrible
scenarios of black slavery he encounters. But he does do little things that
show compassion. He attempts to give a biscuit to a starving slave. He treats
his own cannibals decently. When the helmsman dies, he makes sure he won't be
ignobly eaten by the native Africans on board. So, on the surface level, Marlow
is a decent guy who, as a product of his times, isn't about to start a civil
rights movement in the late nineteenth century.
But, like
most things in Heart of Darkness, it's really not that simple. What
causes Marlow to feel such compassion for the native Africans? How does he see
them in relation to himself? How does his foray down the Congo change the way
he thinks?
Well, let's
start by looking at his first word. We found these words so compelling that we
underlined, highlighted, and circled them, as well as dog-earing the page and
putting three sticky notes on the top. In case you weren't quite so
over-zealous, we'll tell you straight-up that his first words are: "And
this also has been one of the dark places of the earth" (1.8).
This is the
part where we all say, "Oooh." Oooh indeed. Marlow is about to tell
the story of a dark and primitive Africa which the Europeans are so kindly
"civilizing." But he reminds you that Europe, too, was once a dark
and primitive place.
From the
start, Marlow takes this whole noble imperialism bit with a boulder of salt,
telling his listeners that "strength is just an accident arising from the
weakness of others" (1.12). He also notes that "This conquest of the
earth, which mostly means the taking it away from those who have a different
complexion […] than ourselves, is not a pretty thing" (1.12). He also
questions everyone's use of words like "criminal," "enemy,"
and "rebel" in talking about the native Africans (3.6).
We know that
Marlow isn't quite so comfortable with viewing the world in black and white.
Things get even more complicated when he starts becoming like a
"savage" himself. When he's talking to the manager at the outer
station, Marlow is treated like a native African man—not offered a seat or any
food. His response? "I was getting savage," he says, interrupting the
man (1.53). Hmm. Rather than civilizing the "savages," it seems,
Marlow is becoming like them.
Once he's
underway, Marlow's attitudes get even fuzzier. When he looks at the native
Africans dancing and howling, he doesn't see them as strange creatures.
Instead, he says that they're "not inhuman" (2.8).
Interesting.
Why not just say, "human"? Well, this is a nifty little device called
"litotes."
Marlow can't quite go so far as to call them human (as opposed to
savage), so he says it more weakly by affirming its opposite. This
sort-of-humanity is "thrilling," because it shows him that there's a
"remote kinship" between him and the Africans (2.8)—the kinship of
mortality. When the black helmsman dies, Marlow realizes that the
"pilgrims" and the "savages" are linked by the one thing
they have in common: mortality.
Freaky.
Marlow, Lies, and Justice
You might
have noticed that Marlow makes a huge deal out of lies. He says he hates, detests,
and can't bear a lie, that lies are reminiscent of death. So why does he lie to
Kurtz's fiancée at the end of this whole story? Otherwise, "it would have
been too dark" (3.86). Is he trying to protect the woman from the scary
world of reality? Does he think that, by pretending the darkness and the horror
of Kurtz's last words don't exist, they will somehow go away?
To have told
the Intended the truth, he claims, would be to have "rendered Kurtz […]
that justice which was his due" (3.86). After all, he tells us, Kurtz said
that all he wanted was justice. What has justice come to mean in this novel,
anyway? How can there be justice at all in a world where men put heads on
sticks and are revered for it anyway?
You tell us.
All Hail Marlow
Conrad hints
at some god-imagery when he has Marlow sits "cross-legged" like an
"idol" (1.4). And then, in case we still don't get it, he straight
out tells us Marlow was like Buddha (1.12). Oh, and in case we missed it the
first time, he makes a big deal out of telling us at the end that Marlow sits
like a "meditating Buddha "
(3.87).
English-majory
people would probably tell you that Conrad frames the story with a mention of
Buddha at the beginning and then again at the end. To us, the point is that
Marlow takes on the role of a spiritual figure, and specifically one whose role
is to help other people reach enlightenment. But what does Marlow teach the
men? Do the men get it? Is anyone enlightened by this tale?
One last
thought: The nameless narrator tells us before the story begins that it will be
an inconclusive tale. Does this fit with the Buddha imagery, or stand in
contrast to it? What kind of teacher is inconclusive, anyway? (Did you notice
that we're ending this section inconclusively?)
