The Intended PDF
The Intended PDF
The Intended PDF
Kurtz’s mistress and his Intended also help us gain insight If we compare this splendid savage with Kurtz’s
into his decline into madness. When Marlow meets him he fiancée, his Intended, it may seem that we are
no longer cares for the principles of society, and is
setting side by side dynamic energy with sterile
cheating on his fiancé with the African woman. The
African woman represents how Kurtz has formed an hypocrisy, life with death . . . She (the Intended)
alliance with the natives. has chosen for herself a graveyard, where she can
exist in comfort . . .; her condition symbolizes
However a similarity exists between them: both are tragic; both
have been fascinated by Kurtz; both that of western Europe. In contrast, the savage lives
have been betrayed by him out her sexual urges as naturally as if she
were a wild beast. (Cox 56)
When Marlow visits Kurtz’s Intended in London one year
after the man’s death, he finds a woman dressed in black "This fair hair, this pale visage, this
who “seemed as though she would remember and mourn
[Kurtz] forever.” (an ideal woman) pure brow, seemed surrounded by an
The Intended creates for herself a graveyard where she
ashy halo from which the dark eyes
hides behind her sorrow and her delusion regarding looked out at me. '' (Conrad 143)
Kurtz.
As in the African jungle, death permeates every corner of ''The room seemed to have grown
the European home. Marlow meets the Intended 'in a lofty
drawing-room' decorated with a 'marble fireplace' and darker, as if all the sad light of the
'grand piano', the fireplace is 'monumental' in its
'whiteness' and the piano 'gleams' in the corner 'like a
cloudy evening had taken refuge on
sombre and polished sarcophagus' her forehead'' (Creating a kind of
One ought to note this play of light and dark (ref to spotlight effect on the Intended)
chiaroscuro and modernist paintings ) and the very
apparent binaries Conrad creates in his novella.