Lord Jim

by

Joseph Conrad

Fantasy vs. Reality Theme Analysis

Themes and Colors
Fantasy vs. Reality Theme Icon
Justice and Duty Theme Icon
Racism and Colonialism Theme Icon
Truth and Perspective  Theme Icon
LitCharts assigns a color and icon to each theme in Lord Jim, which you can use to track the themes throughout the work.
Fantasy vs. Reality Theme Icon

The title character of Joseph Conrad’s Lord Jim is, above all, a romantic. When Marlow, the sea captain who relates Jim’s story, calls Jim a romantic, he usually means romance in the way it’s used to describe adventure stories about daring feats at sea or knights in shining armor. Jim comes from a relatively comfortable upbringing, but he has big dreams about going on his own adventures and performing noble deeds. The problem, however, is that Jim’s dreams are so big that his real life can’t possibly live up to them. Jim’s biggest encounter with disillusionment comes during the Patna incident, when Jim finds himself on a large passenger ship that seems to be sinking. Jim wants to believe that he’s the type of person who would stay on a sinking ship and help rescue people, but when the time comes, he finds himself escaping with a few other cowardly sailors. The reality of Jim’s actions is so different from his fantasy of being a hero that he blacks out and can’t remember how he escaped. Though the passenger ship miraculously avoids sinking, Jim nevertheless remains haunted by his moment of cowardice when he abandoned innocent people to save his own life.

Marlow believes that Jim isn’t so unusual and that many sailors wouldn’t live up to their ideals when put to the test—they’re just lucky enough to never face such a test. Nevertheless, Jim remains haunted by his failure to live up to his fantasies long after the rest of the world has forgotten about the Patna disaster. When Marlow arranges for Jim to go live in the Malay village of Patusan, Jim eagerly accepts—not because it’s an opportunity to face reality, but because it’s a clean slate for him to create a new fantasy. For a while, Jim gets to lead the fantasy life he always dreamed of, becoming a respected leader that many people trust with their lives. But this fantasy life reaches an appropriately dramatic conclusion when Jim makes a judgment error and offers his own life as a sacrifice rather than running away or fighting. Marlow’s long retelling of Jim’s life is a celebration of fantasy and its ability to drive a person’s real life, but it’s also a warning of the anguish and misfortune a person can suffer when their real life doesn’t live up to their fantasies or when a fantasy goes too far.

Related Themes from Other Texts
Compare and contrast themes from other texts to this theme…
Get the entire Lord Jim LitChart as a printable PDF.
Lord Jim PDF

Fantasy vs. Reality Quotes in Lord Jim

Below you will find the important quotes in Lord Jim related to the theme of Fantasy vs. Reality.
Chapter 1 Quotes

He was an inch, perhaps two, under six feet, powerfully built, and he advanced straight at you with a slight stoop of the shoulders, head forward, and a fixed from-under stare which made you think of a charging bull. His voice was deep, loud, and his manner displayed a kind of dogged self-assertion which had nothing aggressive in it. It seemed a necessity, and it was directed apparently as much at himself as at anybody else. He was spotlessly neat, apparelled in immaculate white from shoes to hat, and in the various Eastern ports where he got his living as ship-chandler’s water-clerk he was very popular.

Related Characters: Jim, Marlow
Page Number: 1
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 2 Quotes

The Patna was a local steamer as old as the hills, lean like a greyhound, and eaten up with rust worse than a condemned water-tank. She was owned by a Chinaman, chartered by an Arab, and commanded by a sort of renegade New South Wales German, very anxious to curse publicly his native country, but who, apparently on the strength of Bismarck’s victorious policy, brutalized all those he was not afraid of, and wore a ‘blood-and-iron’ air,’ combined with a purple nose and a red moustache. After she had been painted outside and whitewashed inside, eight hundred pilgrims (more or less) were driven on board of her as she lay with steam up alongside a wooden jetty.

Related Characters: Jim, The Skipper, The two engineers
Related Symbols: The Patna
Related Literary Devices:
Page Number: 9
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3 Quotes

What had happened? The wheezy thump of the engines went on. Had the earth been checked in her course? They could not understand; and suddenly the calm sea, the sky without a cloud, appeared formidably insecure in their immobility, as if poised on the brow of yawning destruction. The engineer rebounded vertically full length and collapsed again into a vague heap. This heap said ‘What’s that?’ in the muffled accents of profound grief. A faint noise as of thunder, of thunder infinitely remote, less than a sound, hardly more than a vibration, passed slowly, and the ship quivered in response, as if the thunder had growled deep down in the water. The eyes of the two Malays at the wheel glittered towards the white men, but their dark hands remained closed on the spokes. The sharp hull driving on its way seemed to rise a few inches in succession through its whole length, as though it had become pliable, and settled down again rigidly to its work of cleaving the smooth surface of the sea. Its quivering stopped, and the faint noise of thunder ceased all at once, as though the ship had steamed across a narrow belt of vibrating water and of humming air.

