Lord Jim is the story of a man named Marlow's struggle to tell and to understand the life story of a man named Jim.

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BS 251 --- Introduction to British Literature

Term Paper#2 --- Lord Jim by Joseph Conrad

Name --- Ms. Thongkorn Jaroensilp

Student ID --- 4406640435

        Lord Jim is the story of a man named Marlow’s struggle to tell and to understand the life story of a man named Jim. Jim was a young man who goes to seas dreaming of becoming hero. He often fantasizes scenes of himself saving people and all these ideas come from the popular literature that he read. One day, his gets his chance when the ship he is aboard gets damaged. However, Jim fails to save anyone but, instead, he abandons the ship with the other crews. Jim is haunted by this guilt and the failure to do what he dreams for. His dreams of heroism lead to his death in the end of the novel.

        Marlow is the narrator of the story. It is Marlow who pieces Jim’s story together and interprets most of the narrative for the reader. Throughout the novel, Marlow repeats the same phrase again and again, “he was ‘one of us’,” “…while Jim was ‘one of us’,” “I only knew he was ‘one of us’.” Jim being ‘one of us’ is actually the major theme of the novel and as the story progresses, the meaning of ‘one of us’ varies.

        In the fifth chapter, Marlow says that Jim is ‘one of us’. Marlow and Jim are both sailors but this is only the surface meaning of what he means by Jim is ‘one of us’. There are other men who are sailors too but Marlow did not refer to them as ‘one of us’, except Jim. Although it is not yet clear why Marlow is sympathetic to Jim at this point of the story, it is clear that Marlow is extremely impressed with Jim. It is also obvious that Marlow feels some immediate kinship to Jim and that is probably the deeper reason for calling Jim ‘one of us’.

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        In chapter seven, Marlow said, “he was not one of them”. ‘Them’ refers the other crews who abandon the Patna. Jim was not one of them because, unlike Jim, they planned their desertion and they chose to jump off the Patna. Although he was with them, he was not one of them. Marlow feels Jim is better than they are, for he did not plan his desertion. In fact, Jim blames his jumping on them, for he heard them calling. It is also that they did not want Jim on the boat and even threaten to kill him. Since he ...

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