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Selfishness In Frankenstein

Decent Essays

“Every man must decide whether he will walk in the light of creative altruism or in the darkness of destructive selfishness.”- Martin Luther King Junior. 20th century British literature contains a vast amount of examples displaying humankind's inherent selfishness that ultimately ends with destruction, such as Kurtz in Conrad’s Heart of Darkness, Trevor in Greene’s “The Destructors”, and Hester in Lawrence’s “The Rocking Horse Winner”. The character Trevor in “The Destructors” only cares about his needs and wants and is willing to leave someone else in shambles and have others compromise their morals. The mother in the “Rocking Horse Winner” only cares about money and keeping up with financial status. Furthermore in the book “Heart of Darkness” …show more content…

In the novel Kurtz seizes control in the outer station killing any natives who challenged his authority. He “‘Kurtz got the tribe to follow him, did he?’ I suggested…’They adored him’ he said” (Conrad, 54). He was willing to kill or torture anyone he fancied to further his agenda, “Kurtz is personal embodiment... of futility, degradation, and horror in what the Europeans in The Congo called "progress", which meant the exploitation of the natives by every variety of cruelty and treachery known to the greedy man.” (Taghizadeh). Kurtz was willing to order an attack on the steam boat sent by the company because it would threaten to take away his power over the natives, “The Russian told Marlow that Kutz had secretly commanded the attack on the steam boat. “ He informed me… that it was Kurtz who had ordered the attack to be made on the steamer ‘ He hated the idea sometimes of being taken away’” (Conrad, 60). Kurtz had such an obsession with holding his power that when he was dying of disease crawling into the woods to die saying “I had Immense plans”(Conrad, 62), rather than dying without power. His last words were “The Horror! The Horror!”(Conrad, 66), remembering all of the terrible things he had done up to the point of his

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