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Recommended: Inhumanity to man
The Nature of Man in Heart of Darkness Marlow makes some specific conclusions about the nature of man in Heart of Darkness. He specifically believes that men are evil and inhuman. He gives a few examples of how this is so in the book. Just reading the book and seeing the way humans act towards each other you are able to see that humans are evil. Marlow also mentions Kurtz and the manager and their inhumanity. There is a lot of inhumanity. The people are so inhuman that when they are starving, they would be able to eat the youth. The black man is beaten unmercifully and there is a black man with a bullet in his head. Marlow describes humans being dark, inhuman shapes by the way they act towards each other. " Dark human shapes could be made out in the distance, flitting indistinctly against the gloomy border of the forest." (pg.141) This is the way Marlow sees humans, even though he does not come out and say it in these quotes. Marlow brings up a specific inhuman being which to him is Kurtz. He says that Kurtz has a dark nature to him. " He could be very terrible. You can't judge Mr. Kurtz as you would an ordinary man."(pg.135) Kurtz is a thief and a murderer. One of the murders he has done was drying black heads on the stakes. Kurtz was also a liar and at the end of the book Marlow ends up lying himself. To Marlow there is a different person who exudes more evil than Kurtz does. The manager is truly a monster. The manager thought that Marlow should have been hanged."You ought to be hanged"(pg.135) The manager wanted to kill Marlow, after Kurtz's death and he really didn't care much about Kurtz's death either. The only thing that the manager cared about was how to get and keep the ivory. Overall Marlow believes that white men are cruel. They are inhuman and have no respect for others. What led Marlow to believe this was the manager and Kurtz. Through out the book Marlow and Kurtz show how inhuman they are by torturing and murdering other human beings.
Cronus and Rhea are the parents of Poseidon in Greek mythology. Poseidon is one of the 3 sons; the others are Hades and Zeus. And their three sisters were Demeter, Hestia, Hera, and while Cronus was the horrible father who feared his own children so he ate them at birth. He continued to eat the newborns until his wife tricked him by giving him stones instead to save Zeus. But sadly Poseidon (and Hades) was eaten by Cronus to save them Zeus (who was being raised by nymphs) became Cronus’ cupbearer. He poisoned Cronus and he threw up Poseidon. They started a war against Cronus it lasted for ten years until the brothers released the Cyclopes and in return they gave the each a weapon. Poseidon received a trident, Zeus a lightning bolt, and Hades the helmet of darkness.
The epiphany of Marlow in "The Heart of Darkness" has significance in the overall story. The theme of the story is how every man has inside himself a heart of darkness and that a person, being alienated like Kurtz, will become more savage. Marlow, in his epiphany, realizes the savagery of man and how being alienated from modern civilization causes one to be savage and raw. This savagery is shown especially in the death of the helmsman, which is where Marlow's epiphany takes place, but the savagery is also show in Kurtz. The link that Kurtz has to the natives and the death of the helmsman is that the natives work for Kurtz.
His father is Ouranos the god of the sky. His mother is Gaia who is mother earth herself. He was the youngest born titan. His brothers are all the titans. His spouse was Rhea goddess, of fertility, and motherhood. Their children include Zeus, Hestia, Hades, Poseidon, Hera, and Demeter.
Poseidon was Zeus’ brother, and lord of the sea. He was a moody God, and many called him the Earthshaker, because the ground would tremble when he stuck the ground with his trident. When Poseidon took over the sea, the previous ruler of the sea, Nereus kindly gave Poseidon, Amphitrite. Amphitrite was Nereus’ daughter and now the queen of the sea. Poseidon and Amphitrite lived in a palace at the very bottom of the sea. Poseidon and his wife gave birth to one child, Triton. Instead of legs, Triton had a fishtail. Poseidon loved to race, and was rarely home. He had a horse, in the shape of breaking waves.
Upon seeing this atrocious sight of men being treated as savages, Marlow compares the white men who are leading these chained up men, to devils, by remarking that he had seen devils, but never devils who drove other men like cattle. Men who were no different then themselves, except in the color of their skin.
