5 - The scandals of Lord Jim
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
Summary
Conrad's novel of maritime scandal has left no end of scandalized readers in its wake, from the early reviewers who scoffed at the implausible length and wilful obscurity of Marlow's tale, to the more sophisticated readers who complain that the second half of Conrad's broken-backed narrative capitulates to the very romantic errors that the first half clinically diagnoses. In the primary scandal of Lord Jim, the Mecca-bound pilgrim ship Patna, dilapidated and on the point – or so it seems – of sinking, is abandoned by its white officers. Miraculously for its human cargo of 800 pilgrims (and mortifyingly for its officers), the vessel's rusty bulkhead holds out, and the ship is towed to harbour with no lives lost other than that of the engineer who suffers a heart attack in the initial panic. With two officers hospitalized, and the captain fled to America, only the chief mate Jim stays to face the official inquiry, enduring the full glare of professional disgrace, as well as the gleeful curiosity of the novel's very considerable cast of gossiping sailors. Far more than is commonly recognized, Lord Jim is a drama – and, in a particularly cruel sense, a comedy – of embarrassment. Overwhelmingly, it is embarrassment rather than guilt that Jim exhibits in the aftermath of the Patna affair; as he blushes and stammers his way through his excruciating debriefings with Marlow, it becomes clear that the only victim of Jim's criminal negligence was the narcissistic confidence in his own potential for heroism that he imbibed from popular adventure literature.
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- Conrad, Language, and Narrative , pp. 77 - 97Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001