The wilderness is a very
significant symbol in Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness. It is not only
the backdrop against which the action of the story takes place, but also
a character of the story in and of itself. The vastness and savagery of
the wilderness contrast with the pettiness and foolishness of the pilgrims,
and the wilderness also shows the greed and brutality that lie under the
noblest of ideals.
The wilderness is not a
person as such, but rather an ominous, brooding, and omnipotent force that
continually watches the "fantastic invasion" of the white man. The activities
of the white people are viewed throughout the book as insane and pointless.
They spend their existence grubbing for ivory or plotting against each
other for position and status within their own environment. Their whole
society seems to have an air of unreality about it. It is as if they are
building their whole lives on nothing more substantial than a morning mist,
easily blown away by the merest puff of wind. Marlow comments: "The word
'ivory' rang in the air, was whispered, was sighed. You would think they
were praying to it . . . I've never seen anything so unreal in my life".
In contrast, the wilderness appears solid, immovable, and ominously threatening.
During Marlow's stay at the Central Station, he describes the surrounding
wilderness as a "rioting invasion of soundless life, a rolling wave of
plants, piled up, crested, ready to . . . sweep every little man of us
out of his little existence". It is difficult to say, however, what the
intentions of the wilderness actually are. We see the wilderness entirely
through Marlow's eyes, and it is always somewhat of an enigma. It is "an
implacable force brooding over an inscrutable intention".
The wilderness is not just
an impersonal force that is unconcerned with anything else but itself.
It is, rather, a mirror in which one can see clearly the darkness hidden
in one's heart. The force of the wilderness is only malevolent towards
pretense. The natives, who are too simple to have false motives and pretenses,
live perfectly at peace with it. In fact, in many places in the story their
voices can be considered the voices of the wilderness. Specifically, when
they are crying out in grief th rough the impenetrable fog, their voices
seem to be coming from the wilderness itself. (". . . to me it seemed as
though the mist itself had screamed . . ."). The natives reflect the savage
but very real quality of the wilderness. Consider Marlow's description
of the natives in the canoes on the coast: ". . . they had bone, muscle,
a wild vitality, and intense energy of movement, that was as natural and
true as the surf along their coast. They wanted no excuse for being there".
The environment of the jungle, in contrast with the European society from
which the white men have come, imposes no restraints upon the behavior
of an individual. It is a harsh environment that tests one's ability to
hold onto sanity without the structure of society. The people who are successful
in fighting the wilderness are those who create their own structured environments.
As long as they keep themselves busy with surface activities, they cannot
hear the whisperings of the wilderness, and the darkness in their hearts
remains buried. For example, the chief accountant of the government station
preserved himself by maintaining an impeccable appearance. Marlow says
of him, ". . . in the great demoralization of the land he kept up his appearance.
That's backbone. His starched collars and got-up shirt-fronts were achievements
of character". Marlow himself must also face the truth that the wilderness
reveals to him. He sees the wild dancing and chanting of the natives, and
though he says at first that the spectacle is utterly incomprehensible
to him, upon reflection he admits that he feels a remote kinship to the
"passionate uproar." Marlow says, "[The earth] was unearthly, and the men
were-No, they were not inhuman. Well, you know, that was the worst of it-this
suspicion of their not being inhuman". But, like the chief accountant's
clothes, Marlow's work piloting and repairing the steamboat distracts him
from such thoughts.
On the whole, the white
men are successful in fighting the influence of the wilderness. They are
either too greedy and stupid to realize that they are under attack, such
as the pilgrims who are hunting for ivory, or they have managed to insulate
themselves through work, such as the accountant. There is, however, one
notable exception. Kurtz, the fabulously successful chief of the Inner
Station who has come from Europe to civilize the natives, succumbs to the
savagery of the wilderness. He gives up his high aspirations, and the wilderness
brings out the darkness and brutality in his heart. All the principles
and aspirations of European society are stripped from him, and the abominable
passions and greed of his true nature are revealed. He collects a following
of loyal natives who worship him as an idol, and they raid surrounding
villages and collect huge amounts of ivory. The chiefs must use ceremonies
so horrible in approaching Kurtz that Marlow cannot bear to have them described.
Marlow says, ". . . such details would be more intolerable than those heads
drying on the stakes under Mr. Kurtz's windows. . . . I seemed at one bound
to have been transported into some lightless region of subtle horrors .
. ." The full significance of the wilderness can be seen only through
Kurtz, because it is he who most succumbs to its powers. Through the influence
of the wilderness, basic human nature is revealed in him. Consider the
following comment by Marlow about the power of the wilderness over Kurtz:
. . . the wilderness . . . seemed to draw him to its pitiless breast
by the awakening of forgotten and brutal instincts, by the memory of gratified
and monstrous passions . . . this alone had beguiled his unlawful soul
beyond the bounds of permitted aspir ations.
The degradation of Kurtz
has implications for more than just himself. It is a commentary on all
of humanity. At his death, he sees the true state of mankind. His gaze
is "piercing enough to penetrate all the hearts that beat in the darkness".
His final statement of "The horror! The horror!" is his judgment on all
of life. The wilderness brings Kurtz to the point where he has a full awareness
of himself, and from there he makes his pronouncement about all mankind.
Thus, in the story the wilderness is more than a backdrop for the plot.
It is a relentless force that continually beckons the characters to shed
the restraints of civilization and to gratify the abominable desires of
their hearts. The wilderness destroys man's pretensions and shows him the
truth about himself.
© David Dunson