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Nalanda Digital Library , as a part of its E-text Conversion Project (ECP), has converted his writings into 'pdf' format for easy reading on the reading console. You can find the list here. Profile: Not yet twenty-one, he learned English by reading
the London Times, Carlyle's Sartor Resartus , and Shakespeare's plays.
In 1884, Conrad became a naturalized British subject and gained his master's
certificate. In the ten years that followed, he sailed between Singapore
and Borneo, voyages that gave him an unrivaled background of mysterious
creeks and jungle for the tales that he would write after 1896, when he
retired from the sea to settle in Ashford, Kent, with his new wife, Jessie
Chambers.
Primarily seen in his own time as a writer of
boys' sea stories, Conrad is now highly regarded as a novelist whose work
displays a deep moral consciousness and masterful narrative technique.
Influenced by Henry James, Conrad's finest works are Nostromo (1904) , Heart
of Darkness (1899), and Lord Jim (1900). His early novels, including Almayer's
Folly (1895), An Outcast of the Islands (1896), and The Nigger of the 'Narcissus'
(1897), are full of romantic description in an atmosphere of mystery and
brooding. In Tales of Unrest (1898), "Youth" and Other Tales (1902), and
Twixt Land and Sea (1912) appeared such outstanding short stories as "Typhoon"
and "The Shadow-Line" that describe the testing of human character under
conditions of extreme danger and difficulty. Throughout his fiction Conrad
is concerned with moral dilemmas, the isolation of the individual to be
tested by experience, and the psychology of inner urges in both groups
and individuals. His semi-autobiographical The Mirror of The Sea (1906)
and Some Reminiscences (1912) (published in the States as A Personal Record
) testify to his high artistic aims.
Conrad did not find shore-life easy. His expedition
to the Belgian Congo had left him with malarial gout, which afflicted his
wrist so much that he often found writing painful. He was never a quick
or fluent writer; he thought it a good day when he could produce as little
as 350 words with which he was satisfied. After the publication of his
first book, which had taken Conrad some five years to write (and which
had survived the African jungle, shipwreck, and a Berlin railway cloakroom),
Edward Garnett (writer, critic, and publisher's reader) asked, "Why not
another?" Gradually Conrad settled down to write for a living. Although
perceptive judges such as John Galsworthy and H. G. Wells praised him,
the English reading public was slow to recognize the merit of his work.
Conrad uses fiction to analyze the macrocosm (world
at large) by presenting objectively and scientifically a microcosm such
as a ship's crew. As a young merchant sailor Conrad had been cut off from
family, friends, and country; this essential loneliness he conveys in his
tales set on the sea and in exotic locales. His sense of isolation stems
from the fundamental differences that existed between himself and his fellow
seamen--in age, culture, language, education, and experience. However,
his remoteness from the British reading public, and his consequent his
lack of knowledge about what makes a popular novel, makes his stories all
the more real. Conrad often maneuvers to keep the reader at a distance
from the characters in order to view them objectively. For example, in
writing "The Inn of the Two Witches" in the winter of 1912 for the London
Pall Mall (1913) and New York Metropolitan (May, 1913) magazines he resorted
to another "Chinese box" narrative technique: an early twentieth-century
book-collector recalls some years before having found a manuscript which
contained a story (presumably written in the first person).
Here as elsewhere, the world is seen by Conrad
as a place of unending contention between the forces of darkness and dissolution
on the one hand and those of brotherhood, duty, and bravery on the other;
this belief is sometimes referred to as Manichæism, an early Christian
heresy. Conrad divides all mankind into two types--the visionaries (who
are truly 'young' no matter what their chronological age) and the cynical
realists. Conrad implies that a man is already dead if he has lost his
ideals and visions. The sea is always present in Conrad's stories; for
him, it symbolized the physical, emotional, and mental environment of the
individual (as represented by the ship–see, for example, the stories "The
Secret Sharer," "Typhoon," and "Youth"). Conrad shows how superficial are
rational control and civilisation. Youth, full of romantic visions and
idealism, encountering the sheer corruption of the Darwinian jungle, may
be overwhelmed by the experience, as Tuan Jim is at the start of Lord Jim
on board the Patna.
National Institute of Technology kerala, India
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