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believed by
Charles Gould and his own employers to be incorruptible, and it is for this reason that Nostromo is entrusted with removing the silver from Sulaco to keep it from the revolutionaries. Accompanied by the young journalist Martin Decoud, Nostromo sets off to smuggle the silver out of Sulaco. However, the lighter on which the silver is being transported is struck at night in the waters off Sulaco by a transport carrying the invading revolutionary forces under the command of Colonel Sotillo. Nostromo and Decoud manage to save the silver by putting the lighter ashore on Great Isabel. Decoud and the silver are deposited on the deserted island of Great Isabel in the expansive bay off Sulaco, while Nostromo scuttles the lighter and manages to swim back to shore undetected. Back in Sulaco, Nostromo's power and fame continues to grow as he daringly rides over the mountains to summon the army which ultimately saves Sulaco's powerful leaders from the revolutionaries and ushers in the independent state of Sulaco. In the meantime, left alone on the deserted island, Decoud eventually loses his mind. He takes the small lifeboat out to sea and there shoots himself, after first weighing his body down with some of the silver ingots so that he would sink into the sea.
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after all others believed it lost at sea. He finds himself becoming a slave of the silver and its secret, even as he slowly recovers it ingot by ingot during nighttime trips to Great Isabel. The fate of Decoud is a mystery to
Nostromo, which combined with the fact of the missing silver ingots only adds to his paranoia. Eventually a lighthouse is constructed on Great Isabel, threatening Nostromo's ability to recover the treasure in secret. The ever resourceful Nostromo manages to have a close acquaintance, the widower Giorgio Viola, named as its keeper. Nostromo is in love with Giorgio's younger daughter, but ultimately becomes engaged to his elder daughter Linda. One night while attempting to recover more of the silver, Nostromo is shot and killed, mistaken for a trespasser by old Giorgio.
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292:, a.k.a. "King of Sulaco" – an Englishman by ancestry and temperament, he is nevertheless a third generation Costaguanero; owner of the San Tomé Silver Mine, a bequest from his late father who was forced into ownership of the then derelict mine as repayment for many forced loans made to the corrupt government of Guzman Bento; the mine becomes his single-minded obsession
366:– Costaguana's first civilian head of state, who takes over after the overthrow of the tyrannical Guzman Bento; a member of the landed aristocracy; corpulent to the point of infirmity; highly respected abroad and full of good intentions, and many of the characters, including Charles Gould, place their hopes in his ability to bring democracy and stability to Costaguana
400:– the commander of a military unit in Esmeralda, up the coast from Sulaco; he abandons the Ribiera regime and joins the uprising of General Montero and is the first to arrive in Sulaco after the fall of the Ribiera government; his loyalties, however, are soon consumed by a mad desire to get hold of the silver of the San Tomé Mine
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His exploits during the revolution do not bring
Nostromo the fame he had hoped for, and he feels slighted and used. Feeling that he has risked his life for nothing, he is consumed by resentment, which leads to his corruption and ultimate destruction, for he has kept secret the true fate of the silver
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near the key port of Sulaco. He is tired of the political instability in
Costaguana and its concomitant corruption, and uses his wealth to support Ribiera's government, which he believes will finally bring stability to the country after years of misrule and tyranny by self-serving dictators. Instead,
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Nostromo is a commanding figure in Sulaco, respected by the wealthy
Europeans and seemingly limitless in his abilities to command power among the local population. He is, however, never admitted to become a part of upper-class society, but is instead viewed by the rich as their useful tool. He is
880:, emerged in 1904. It is Paraguay, seen through the prisms of his great friend's anger – Napoleonic dictators and a Great Conspiracy. There is even 'a barefoot army of scarecrows' and a priest who becomes the state torturer." Graham arrived in Paraguay in 1873 and wrote many books on it.
