For all those that felt that
Conrad did not end the story “right” with Marlow actually giving the truth,
here is a possible ending in which he gives the truth to the Intended, coming
in right after she asks him to give her Kurtz’s last words, and returning right
before the perspective returns to the Narrator.
“I could feel the Darkness rising
up, the fearful thing from the past colliding solidly into the present, trying
to connect and re-live itself, to continue itself to infinity. Then I felt the
fear, the pain, the insanity, the thing which had changed the memory of this
Shade wrapped in the shadows into something else, something that would become
the Kurtz I thought I knew, from the amount I could glean from the instants I
felt his presence, this being, that had left the earth long before I would hear
of him in the Darkness.
“Then I turned to her, and told
her the feeling that was all around. The rising thing that had rose up in Kurtz
at his last, ‘The Horror, the Horror.’
“She looked at me first as if
this was impossible, that would not his beloved’s name be the only thing he
could have thought at his lowest? Then, she changed, to question why I would
commit such a crime as to give the painful, sharp Truth, which cut through all veils,
and then her, too, like a bright, flashing saber. At last, she finished with
understanding, as if she actually understood what Kurtz had meant in his view
from and into the abyss, that the only horror was that he could not be there
with her then in the present.
“She then turned, lost in
thought, back into the shadowy recesses of the room, to dwell on her now
seemingly complete memory of her devoted.
“I turned and left after as she
did, horrified at what I had done, my mind petrified in what I could have
done…”
I like it! I think you capture the feel of the novella.
ReplyDeleteCaptured Darkness? Thanks!
ReplyDeleteWould you mind if I used your alternate ending here as a part of a school project? I'm presenting on the importance of analyzing literature from multiple points of view, and an alternate ending to a book would be fantastic.
ReplyDeleteSure, I suppose if you want to. I'm flattered that you see my opinion as a relevant view on Heart of Darkness. All that I ask is that the piece is properly cited. I also wouldn't mind reading the final project you use it for. I'd be interested in your take on Heart of Darkness.
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