Curiosity Killed the Cat
As a kid,
Marlow wanted to map the uncharted blank spaces on maps and to explore the
"blankest" and most unknown of all places—Africa (1.16). No wonder
that, as an explorer for the Company, he becomes curious about Kurtz—so curious
that he's willing to listen in on private conversations and even sacrifice some
of his men along the way. To us, it seems like Conrad might be suggesting
there's something a little unethical about the very act of exploration. Whether
you're trying to fill in blank spaces on a map or blank spaces in a person's
mind (like with a novel), you're always looking into something you shouldn't.
Interestingly,
because of Marlow's story-telling tendencies, we experience events the way he
did: with much confusion and fog, both literal and metaphorical. When he starts
ruminating on past events, our nameless narrator tells us that Marlow is not a
typical seaman. He's a "wanderer" (1.9), and he tells his story as if
the meaning is "outside" of the tale, brought out "as a glow
brings out a haze" (1.3).
Hmm…are you
curious yet?
Marlow
and The Laaadies
Marlow may
have a thing for mysterious, amoral men—but he doesn't seem to think much of
women. Twice in the novel, he mentions women and always sees them as somehow
divorced from reality, as living in another world: "It's queer how out of
touch with truth women are," he says: "They live in a world of their
own, and there has never been anything like it, and never can be. It's
too beautiful all together" (1.28). (Um, Marlow? If women literally make
up half the world, then who's to say that their world isn't the
"real" one?)
Anyway,
Marlow obviously sees women as naïve and idealistic. But here's the rub: he
wants them to stay that way. When he lies to Kurtz's Intended, it looks
a lot like a chivalrous attempt to protect women from the world's brutal
realities—like slavery and imperialism. Well, except for those two knitting
women in black, who seem to have a weird power over Marlow—almost like they
might be representations of fate, knitting up his destiny. Women: pure and evil
all at once.
From our
position, that contradiction seems like a pretty good way to sum op Mr. Marlow.
Mr. Kurtz
Character
Analysis
Mr. Kurtz is a star agent of the Company who works in true ivory
country, deep in the interior of Africa. Also, he goes crazy and dies.
Will the Real Mr. Kurtz Please Stand Up
Everyone who
knows Kurtz (even his fiancée, who doesn't know him at all) agrees that he has
all the ambition, charisma, and eloquence to achieve greatness. As the Intended
says—although she's not the most reliable witness—he's a man of
"promise," "greatness," a "generous mind," and a
"noble heart" (3.66).
Come to
think of it, everything we know about Kurtz is secondhand. So, let's
start with what we do know.
It's a Jungle Out There
Kurtz
represents a normal—if ambitious—man who realizes that to thrive in the
Interior, he has to act like a god, someone who can lead these
"primitive" people to the proverbial light and civilization.
But then
greed gets in the way. His insatiable hunger for ivory drives him to make
alliances and enemies among the native Africans, raiding village after village
with the help of his African friends as he searches for ivory. His obsession
takes over so much that Conrad/ Marlow even describes him in terms of the
material he seeks: his head "was like a ball—an ivory ball" (2.29),
and when he utters his final words, he carries an "expression of sombre
pride" on his "ivory face" (3.42). The jungle has "got into
his veins, consumed his flesh" (2.29), making him into a totally different
man.
Maybe that's
why Marlow tells us repeatedly that Kurtz has "no restraint" (2.30,
3.29). It's not as simple as "Kurtz goes to jungle; Kurtz becomes like
native Africans; Heads on sticks ensue." In fact, Kurtz becomes something
else altogether—something worse. (The horror! The horror!)
See,
Africans do have a sense of decency and restraint. Think of the cannibals who
eat rotten hippo meat instead of attacking the pilgrims whom they outnumber
five to one. But not Kurtz. Kurtz has fallen a complete victim to the power of
the jungle, has transformed into its "spoiled and pampered
favorite."(2.29). He's basically become a child, and not a nice one,
either: a greedy, selfish, and brutal playground bully.
Or as Marlow
so beautifully says, the "powers of darkness have claimed him for their
own" (2.29).
A Face for Radio
Marlow ends
up refining his obsession with Kurtz all the way down to one particular aspect:
his voice. He's not excited about seeing Kurtz or shaking his hand or talking
about last night's Lakers game, he says—just hearing him talk. "The man
presented himself as a voice" (2.24), Marlow says, actually breaking the
order of the story's narrative to tell us that he does eventually get to talk
to Kurtz. This little narrative interruption drives home just how important
Kurtz's voice is.
