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Heart of Darkness Joseph Conrad
Part III
The Russian trader's description of Kurtz
through the Russian trader's departure from the Inner Station.
Summary
The Russian trader begs Marlow to take Kurtz
away quickly. He recounts for Marlow his initial meeting with Kurtz,
telling him that Kurtz and the trader spent a night camped in the
forest together, during which Kurtz discoursed on a broad range
of topics. The trader again asserts that listening to Kurtz has
greatly enlarged his mind. His connection to Kurtz, however, has
gone through periods of rise and decline. He nursed Kurtz through two
illnesses but sometimes would not see him for long periods of time,
during which Kurtz was out raiding the countryside for ivory with
a native tribe he had gotten to follow him. Although Kurtz has behaved
erratically and once even threatened to shoot the trader over a
small stash of ivory, the trader nevertheless insists that Kurtz
cannot be judged as one would judge a normal man. He has tried to
get Kurtz to return to civilization several times. The Russian tells
Marlow that Kurtz is extremely ill now. As he listens to the trader,
Marlow idly looks through his binoculars and sees that what he had
originally taken for ornamental balls on the tops of fence posts
in the station compound are actually severed heads turned to face
the station house. He is repelled but not particularly surprised.
The Russian apologetically explains that these are the heads of
rebels, an explanation that makes Marlow laugh out loud. The Russian
makes a point of telling Marlow that he has had no medicine or supplies
with which to treat Kurtz; he also asserts that Kurtz has been shamefully abandoned
by the Company.
At that moment, the pilgrims emerge from the station-house
with Kurtz on an improvised stretcher, and a group of natives rushes
out of the forest with a piercing cry. Kurtz speaks to the natives,
and the natives withdraw and allow the party to pass. The manager
and the pilgrims lay Kurtz in one of the ship's cabins and give
him his mail, which they have brought from the Central Station.
Someone has written to Kurtz about Marlow, and Kurtz tells him that
he is glad to see him. The manager enters the cabin to speak with
Kurtz, and Marlow withdraws to the steamer's deck. From here he
sees two natives standing near the river with impressive headdresses
and spears, and a beautiful native woman draped in ornaments pacing gracefully
along the shore. She stops and stares out at the steamer for a while
and then moves away into the forest. Marlow notes that she must
be wearing several elephant tusks' worth of ornaments. The Russian
implies that she is Kurtz's mistress, and states that she has caused
him trouble through her influence over Kurtz. He adds that he would
have tried to shoot her if she had tried to come aboard. The trader's
comments are interrupted by the sound of Kurtz yelling at the manager
inside the cabin. Kurtz accuses the men of coming for the ivory
rather than to help him, and he threatens the manager for interfering
with his plans.
The manager comes out and takes Marlow aside, telling
him that they have done everything possible for Kurtz, but that
his unsound methods have closed the district off to the Company
for the time being. He says he plans on reporting Kurtz's complete
want of judgment to the Company's directors. Thoroughly disgusted
by the manager's hypocritical condemnation of Kurtz, Marlow tells
the manager that he thinks Kurtz is a remarkable man. With this statement,
Marlow permanently alienates himself from the manager and the rest
of the Company functionaries. Like Kurtz, Marlow is now classified
among the unsound. As the manager walks off, the Russian approaches
again, to confide in Marlow that Kurtz ordered the attack on the
steamer, hoping that the manager would assume he was dead and turn
back. After the Russian asks Marlow to protect Kurtz's reputation,
Marlow tells the Russian that the manager has spoken of having the
Russian hanged. The trader is not surprised and, after hitting Marlow
up for tobacco, gun cartridges, and shoes, leaves in a canoe with
some native paddlers.
Analysis
Until this point, Marlow's narrative has featured prominently
mysterious signs and symbols, which Marlow has struggled to interpret. Now
he confronts the reality of the Inner Station, and witnesses that symbols
possess a disturbing power to define reality and influence people.
The natives perceive Kurtz as a mythical deity and think that the
guns carried by his followers are lightning bolts, symbols of power
rather than actual weapons. Marlow and the Russian trader are aware
of the guns' power to kill, however, and they react nervously at
Kurtz's show of force. Kurtz himself acts as a symbol for all of
the other characters, not only the natives. To the Russian trader,
he is a source of knowledge about everything from economics to love.
To Marlow, Kurtz offers a choice of nightmares, something distinct
from the hypocritical evils of the manager. To the manager and the
pilgrims, he is a scapegoat, someone they can punish for failing
to uphold the civilized ideals of colonialism, thereby making
themselves seem less reprehensible. The long-awaited appearance
of the man himself demonstrates just how empty these formulations
are, however. He is little more than a skeleton, and even his name
proves not to be an adequate description of him (Kurtz means short
in German, but Kurtz is tall). Thus, both words and symbols are
shown to have little basis in reality.
Kurtz's African mistress provides another example of the
power of symbols and the dubious value of words. The woman is never given
the title mistress, although it seems clear that she and Kurtz have
a sexual relationship. To acknowledge through the use of the term
that a white man and a black woman could be lovers seems to be more
than the manager and the Russian trader are willing to do. Despite
their desire to discredit Kurtz, the transgression implied by Kurtz's
relationship is not something they want to discuss. To Marlow, the
woman is above all an aesthetic and economic object. She is superb
and magnificent, dripping with the trappings of wealth. As we
have seen in earlier sections of Marlow's narrative, he believes that
women represent the ideals of a civilization: it is on their behalf that
men undertake economic enterprises, and it is their beauty that comes
to symbolize nations and ways of life. Thus, Kurtz's African mistress
plays a role strikingly like that of Kurtz's fiancée: like his fiancée,
Kurtz's mistress is lavished with material goods, both to keep her
in her place and to display his success and wealth.
Marlow and the Russian trader offer alternate perspectives throughout
this section. The Russian is naive to the point of idiocy, yet he
has much in common with Marlow. Both have come to Africa in search
of something experiential, and both end up aligning themselves with
Kurtz against other Europeans. The Russian, who seems to exist upon
glamour and youth, is drawn to the systematic qualities of Kurtz's
thought. Although Kurtz behaves irrationally toward him, for the
trader, the great man's philosophical mind offers a bulwark against
the even greater irrationality of Africa. For Marlow, on the other
hand, Kurtz represents the choice of outright perversion over hypocritical
justifications of cruelty. Marlow and the Russian are disturbingly
similar to one another, as the transfer of responsibility for Kurtz's
reputation from the Russian to Marlow suggests. The manager's
implicit condemnation of Marlow as unsound is correct, if for
the wrong reasons: by choosing Kurtz, Marlow has, in fact, like
the cheerfully idiotic Russian, merely chosen one kind of nightmare
over another.
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