The Poles who were West Slavic people established Poland in the late 5th century. History was first written in the 10th century about Poland when the Polish nation changed into Christianity in 966. Prince Mieszko I was the first ruler and his son, Boleslaw I, was the first king of Poland. This established the Piast dynasty that lasted from 966 to 1370. During the Piast dynasty there where Piast kings with a lot of rivalries from nobility and Bohemian and Germanic invasions that made Poland a very troubled country. The last king of the dynasty was Casimir III, crowned in 1333. He extended Polish influence eastward to Lithuania and Russia. He acquired Pomerania from the Teutonic Knights and shifted borders between Poland and Germany. During his 37-year reign a university was established, laws were made more organized, castles grew strong, and minority groups were given protection (Grolier).
bears live past 15 to 18 years. The oldest known polar bear in the Arctic
born he was eaten by his father. His siblings were eaten too, except for his brother Zeus.
Polar bears live in Russia, Alaska, and Canada to Greenland. There is no exact number of a population estimate, but biologists believe there is an estimated figure of 22,000 to 25,000 bears, of which 60% of bears are living in Canada.
When Marlow finally reaches Kurtz he is in declining health. This same jungle which he loved, embraced and consumed with every ounce of his flesh had also taken its toll on him. Marlow finally meets the man whose name has haunted him on his river journey. Could this frail human be the ever so powerful Kurtz? The man who has journeyed into uncharted territories and has come back with scores of ivory and the respect of the native tribe. Yes, this was the very man and though he is weak and on his way to death his power still exudes from him.
As Kurtz lived out his purpose as a sacrificial figure, he dies. However the true worth of his sacrifice is untold; his legacy is carried upon Marlow, symbolized by the disease he contracts that does not kill him. However, this burden of truth is almost impossible to spread by Marlow, for that reason, Kurtz’s discovery of truth is almost obsolete. The tragic sacrifice of Kurtz and the aimless product of that sacrifice makes Kurtz a victim of the
These patterns help emphasize the dry humor because the different lines create detailed list of public yet random information collected about the person. The first 5 lines do not have a particular rhyme scheme but it shows that this person “was a saint” from the state’s perspective and other records, having “served the Greater Community” with his contributions. The following create a picture of this man and uses positive diction through words like “normal”, “right”, and “proper” to indicate ways that make him this ideal man of
Despite the opinion of certain critics, Conrad did not create Marlow to be a prejudice character. One of his first Marlow?s first Reactions to the villagers is the exact opposite, ?They were not enemies they were not criminals??(Conrad, 189) While his initial response may not seem altogether accepting, it is far beyond the understanding of his peers. As the story continues Marlow is slightly sarcastic in his understanding of the villagers, ?Fine fellows-Cannibals-in their place. They were men one could work with, and I am grateful to them. And, after all, they did not eat each other before my face? (189)? Marlow shows his ability to be sarcastic in the face of popular criticism, even making the mold step to refer to these African?s as ?Fine Fellows?(189), ?They howled and leaped, and spun, and made horrid faces; but what thrilled you was just the thought of they humanity-like yours-the thought of your remote kinship with this wild??(189) Although the natives...
By the time Marlow and Kurtz meet, Marlow is already well aware of the similarities they share. Both are imperialists, and while Marlow detests the treatment of the natives by his employers (Belgian colonists), he also makes apparent his abhorrence toward the Africans. On the other hand, Kurtz abandons the pretense of helping the natives achieve civilization, as displayed by the Europeans. Instead, he adopts their customs and becomes their leader in the never-ending quest for ivory. "He began with the argument that we whites, from the point of development we had arrived at, 'must necessarily appear to them [savages] in the nature of the supernatural beings- we approach them with the might as of a deity' (Longman, 2000, p. 2226). Marlow also admired Kurtz' resourcefulness and survival skills, especially his perseverence through jungle fever. "The wilderness had patted him on the head....it had taken him, loved him, embraced him, got into his veins, consumed his flesh, and sealed his soul to its own by the inconceivable ceremonies of some devilish initiation. He was its spoiled and pampered favorite." (Longman, 2000, p. 2225).
Through out this novel a lot of different themes are present, and is very graphic but it can be seen that even at the end Marlow questions his sanity because of the jungle. Even the thick taste of the jungle is dangerous as Marlow says in the final lines of the book. “The offing was barred by a black bank of clouds, and the tranquil waterway leading to the uttermost ends of the earth flowed somber under an overcast sky – seemed to lead into the heart of an immense darkness.” (96)