Related Characters: Jim, The Skipper, The two engineers
Related Symbols: The Patna
Page Number: 19
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5 Quotes

‘My eyes met his for the first time at that inquiry. You must know that everybody connected in any way with the sea was there, because the affair had been notorious for days, ever since that mysterious cable message came from Aden to start us all cackling. I say mysterious, because it was so in a sense though it contained a naked fact, about as naked and ugly as a fact can well be. The whole waterside talked of nothing else.’

Related Characters: Marlow (speaker), Jim
Related Symbols: The Patna
Page Number: 25
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

“I will soon show you I am not,” he said, in a tone suggestive of a crisis. “I declare I don’t know,” I protested earnestly at the same time. He tried to crush me by the scorn of his glance. “Now that you see I am not afraid you try to crawl out of it,” he said. “Who’s a cur now—hey?” Then, at last, I understood.’

Related Characters: Jim (speaker), Marlow (speaker)
Related Symbols: The Patna
Page Number: 55
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 7 Quotes

‘I can’t tell you whether Jim knew he was especially “fancied,” but the tone of his references to “my Dad” was calculated to give me a notion that the good old rural dean was about the finest man that ever had been worried by the cares of a large family since the beginning of the world. This, though never stated, was implied with an anxiety that there should be no mistake about it, which was really very true and charming, but added a poignant sense of lives far off to the other elements of the story. “He has seen it all in the home papers by this time,” said Jim. “I can never face the poor old chap.”’

Related Characters: Jim (speaker), Marlow (speaker)
Related Symbols: The Patna
Related Literary Devices:
Page Number: 59
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

‘The last moment had come, as he thought, and he did not move. His feet remained glued to the planks if his thoughts were knocking about loose in his head. It was at this moment too that he saw one of the men around the boat step backwards suddenly, clutch at the air with raised arms, totter and collapse. He didn’t exactly fall, he only slid gently into a sitting posture, all hunched up, and with his shoulders propped against the side of the engine-room skylight. “That was the donkey-man. A haggard, white-faced chap with a ragged moustache. Acted third engineer,” he explained.

‘“Dead,” I said. We had heard something of that in court.’

Related Characters: Jim (speaker), Marlow (speaker), George
Related Symbols: The Patna
Page Number: 80
Explanation and Analysis:

‘“I had jumped . . .” He checked himself, averted his gaze. . . . “It seems,” he added.’

Related Characters: Jim (speaker), Marlow (speaker)
Related Symbols: The Patna
Page Number: 83
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 14 Quotes

‘I said nothing. I had a rapid vision of Jim perched on a shadowless rock, up to his knees in guano, with the screams of sea-birds in his ears, the incandescent ball of the sun above his head; the empty sky and the empty ocean all a-quiver, simmering together in the heat as far as the eye could reach. “I wouldn’t advise my worst enemy . . .” I began.’

Related Characters: Marlow (speaker), Jim, Chester
Related Literary Devices:
Page Number: 126
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 17 Quotes

‘But as to me, left alone with the solitary candle, I remained strangely unenlightened. I was no longer young enough to behold at every turn the magnificence that besets our insignificant footsteps in good and in evil. I smiled to think that, after all, it was yet he, of us two, who had the light. And I felt sad. A clean slate, did he say? As if the initial word of each our destiny were not graven in imperishable characters upon the face of a rock.’

Related Characters: Marlow (speaker), Jim
Related Symbols: The Patna
Page Number: 140
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 19 Quotes

‘All this was in the past, but I knew the story of his life and the origin of his fortune. He was also a naturalist of some distinction, or perhaps I should say a learned collector. Entomology was his special study. His collection of Buprestidae and Longicorns—beetles all—horrible miniature monsters, looking malevolent in death and immobility, and his cabinet of butterflies, beautiful and hovering under the glass of cases on lifeless wings, had spread his fame far over the earth. The name of this merchant, adventurer, sometime adviser of a Malay sultan (to whom he never alluded otherwise than as “my poor Mohammed Bonso”), had, on account of a few bushels of dead insects, become known to learned persons in Europe, who could have had no conception, and certainly would not have cared to know anything, of his life or character. I, who knew, considered him an eminently suitable person to receive my confidences about Jim’s difficulties as well as my own.’

Related Characters: Marlow (speaker), Jim, Stein
Related Symbols: The Patna, Patusan, Butterflies
Page Number: 153
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 20 Quotes

“To tell you the truth, Stein,” I said with an effort that surprised me, “I came here to describe a specimen. . . .”

‘“Butterfly?” he asked, with an unbelieving and humorous eagerness.

‘“Nothing so perfect,” I answered, feeling suddenly dispirited with all sorts of doubts. “A man!”

Related Characters: Marlow (speaker), Stein (speaker), Jim
Related Symbols: Butterflies, Patusan
Page Number: 160
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 21 Quotes

‘I don’t suppose any of you have ever heard of Patusan?’ Marlow resumed, after a silence occupied in the careful lighting of a cigar. ‘It does not matter; there’s many a heavenly body in the lot crowding upon us of a night that mankind had never heard of, it being outside the sphere of its activities and of no earthly importance to anybody but to the astronomers who are paid to talk learnedly about its composition, weight, path—the irregularities of its conduct, the aberrations of its light—a sort of scientific scandal-mongering. Thus with Patusan.’

