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Essay/Term paper: Heart of darkness 3

Essay, term paper, research paper:  Heart of Darkness

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The Horror!


In Heart of Darkness it is the white invaders for instance, who are, almost without
exception, embodiments of blindness, selfishness, and cruelty; and even in the
cognitive domain, where such positive phrases as "to enlighten," for instance, are
conventionally opposed to negative ones such as "to be in the dark," the traditional
expectations are reversed. In Kurtz's painting, as we have seen, "the effect of the
torch light on the face was sinister" (Watt 332).
Ian Watt, author of "Impressionism and Symbolism in Heart of Darkness," discusses about
the destruction set upon the Congo by Europeans. The destruction set upon the Congo by
Europeans led to the cry of Kurtz's last words, "The horror! The horror!" The horror in
Heart of Darkness has been critiqued to represent different aspects of situations in the
book. However, Kurtz's last words "The horror! The horror!" refer, to me, to magnify
only three major aspects. The horror magnifies Kurtz not being able to restrain himself,
the colonizers' greed, and Europe's darkness.
Kurtz comes to the Congo with noble intentions. He thought that each ivory
station should stand like a beacon light, offering a better way of life to the natives. He
was considered to be a "universal genius": he was an orator, writer, poet, musician, artist,
politician, ivory producer, and chief agent of the ivory company's Inner Station. yet, he
was also a "hollow man," a man without basic integrity or any sense of social
responsibility. "Kurtz issues the feeble cry, 'The horror! The horror!' and the man of
vision, of poetry, the 'emissary of pity, and science, and progress' is gone. The jungle
closes' round" (Labrasca 290). Kurtz being cut off from civilization reveals his dark side.
Once he entered within his "heart of darkness" he was shielded from the light. Kurtz
turned into a thief, murderer, raider, persecutor, and to climax all of his other shady
practices, he allows himself to be worshipped as a god. E. N. Dorall, author of "Conrad
and Coppola: Different Centres of Darkness," explains Kurtz's loss of his identity.

Daring to face the consequences of his nature, he loses his identity; unable to be
totally beast and never able to be fully human, he alternates between trying to
return to the jungle and recalling in grotesque terms his former idealism. Kurtz
discovered, A voice! A voice! It rang deep to the very last. It survived his
strength to hide in the magnificent folds of eloquence the barren darkness of his
heart.... But both the diabolic love and the unearthly hate of the mysteries it
had penetrated fought for the possession of that soul satiated with primitive
emotions, avid of lying, fame, of sham distinction, of all the appearances of success
and power. Inevitably Kurtz collapses, his last words epitomizing his experience,
The horror! The horror! (Dorall 306).
The horror to Kurtz is about self realization; about the mistakes he committed while in
Africa.
The colonizers' cruelty towards the natives and their lust for ivory also is
spotlighted in Kurtz's horror. The white men who came to the Congo professing to bring
progress and light to "darkest Africa" have themselves been deprived of the sanctions of
their European social orders. The supposed purpose of the colonizers' traveling into
Africa was to civilize the natives. Instead the Europeans took the natives' land away from
them by force. They burned their towns, stole their property, and enslaved them.
"Enveloping the horror of Kurtz is the Congo Free State of Leopold II, totally corrupt
though to all appearances established to last for a long time" (Dorall 309). The conditions
described in Heart of Darkness reflect the horror of Kurtz's words: the chain gangs, the
grove of death, the payment in brass rods, the cannibalism and the human skulls on the
fence posts.

Africans bound with thongs that contracted in the rain and cut to the bone, had
their swollen hands beaten with rifle butts until they fell off. Chained slaves were
forced to drink the white man's defecation, hands and feet were chopped off for
their rings, men were lined up behind each other and shot with one cartridge,
wounded prisoners were eaten by maggots till they died and were then thrown to
starving dogs or devoured by cannibal tribes (Meyers 100).
The colonizers enslaved the natives to do their biding; the cruelty practiced on the black
workers were of the white man's mad and greedy rush for ivory. "The unredeemable
horror in the tale is the duplicity, cruelty, and venality of Europeans officialdom"
(Levenson 401).
Civilization is only preserved by maintaining illusions. Juliet Mclauchlan, author of
"The Value and Significance of Heart of Darkness," stated that every colonizer in Africa is
to blame for the horror which took place within.