Now consider
this: Marlow, sitting on the Nellie and telling his story in the pitch-dark, is
explicitly described as "no more to us than a voice" to the men that
listen (2.66). And then, When he finds an "appeal" in the "fiendish
row" of the Africans dancing on shore, he negates it with the claim,
"I have a voice, too, and for good or evil mine is the speech that cannot
be silenced" (2.8).
So is this
voice business merely another tool to establish connections between Marlow and
Kurtz? Maybe. If Marlow's voice is never silenced, what about Kurtz's? The guy
dies, after all. But are his last words resonant for us? Does Heart of
Darkness end on a note of "horror"?
Kurtz as a God
The native
Africans worship Kurtz like a god, even attacking to keep Kurtz with them. But
here's the irony: we're not sure whether Kurtz orders the attack or whether the
native Africans do it on their own (we get conflicting stories from the
harlequin). Kurtz may be a god, but he's also a prisoner to his devotees. He
can order mass killings of rebels, but he can't walk away freely.
Hm. We're
feeling like there might just be a little bit of symbolism here.
Ready for
some more irony? Kurtz was apparently seven feet tall or so (although we figure
Marlow was riding the hyperbole train here). But his name means
"short" in German—which Marlow makes sure to point out, just in case
we're not caught up with our Rosetta Stone cassettes. So, his name contradicts
his god-like height, a discrepancy that reflects the big fat lie of his life
and death, and which we're thinking means his life as a god was also false.
As for his
death? You tell us.
Kurtz, Madness, and Sickness
First, is
Kurtz mad? Um, yes. We think that jamming a bunch of heads on sticks might
qualify, but if that weren't enough, Marlow makes sure we know that, although
the man's intelligence is clear, Kurtz's "soul [is] mad" (3.29).
And then his
madness becomes physical, so that his bodily sickness is a reflection of his
diseased mind. His slow, painful spiral into death is marked by visions and
unintelligible ravings. Parts of the narrative recount the emptiness of Kurtz's
soul; this may be a commentary on the debilitating and devastating power of the
wilderness to suck all the humanity out of a man.
And now for
those famous final words: "The horror! The horror!" (3.43). Marlow
interprets this for us, saying that these words are the moment Kurtz realizes
exactly how depraved human nature is—that his inability to exert even a shred
of self-control is the same darkness in every human heart. (Speak for yourself,
Kurtz: there's a red velvet cupcake sitting on the counter that we're resisting
quite nicely, thankyouverymuch.)
Ahem. As
Marlow says, "Whether [Kurtz] knew of this deficiency [lacking restraint
in gratification of his lusts] I can't say. I think the knowledge came to him
at last—only at the very last" (3.5). So why do people still look up to
Kurtz? We think they see in him the potential for greatness, along with
charisma and ambition. And those qualities end up being Kurtz's
legacy—not his madness and brutality. Is this Conrad's own condemnation of
mankind's blindness?
Kurtz the Hero
Buckle up,
set the airbags, and put on your oxygen masks: we have one more big idea about
Kurtz: He's the result of progress.
Think about
it. We know that Conrad isn't doing a simple light = good, dark = bad thing.
Instead, he's suggesting that progress—moving into Africa, spreading Western
culture—inevitably means taking part of the dark inside you. (Want a fancy word
for this? We call it dialectics.) What Kurtz shows us is that progress isn't
good. In fact, it's horrific.
In the
nineteenth century, there was a general idea in Europe that history and
cultures were evolving toward a better future. Western civilization was the
pinnacle of human evolution, and eventually it was going to crowd out the
darkness in other parts of the world.
Conrad
didn't think so, but his objection wasn't the cultural relativism that makes us
roll our eyes at that idea today. Today, we tend to see all cultures as
valuable—different, sure, but equally worthwhile in their own way. Saying that
Western culture is the pinnacle of human evolution and that we have a duty to
educate people all over the world strikes many people as a little presumptuous
and even silly.
It didn't
strike Conrad as silly. It struck him as terrifying. Through Kurtz, Conrad
shows us that the true result of "progress" is madness and horror.
The Manager
Character Analysis
The manager
is a mediocre Company employee who lives and works at the Central Station.
We're thinking that he works at the "central" station because he's
average and commonplace (you know, central) in every way—that is, except
for his "remarkably cold" eyes and creepy smile (1.52). That
expression gives Marlow the willies. (Us too.)
The manager
is jealous of Kurtz's success, but other than that he's a total blank—which is
the point. He babbles a lot, but about nothing meaningful and his creepy smile
is described as "seal applied on words to make the meaning of the
commonest phrase appear absolutely inscrutable" (1.52). In other words,
all his chitchat ends up seeming profound because he slaps on this mysterious,
empty, smile.
