Wednesday, September 4, 2019
Two Themes in Heart Of Darkness :: Heart Darkness essays
      Two Themes in Heart Of Darkness                 There are many themes that run through the  novel Heart of Darkness.     There are however two main and significant ones.  These are the theme  of     restraint and man's journey into self.                 The importance of restraint is stressed  throughout Heart of     Darkness.  In the novel Marlow is saved by restraint, while Kurtz is  doomed     by his lack of it.                 Marlow felt different about Africa before he  went, because the     colonization of the Congo had "an idea at the back of it."  Despite  an     uneasiness, he assumed that restraint would operate there.  He soon  reaches     the Company station and receives his first shock, everything there seems     meaningless.  He sees no evidence here of that "devotion to  efficiency"     that makes the idea work.  In the middle of this, Marlow meets a  "miracle".     The chief accountant has the restraint that it takes to get the job done.     He keeps up his apearance and his books are in "apple-pie order."   Marlow     respects this fellow because he has a backbone.                 "The cannibals some of those ignorant  millions, are almost totally     characterized by restraint."  They outnumber the whites "thirty to  five"     and could easily fill their starving bellies.  Marlow "would have as  soon     expected restraint from a hyena prowling amongst the corpses of a     battlefield."  The cannibals action is "one of those human secrets  that     baffle probability."  This helps Marlow keep his restraint, for if  the     natives can possess this quality Marlow feels he certainly can.                 Kurtz is the essence of the lack of restraint  Marlow sees     everywhere.  Kurtz has "kicked himself loose from the earth."  "He  owes no     allegiance to anything except those animal powers, those various lusts,     those unpermitted aspirations lurking in the darkness of his inner  station.     Marlow also responds to these dark callings, and he almost becomes their     captive.  He confuses the beat of the drum (the call to man's  primitive     side) with his own heartbeat, and is pleased.  Yet he does not slip  over     the edge as Kurtz does.  Marlow keeps to the track.  When he is  confronted     with the ultimate evil where a man "must fall back on (his) own innate     strength, upon (his) own capacity for faithfulness,"  he is able to do  so,     					    
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