Saturday, February 16, 2019
Comparing Conrads The Secret Sharer and Heart of Darkness :: Comparison Compare Contrast Essays
  Similarities in Conrads The Secret partaker and Heart of Darkness        Joseph Conrads books, The Secret Sharer and Heart  of Darkness, both  hire with each of our dark selves.  These books also  ware  similarities which are overwhelming. In describing the true inner self of humans, Conrad used  many an(prenominal) symbols which have become apparent in many of his  novels. Conrad uses the same or very similar objects in many of his works.         Joseph Conrad wrote Heart of Darkness in 1899  to recount his voyages in the Congo.  Conrad hid most of his meaning in his words  development  a form of writing kn knowledge as stream of  instinct.  This made it  difficult for people to find the true meaning of his work.   by and by about ten  years, Conrad realized that he would have to get his  tear down across in an easier  to understand book.  This book was The Secret Sharer.         Both of these    books  take on the hero wanting  to meet or developing a fascination for a truly  hellish character.  In Heart of Darkness, Marlow  is very  earnest to meet Kurtz. Marlow is so eager, in fact, that he eventually starts to panic when he thinks he will never meet him.  Marlow  realizes that Kurtz is a very  grievous person, but this does not stop him from wanting to meet this incredibly  noteworthy person.  In The Secret Sharer the  headman saves a murderer from  to the highest degree certain death without knowing what  the man has done.  Later, The Captain has a  word of honor with the man and  finds out his name is Leggatt.  Leggatt tells his story and the Captain  becomes more  enthralled with Leggatt ever so more.  When Leggatt tells the  Captain he has committed a murder, the Captain does not throw him overboard. Instead, the Captain harbors this criminal because he feels a  tie-up with Leggatt that he has never felt before.  In both stories the  hero    identifies with his evil counterpart to the point that they actually  become one in their own minds.  Conrad wanted to show the evil that exists  within all of us.         The bulk of Conrads stories deal with sea  voyages because of his extensive sailing as a young man.  The  place in his writing can be  thought of as  mean the journey through life, a vessel of sorts.  
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