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Marlow And Mr. Kurtz In Joseph Conrad's Heart Of Darkness

Decent Essays

In Heart of Darkness, a frame story narrative written by Joseph Conrad, readers follow a man named Charles Marlow as he travels to the heart of a jungle in Congo searching for a mysterious man named Mr. Kurtz. Readers can infer that Marlow and Mr. Kurtz are very similar to each other; Marlow is the man who Mr. Kurtz was and could have continued to be, and Mr. Kurtz is the man who Marlow could have become if he introduced darkness into his heart and followed in Mr. Kurtz’s footsteps. When the readers are first introduced to Marlow, the narrator of the story presented him as a wise man, he was even described as Buddha like, aged by his many nautical adventures--- this wisdom is most likely a direct result of his wicked and grueling adventures in the dark heart of the Congo jungle. Marlow goes into detail about how he would study maps as a child and how one day he would like to travel to “the biggest, the most blank, so to speak [spot on the map] ---that [he] had a hankering after” (page 4). He then talked about how he got an interview, and eventually a position, at a company going on an expedition to the Congo. It is revealed that as a young man, Mr. Kurtz also wanted to travel to Africa with the intent of “humanizing, improving, [and] instructing” the natives (page 52). As he became more power hungry, he began to have the natives treat him like a god. The comparison of Marlow to a Buddha and Mr. Kurtz as a god is also fascinating. Buddhism focuses on enlightenment and

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