I found Charlie Marlow as a narrator of Dark Heart. In the dark, the main storyteller is Charlie Marlow. According to the ship awaiting the tide turn of the Thames, he told the crew a trip to Africa's Congo. On the opening page, Marlowe is drawn like an idol; he is related to his somewhat philosophical way of telling a story "He has a Buddha's preaching attitude." Ambiguous, thinking deeply about imperialism - the big theme is darkness.
Marlow is one of the two narrators of The Heart of Darkness, and he is more important of the two. Conrad made a complex narrator to Marlow, a man who is not right and wrong. Marlow tells stories that make up the true content of the novel. The storyteller tells the story objectively and avoids it. However, in "the heart of darkness" Marlow himself is one of the central figures. Mahlow is not an objective window of the story, but an emotional confrontation between the events in the story and the characters. He is also a man alienated from the mainstream. He is also an observer, thinker and commentator. Ignoring the role of Marlow in the dark heart, half of the interest and appeal to this novel will disappear. Marlow also plays a symbolic role. He represents much bigger things than myself.
The heart of darkness is expressed as a story in the story. Although the viewpoint mainly provides Charlie Marlow, most of the story, Marlow's perspective consists of an anonymous narrator that in turn provides an explanation of the first person of Marlow's story. This view can also be seen by Conrad's third consciousness of this book. Conrad himself tells the reader the entire story and decides which authors fill out the details and what is missing. In addition to these three main perspectives, there is a personal opinion of the main character in the book. Everyone has different opinions about Kurz. These views are often contradictory and can always accept explanations. Whose opinion can be trusted? Which narrator and role can you trust? Conrad leaves these questions to the reader to explain the complexity of the book and the meaning of the multilayers.