Thursday, November 28, 2019
Secret Essays - The Secret Sharer, Joseph Conrad, Secret Sharer
  Secret    Sharer By Joseph Conrad  "The Secret Sharer" by Joseph Conrad is a story of deep  mysterious thought. The main character is a young captain who becomes aware that  he does not yet know his ship, or his crew, or, indeed, himself. His character  is one of complicated emotion and deep inner struggle. It's emphasis on the  "double" (or alter ego) portrays the bond between an innocent person  and one who is technically a criminal and reveals how easily the fates of each  are interchangeable. Conrad has a unique style on which his specific diction and  somewhat advanced vocabulary, coupled with complex sentence structure and plot  development, hold the potential to confuse and frustrate the average reader.    Conrad attempts to engage their minds and create original thought. In depth  description is also very characteristic of Conrad's style and is found  throughout "The Secret Sharer." Because of his stylistic writing, some  readers may find themselves lost in his description and loose the story line in  the process. It is, however, these ornate descriptions that Conrad uses to  present his underlying meaning of his story. His character development is also  somewhat established through this. There is a recurring theme to "The    Secret Sharer." Alienation and repression of inner urges are the dominating  themes. One can almost believe the young captain is so filled with uncertainty  of himself that he manufactures a self-analytical double to help him find his  way. From the beginning of the story Conrad begins to use symbolism. The first  four paragraphs that set the place and time also include the first usage of  symbolism. In the first paragraph Conrad describes the setting of the story and  in doing so subtly lets it be known that the captain is feeling alone and  different from the rest of his crew. For example, ".... For there was no  sign of human habitation as far as the eye could reach." "To the left  a group of barren islets...had its foundations set in a blue sea that itself  looked solid, so still and stable did it lie below my feet." In these words    Conrad could be saying how the captain feels that the sea is his only solid  foundation in life, his stronghold and the one thing that is stable in his life.    Through the description of the vast sea and open air Conrad portrays a man who  feels alienated and insignificant. Repetition of the use of the word alone and  metaphors of things and situations that cause loneliness are used throughout the  entire introduction. The secret sharer of the captain's boat is an escaped  murderer by the name of "Legatt." Legatt is physically and  psychologically identical to the captain. Whether or not Legatt is real is  something that will be debated by scholars for years to come. Did the captain  simply create this other self to rid him of his loneliness? Was Legatt a way for  him to express his inner urges to sin and rebel against society? If so then how  do we explain the skipper of the ship "Sephora" looking for him? These  are all legitimate questions that really only Conrad would know the answers to.    They do, however, give us a basis for further discussion of symbolism in this  story. One way to explore the symbolism of the story is through the sleeping  suit that Conrad repeatedly refers to. When Conrad brings Legatt into the story  he uses words that imply a fantasy or mystical world. For example, "the  darkling glassy shimmer of the sea", "a faint flash of phosphorescent  light... flickered in the sleeping water with the elusive, silent play of summer  lightning in a night sky.", "his face, a dimly pale oval in the shadow  of the ship's side." and "he appeared ghastly, silvery,  fishlike." All of these passages strongly suggest the presence of a fairy  tale like atmosphere. The illusions to light, shimmers of the water, and the  references to Legatt being a "shadow of the ship's side" and  "ghastly" imply that Legatt could very well be a figment of the  captains imagination. He could have been developed in the captain's subconscious  as a real person who ended up succeeding in providing companionship and living  out the other "self" inside the captain. Legatt is exactly like the  captain in all respects except for the fact that he is also the part of him that  the captain has always repressed and hidden even from himself. He is the part  that we all hide deep inside us. The part of us that wants to go against the  grain and do    
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