Wednesday, September 18, 2019
Illusion and Delusion in Conradââ¬â¢s Lord Jim : A Tale Essay -- Joseph Co
Don Quixote Rides Again: Illusion and Delusion in Conradââ¬â¢s Lord Jim: A Tale ââ¬Å"ââ¬ËYou are an incorrigible, hopeless Don Quixote. Thatââ¬â¢s what you are.ââ¬â¢Ã¢â¬ (Conrad 1946b, 44) Fifteen-year-old Konrad Korzeniowski (Joseph Conrad) heard these admonitory words from the lips of his tutor, a Krakowian college student instructed by his maternal uncle (Tadeusz Bobrowski) to talk his nephew out of his eccentric desire to become a seaman. The link between young Conradââ¬â¢s desire to become a sailor and the renowned knight of La Mancha is not a casual one. In his writings, Conrad generalises the particular case of his vocation for the sea by pointing to the reading of romances of adventure as the cause prompting young men to join the maritime profession. Thus, for instance, in the autobiographical work in which the words of dear tutor are quoted (A Personal Record) Conrad refers to Victor Hugoââ¬â¢s Toilers of the Sea as his ââ¬Å"first introduction to the sea in literature.â⬠(1946b, 72) In ââ¬Å"Tales of the Seaâ⬠(1898) ââ¬âââ¬âan earlier piece written at a period in which he was already engaged in the composition of Lord Jim: A Taleââ¬âââ¬â Conrad speaks of how Frederick Marryat and James Fenimore Cooper, the creators of sea fiction, ââ¬Å"influenced so many lives and gave to so many the initial impulse towards a glorious or a useful careerâ⬠. (1949, 56) Later essays like ââ¬Å"Well Doneâ⬠(1918) or ââ¬Å"Geography and Some Explorersâ⬠(1924) highlight the role played by romances and books of exploration in triggering young menââ¬â¢s desire for a life of adventure at sea, Conradââ¬â¢s included. In the latter he calls Nà ºÃ ±ez de Balboa, Tasman, Torres, Cook or Franklin ââ¬Å"the first grown-up friends of my early boyhoodâ⬠and states that their nautical feats were an inspiration for him. ... ...Facts! They demanded facts for him [Jim], as if facts could explain anything!â⬠(Conrad 1946c, 29) This disavowal of the value of facts sounds is an anomalous one to hear coming from a third-person narrator which, traditionally, was supposed to occupy the objective position of a view from nowhere specifically. It is important to add that such a statement is made in Chapter 4, at the end of which the third-person narrator gives the floor to Marlow, a first-person narrator subjectively involved in the story he is telling. 11 Needless to comment on the connection between hepatic diseases and alcoholism. 12 It may be argued that the doctorââ¬â¢s irony and laughter are a sign of nervousness and a symptom of the loss of consistency of his self-representation as derived from a scientific practice whose solidity is equally eroded by the engineerââ¬â¢s atypical hallucinations.
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