Who is the eldorado exploring expedition




















Their only desire was to tear treasure out of the ground like burglars breaking into a safe. He carried his fat paunch with ostentation on his short legs, and during the time his gang infested the station spoke to no one but his nephew. You could see these two roaming about all day long with their heads close together in an everlasting confab.

His eyes were shifty. They walked around all day together, in constant private conversation. I said Hang! I had plenty of time for meditation, and now and then I would give some thought to Kurtz. Still, I was curious to see whether this man, who had come out equipped with moral ideas of some sort, would climb to the top after all and how he would set about his work when there. I said the hell with it and let it go. At this point, Marlow breaks off his narrative, explaining to the men on the Nellie that he finds it difficult to convey the dream-like quality of his African experiences.

Marlow resumes his tale by continuing the description of his talk with the Brickmaker, who complained to Marlow that he could never find the necessary materials needed to make any bricks. Marlow told of how he needed rivets to repair his steamboat, but none arrived in any of the caravans. After his conversation with the Brickmaker, Marlow told his mechanic a boilermaker that their rivets would be arriving shortly.

Marlow assumed that because the Brickmaker was eager to please him because he assumed Marlow had important friends, he would get him the necessary rivets.

Like the Brickmaker, the mechanic assumed that Marlow had great influence in Europe. However, the rivets did not arrive — instead, a number of White men riding donkeys and followed by a number of natives burst into the Central Station. Marlow learned that these men called themselves the Eldorado Exploring Expedition and that they had arrived in search of treasure.

The Manager 's uncle was the leader of the Expedition, and Marlow saw him and his nephew conspiring on many occasions. At times, Marlow would hear Kurtz's name mentioned and become mildly curious, but he felt a strong desire to repair his steamship and begin his job as a pilot.

Ironically Marlow feels that he wants to side with Kurtz and the cannibals than his fellow European employers. Eldorado was historically known as a city of gold and it was never found so it was concluded that it was only myth and never existed.

This is interesting because it shows that the whites were willing to risk everything to get the ivory. Just as many explorers risked everything to try to find the city of Eldorado. Often times Europeans are portrayed as being superior to the African natives.

Heart of Darkness shows a good bit of irony in that the cannibals are more civilized than the European leaders. Well I do. It takes a man all of his inborn strength to fight hunger properly. Spending time alone got boring, so he came up with a plan to hire on help, got them to get on the yacht, then would get them drunk, commit sodomy, rob, and kill.

I agree that his accidental discovery ultimately led to the massacre of countless Natives. Although, he might be considered a hero for 'discovering ' the New World. However, there were several who came before him and inhabited the land, such as the Natives. Thus, the impossibility of discovering something that had already been in place. For this reason, I would not consider Columbus a hero.

Life before the war, an Olympic athlete in his prime, had his dreams crushed when the Olympics had been cancelled due to an uprising in the Eastern part of the world. Hitler and his army had invaded Poland, after that Louie was sent to war.

He became a military officer and was highly praised because of his past. Then, he was captured by Japan and sent in to many POW camps and was thoroughly interrogated. Marlow notices an oil painting on the wall. Marlow needs rivets to continue his journey but the rivets do not come for a while. An exploring party, the Eldorado Exploring Expedition, arrives. They represent the greedy, reckless and cruel young men whose sole purpose is to obtain money and wealth by destroying the land.

While on his boat, Marlow overhears a conversation between the manager and his uncle who talk about Kurtz. He and his caravan of sixty men start heading up the river on his quest to the heart of darkness, a mythical place of hell.



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