Kurtz's moral judgment applies supremely to his own soul, but his final insight is all
encompassing; looking upon humanity in full awareness of his own degradation, he
projects his debasement, failure, and hatred universally. Realizing that any human
soul may be fascinated, held irresistible, by what it rightly hates, his stare is "wide
enough to embrace the whole universe," wide and immense.... embracing,
condemning, loathing all the universe (Mclauchlan 384).
The darkness of Africa collides with the evils of Europe upon Kurtz's last words. Kurtz
realized that all he had been taught to believe in, to operate from, was a mass of horror
and greed standardized by the colonizers. As you recall in Conrad's Heart of Darkness,
Kurtz painted a painting releasing his knowledge of the horror and what is to come. A
painting of a blindfolded woman carrying a lighted torch was discussed in the book. The
background was dark, and the effect of the torch light on her face was sinister. The oil
painting suggests the blind and stupid ivory company, fraudulently letting people believe
that besides the ivory they were taking out of the jungle, they were, at the same time,
bringing light and progress to the jungle.
Kurtz, stripped away of his culture by the greed of other Europeans, stands both
literally and figuratively naked. He has lost all restraint in himself and has lived off the
land like an animal. He has been exposed to desire, yet cannot comprehend it. His horror
tells us his mistakes and that of Europe's. His mistakes of greed for ivory, his mistakes of
lust for a mistress and his mistakes of assault on other villages, were all established when
he was cut off from civilization. When Conrad wrote what Kurtz's last words were to be,
he did not exaggerate or invent the horrors that provided the political and humanitarian
basis for his attack on colonialism.
Conrad's Kurtz mouths his last words, "The horror! The horror!" as a message to
himself and, through Marlow, to the world. However, he did not really explain the
meaning of his words to Marlow before his exit. Through Marlow's summary and moral
reactions, we come to realize the possibilities of the meaning rather than a definite
meaning. "The message means more to Marlow and the readers than it does to Kurtz,"
says William M. Hagen, in "Heart of Darkness and the Process of Apocalypse Now."
"The horror" to Kurtz became the nightmare between Europe and Africa. To Marlow,
Kurtz's last words came through what he saw and experienced along the way into the
Inner Station. To me, Kurtz's horror shadows every human, who has some form of
darkness deep within their heart, waiting to be unleashed. "The horror that has been
perpetrated, the horror that descends as judgment, either in this pitiless and empty death
or in whatever domination there could be to come" (Stewart 366). Once the horror was
unleashed, there was no way of again restraining it.

Dorall, E. N. [Conrad and Coppola: Different Centres of Darkness.]
Heart of Darkness. By Joseph Conrad 3rd ed. Ed. Robert Kimbrough.
New York: Norton Critical 1988. 306, 309.

LaBrasca, Robert. [Two Visions of "The Horror!".]
Heart of Darkness. By Joseph Conrad 3rd ed. Ed. Robert Kimbrough.
New York: Norton Critical 1988. 290.

Levenson, Michael. [The Value of Facts in the Heart of Darkness.]
Heart of Darkness. By Joseph Conrad 3rd ed. Ed. Robert Kimbrough.
New York: Norton Critical 1988. 401.

McLauchlan, Juliet. [The "Value" and "significance" of Heart of Darkness.]
Heart of Darkness. By Joseph Conrad 3rd ed. Ed. Robert Kimbrough.
New York: Norton Critical 1988. 384.

Meyers, Jeffrey. Joseph Conrad. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons, 1991.

Stewart, Garrett. [Lying as Dying in Heart of Darkness.]
Heart of Darkness. By Joseph Conrad 3rd ed. Ed. Robert Kimbrough.
New York: Norton Critical 1988. 266.

Watt, Ian. [Impressionism and Symbolism in Heart of Darkness.]
Heart of Darkness. By Joseph Conrad 3rd ed. Ed. Robert Kimbrough.
New York: Norton Critical 1988. 332.



 

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