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franchise, "Nostramo" is the name of a corruption-ridden city world covered in unending darkness. Nostramo eventually falls under control of a brutal serial killer demigod named Konrad Curze, an allusion to either the name of a central character in Conrad's novella
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is set in the fictional South
American country of Costaguana, and more specifically in that country's Occidental Province and its port city of Sulaco. Though Costaguana is a fictional nation, its geography as described in the book resembles real-life
278:(or Giovanni Battista Fidanza) – a charismatic Italian seaman who has settled in Sulaco and established a reputation for leadership and daring; as an employee of the Oceanic Steam Navigation Company, he earns the unofficial title of the "
372:– a former dictator of Costaguana whose death some years before the novel opens had ushered in a renewed period of political and economic instability; the period of his rule was a dark and bloody chapter in the history of Costaguana
310:– a Costaguanero who has spent much of his time in Paris and considers himself a European by temperament if not birth; he returns to Costaguana and becomes an outspoken journalist and editor of the progressive newspaper
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Gould's refurbished silver mine and the wealth it has generated inspires a new round of revolutions and self-proclaimed warlords, plunging
Costaguana into chaos. Among others, the forces of the
239:" (Head Longshoreman) of Sulaco, to take the mine's most recent load of silver offshore, and arranges for the mine complex to be destroyed by dynamite if the coup leaders try to take it.
314:("The Future"); initially a cynic, he becomes the intellectual force behind the idea of independence for the Occidental Province of Costaguana; he is also in love with Antonia Avellanos
188:, Joseph Conrad provides a detailed explanation of the inspirational origins of his novel. There he relates how, as a young man of about seventeen, while serving aboard a ship in the
436:– the manager of the San Tomé Silver Mine under Charles Gould; under Gould's orders, he is prepared to blow up the mine rather than let if fall into the hands of the Montero forces
254:", but the name could also be considered a corruption of the Italian phrase "nostro uomo" or "nostr'uomo", meaning "our man"). Nostromo's real name is Giovanni Battista Fidanza—
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General
Montero invade Sulaco after securing the inland capital. Gould, adamant that his silver mine should not become spoil for his enemies, orders Nostromo, the trusted "
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and its 19th-century history of despotism, war, and revolution: "Conrad, meanwhile, was absorbing the
Paraguayan story. His nightmarish political novel,
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220:. Costaguana has a long history of tyranny, revolution and warfare, but has recently experienced a period of stability under the dictator Ribiera.
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848:(2007) narrates the secession of Panamá from Colombia as the background story that (in this fictional work) served as Conrad's inspiration for
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734:(1985) has much of the story set in the fictional country of Costaguana. Many of the place names are borrowed from Conrad's novel.
196:-full of silver". As Conrad goes on to relate, he forgot about the story until some twenty-five years later when he came across a
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Conrad set his novel in the town of Sulaco, a port in the western region of the imaginary country
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who has risen to his position through his bravery and daring exploits. ("Nostromo" is Italian for "
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from peasant stock; he manages to muster an army of supporters to eventually overthrow Ribiera
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in a used-book shop in which the author related how he worked for years aboard a
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This article is about the Joseph Conrad novel. For the fictional spacecraft, see
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Charles Gould is a native Costaguanero of English descent who owns an important
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whose master claimed to be that very thief who had stolen the silver.
934:(Landmarks of World Literature), Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1988, p. 1.
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but who is now an innkeeper in Sulaco and the father of two daughters
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The novel was translated to Polish for the first time in 1928 by
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Thomas L. Jeffers, "The Logic of Material Interests in Conrad's
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947:(Garden City, NY: Doubleday, Page & Co., 1921), vii–viii.
332:– an exiled Italian revolutionary who once fought alongside
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At the Tomb of the Inflatable Pig: Travels through Paraguay
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had all been set to star in this adaptation, along with
1010:"A Curious Case of Influence: "Nostromo and Alien(s)""
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republic of "Costaguana". It was originally published
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As the travel writer John Gimlette points out in his
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produced a lavish silent film version in 1926 called
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100 best English-language novels of the 20th century
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771:(1986), the Marine transport vessel is named
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982:Adamczewska, Izabella (9 February 2024).