Related Characters: Marlow (speaker), Jim, Stein
Related Symbols: Patusan, The Patna
Page Number: 164
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 22 Quotes

‘The conquest of love, honour, men’s confidence—the pride of it, the power of it, are fit materials for a heroic tale; only our minds are struck by the externals of such a success, and to Jim’s successes there were no externals. Thirty miles of forest shut it off from the sight of an indifferent world, and the noise of the white surf along the coast overpowered the voice of fame.’

Related Characters: Marlow (speaker), Jim
Related Symbols: Patusan, The Patna
Related Literary Devices:
Page Number: 171
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 27 Quotes

‘The popular story has it that Jim with a touch of one finger had thrown down the gate. He was, of course, anxious to disclaim this achievement. The whole stockade—he would insist on explaining to you—was a poor affair […]; and, anyway, the thing had been already knocked to pieces and only hung together by a miracle. He put his shoulder to it like a little fool and went in head over heels. Jove! If it hadn’t been for Dain Waris, a pock-marked tattooed vagabond would have pinned him with his spear to a baulk of timber like one of Stein’s beetles. The third man in, it seems, had been Tamb’ Itam, Jim’s own servant. This was a Malay from the north, a stranger who had wandered into Patusan, and had been forcibly detained by Rajah Allang as paddler of one of the state boats. He had made a bolt of it at the first opportunity, and finding a precarious refuge (but very little to eat) amongst the Bugis settlers, had attached himself to Jim’s person. His complexion was very dark, his face flat, his eyes prominent and injected with bile. There was something excessive, almost fanatical, in his devotion to his “white lord.”’

Related Characters: Marlow (speaker), Jim, Dain Waris, Stein, Tamb’ Itam, Sherif Ali
Related Symbols: Patusan, Butterflies
Page Number: 204
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 28 Quotes

‘Next day, talking casually with the people of the little native court of the place, I discovered that a story was travelling slowly down the coast about a mysterious white man in Patusan who had got hold of an extraordinary gem—namely, an emerald of an enormous size, and altogether priceless.’

Related Characters: Marlow (speaker), Jim, Jewel, Cornelius
Related Symbols: Patusan
Page Number: 212
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 29 Quotes

‘This was the theory of Jim’s marital evening walks. I made a third on more than one occasion, unpleasantly aware every time of Cornelius, who nursed the aggrieved sense of his legal paternity, slinking in the neighbourhood with that peculiar twist of his mouth as if he were perpetually on the point of gnashing his teeth.’

Related Characters: Marlow (speaker), Jim, Jewel, Cornelius
Related Symbols: Patusan
Page Number: 1
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 33 Quotes

‘Why did I come, then? After a slight movement she was as still as a marble statue in the night. I tried to explain briefly: friendship, business; if I had any wish in the matter it was rather to see him stay. . . . “They always leave us,” she murmured. The breath of sad wisdom from the grave which her piety wreathed with flowers seemed to pass in a faint sigh. . . . Nothing, I said, could separate Jim from her.’

Related Characters: Marlow (speaker), Jewel (speaker), Jim
Related Symbols: Patusan, The Patna
Page Number: 235
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 36 Quotes

With these words Marlow had ended his narrative, and his audience had broken up forthwith, under his abstract, pensive gaze. Men drifted off the verandah in pairs or alone without loss of time, without offering a remark, as if the last image of that incomplete story, its incompleteness itself, and the very tone of the speaker, had made discussion in vain and comment impossible. Each of them seemed to carry away his own impression, to carry it away with him like a secret; but there was only one man of all these listeners who was ever to hear the last word of the story. It came to him at home, more than two years later, and it came contained in a thick packet addressed in Marlow’s upright and angular handwriting.

Related Characters: Jim, Marlow, The Privileged Reader
Related Literary Devices:
Page Number: 256
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 44 Quotes

‘Thus Brown balanced his account with the evil fortune. Notice that even in this awful outbreak there is a superiority as of a man who carries right—the abstract thing—within the envelope of his common desires. It was not a vulgar and treacherous massacre; it was a lesson, a retribution—a demonstration of some obscure and awful attribute of our nature which, I am afraid, is not so very far under the surface as we like to think.’

Related Characters: Marlow (speaker), Jim, Doramin, Dain Waris, Gentleman Brown, The Privileged Reader
Related Symbols: Patusan
Page Number: 309
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 45 Quotes

‘Who knows? He is gone, inscrutable at heart, and the poor girl is leading a sort of soundless, inert life in Stein’s house. Stein has aged greatly of late. He feels it himself, and says often that he is “preparing to leave all this; preparing to leave . . .” while he waves his hand sadly at his butterflies.’

September 1899—July 1900.

Related Characters: Marlow (speaker), Jim, Doramin, Dain Waris, Stein, Gentleman Brown, Jewel, The Privileged Reader
Related Symbols: Patusan, Butterflies, The Patna
Page Number: 318
Explanation and Analysis: