Saturday, June 1, 2019
Heart Of Darkness :: essays research papers
Many authors utilize loaded language to try and convey other possible meaning behind the story. However, it is often neglected and the reader never comes to such a realization. But it is quite clear through Joseph Conrad&8217s excerpt of words, that there is a suggestion of an allusionary meaning, which is the determination of heaven, hell, and purgatory. Part one gives a wealth of information to suggest and alternate meaning. The way that I chose to interpret the line of descent was that of the story of creation-a new boat, a new voyage, and a new life-just as Adam and Eve had begun. Marlow was starting off sinless and without a fault. Then, Marlow comes across &8220a gentleman who hung himself. (p. 12) According to Catholicism, suicide is considered a sin,Through the use of loaded language, Conrad assumes a direct relationship between the story of Adam and Eve to the man who hung himself. As Marlow and his companions walked through the countryside, they eventually wound up in a different location, an &8220inhabited devastation where there are people, a turn up where sinners reside. This is a tremendous contrast from where Marlow started out, which was seemingly the Garden of Eden. Reading the section of the story that I did consider the Garden of Eden, I felt quite empty, as if it was a place where only Marlow and his companions were. Conrad used detail in this section which really made me pick up on this perception of loneliness. When we finally arrive to the &8220inhabited devastation, the feeling that Marlow along with his companions are the only people there, evaporate. Immediately, the mountainous scenery strikes me. The details that Conrad gives of this specific places, gives me a very cold feeling. All around, the reader receives a nonrepresentational description of the natives, who are a part of the inhabited devastation. Just as Adam and Eve are out of place, the reader can assume the homogeneous of Marlow and his companions. However, we ar e not fully aware of one sin that Marlow has come across, the sin of suicide. It has to have played a part in their expulsion.
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