He also has
one other remarkable quality—he never gets sick. Maybe, Marlow says, because
"there was nothing within him" (1.52). The manager himself says that
anyone who comes to work in the interior "should have no entrails"
(much like him).
Weirded out
yet? You should be. The manager's character implies that the wilderness of the
interior has a way of depleting or draining away what makes men human, leaving
only a shell of the former self. Sort of like Kurtz, except instead of being
replaced by a maniacal, ivory-hungry devil, this guy got replaced by nothing at
all.
Since there
is nothing within him, everything the manager says and does has no sincerity.
All his energy is devoted to keeping up appearances. As Marlow observes, he
"originat[es] nothing" because there's nothing there (1.52). He can't
create; he can only destroy.
Huh. You
could say that "destroying" is exactly what British imperialists were
doing to Africa at the time. We knew
this character was here for a reason.
The Brickmaker
Character
Analysis
The
brickmaker is another rather useless worker in the crew at Central Station,
even though you'd think that, with a name like "brickmaker," he'd
actually be up to something useful. Marlow notes "There wasn't a fragment
of a brick anywhere in the station, and he had been there more than a
year—waiting. It seems he could not make bricks without something … Anyway, it
could not be found there and as it was not likely to be sent from Europe, it
did not appear clear to me what he was waiting for" (1.56).
Ouch.
This obvious
idleness is one of the reasons Marlow—who's definitely a hard worker—dislikes
him so much. The other agents call him the "manager's spy" (1.56),
and, appropriately, he tries to pry information out of Marlow. At first, Marlow
is baffled trying to figure out what the guy wants, but in the end we find that
the brickmaker is only seeking to advance his position in the Company.
Like the
manager and his uncle, he's driven by ambition. However, unlike the manager,
the brickmaker is a sycophant, sucking up to the people who he thinks will help
him climb the Company ladder. He has no problem flattering and cajoling his way
into what he wants.
Brickmaker, Brickmaker, Make Me a Brick
Check out
how Marlow describes the brickmaker as having a "forked little beard and a
hooked nose" (1.56), calling him a "papier-mâché
Mephistopheles." (FYI, Mephistopheles was the devil in another story,
Faust.) Indeed, the man has many of the characteristics attributed to Satan.
He's lazy, greedy, and ambitious—plus, he has that silver tongue to tempt
people into sin.
One last
thing: the "hooked nose" and greed (having a "whole candle all
to himself" [1.56]) make the brickmaker sound a lot like late nineteenth
and early twentieth century stereotypes of Jewish people. And then there's the
whole joke about needing "straw" to make bricks, which is an allusion
to the story in the Hebrew Bible book of Exodus about the Israelites who the
Pharaoh enslaved to make bricks (with straw).
What do you
think? Is Conrad hitting the anti-Semitism button here? And, if so, what could
he possibly be suggesting about Jewish people? About
humanity in general?
The Intended
Character
Analysis
The Intended
is Kurtz's fiancée who stays snug in Belgium (probably eating delicious Belgian
waffles and French fries with mayonnaise, hmm, is it
lunch time yet?) while Kurtz sails off to gather ivory.
She's
beautiful and often connected with imagery of light and heaven:
This fair hair, this pale visage, this pure brow, seemed surrounded by
an ashy halo from which the dark eyes looked out at me. Their glance was
guileless, profound, confident, and trustful. (3.53).
Check out
that halo and the "pure brow": it matches her naïve and idealistic
view of Kurtz, who she sees as a kind of saint, whose "goodness shone in
every act" (3.70). She's utterly infatuated with Kurtz and believes
herself the single most definitive authority on his character: "I am proud
to know I understood him better than any one on earth" (3.59). Um, no.
The Intended
is essentially a stand-in for every woman, everywhere. (Well, every white,
European woman). Her value is measured by her beauty and idealism, and Marlow
says that "We must help them to stay in that beautiful world of their own
lest ours gets worse" (2.29). In other words, men need women to be
beautiful and dumb so there's some bit of goodness in the world. Excuse us while
we gag.
But we think
it's more complicated than that. (Of course.) Marlow sees women as naïve,
idealistic, and gullible—in other words, able to turn blind eyes to the bloody
realities and brutalities of imperialism. (Who do you think is wearing all that
ivory?) They end up standing in for all Europeans. Like the Intended,
white men want to believe in the good and civilizing characteristics of the
pilgrims sent into the interior. They want the illusion, and the ivory—not the
reality of African slaves worked to death.
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