714:Learn how and when to remove this message
473:was to film the story of Nostromo, with
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872:(2003), there are many similarities to
831:, or the name of the brutal villain of
1743:Fictional Italian people in literature
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747:(1979), the spacecraft is named the
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258:meaning "trust" in archaic Italian.
169:once said, "I'd rather have written
1039:Towers, Andrea (26 February 2016).
378:– an early supporter of Ribiera; a
358:Captain Joseph "Fussy Joe" Mitchell
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943:"Author's Note" in Joseph Conrad,
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1071:(Fall 2003), pp. 80–111.
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412:– leader of a gang of bandits
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1689:Apollo Korzeniowski (father)
441:Adaptations and translations
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1738:Novels set in South America
1129:public domain audiobook at
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694:the claims made and adding
342:– the wife of Giorgio Viola
35:1904 novel by Joseph Conrad
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1008:Billy, Ted (Summer 1989).
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469:In 1991, British director
290:Charles "don Carlos" Gould
144:in monthly instalments of
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1222:An Outcast of the Islands
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1041:"Colony recap: Broussard"
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601:References in other works
536:Radiotelevisione Italiana
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296:Mrs. "dona Emilia" Gould
161:47th on its list of the
136:, set in the fictitious
1723:Novels by Joseph Conrad
1156:Analysis and commentary
242:Nostromo is an Italian
173:than any other novel."
1543:Outcast of the Islands
1429:Because of the Dollars
1387:An Outpost of Progress
566:Jadwiga Korniłowiczowa
1348:The Nature of a Crime
1243:The End of the Tether
577:Jan Józef Szczepański
555:Stanisław Wyrzykowski
280:Capataz de Cargadores
237:Capataz de Cargadores
1046:Entertainment Weekly
842:Juan Gabriel Vásquez
633:improve this section
26:For other uses, see
1728:1904 British novels
1511:The Silver Treasure
907:Politics in fiction
645:independent sources
540:Televisión Española
513:in the title role.
503:Christopher Lambert
499:Isabella Rossellini
451:The Silver Treasure
167:F. Scott Fitzgerald
132:is a 1904 novel by
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1639:Spec Ops: The Line
1519:Dangerous Paradise
1299:Under Western Eyes
1141:at Nostromo Online
679:possibly contains
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1591:Heart of Darkness
1470:A Personal Record
1422:The Secret Sharer
1334:The Arrow of Gold
1236:Heart of Darkness
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792:The Secret Sharer
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1487:Adaptations
1477:Last Essays
1446:Other works
993:13 February
988:wyborcza.pl
930:Watt, Ian.
857:USA Network
800:Dean Koontz
741:'s classic
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548:Colin Firth
544:WGBH Boston
346:Linda Viola
1717:Categories
1415:Amy Foster
1394:The Lagoon
1380:The Idiots
1341:The Rescue
1205:Novels and
1014:Conradiana
913:References
765:'s sequel
688:improve it
622:irrelevant
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244:expatriate
228:concession
198:travelogue
177:Background
120:Wikisource
1623:Gabrielle
1618:(1997 TV)
1559:The Rover
1355:The Rover
844:'s novel
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692:verifying
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524:John Hale
464:lost film
410:Hernandez
334:Garibaldi
252:boatswain
82:Publisher
39:Nostromo
1615:Nostromo
1599:Victory
1551:Lord Jim
1527:Sabotage
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1362:Suspense
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1207:novellas
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885:See also
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446:Fox Film
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312:Porvenir
276:Nostromo
248:shipmate
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202:schooner
186:Nostromo
171:Nostromo
159:Nostromo
142:serially
115:Nostromo
66:Language
20:Nostromo
1682:Related
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686:Please
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69:English
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