In this article, we will explore the topic of Last Essays in depth, examining its origins, its impact on contemporary society and its relevance in different areas of daily life. In order to better understand this phenomenon, we will delve into its history, analyze different perspectives and give a voice to experts in the field. Throughout these pages, I invite the reader to reflect on Last Essays from various perspectives and to question their own preconceived ideas about it. I hope that this article proves to be a source of knowledge and inspiration, and that it contributes to enriching the dialogue around Last Essays.
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Last Essays is a volume of essays by Joseph Conrad, edited with an introduction by Richard Curle, and published posthumously in 1926 (London & Toronto: J. M. Dent & Sons).
The volume includes nineteen shorter pieces, mainly written by Conrad for various newspapers and magazines after the publication of Notes on Life and Letters in 1921. Together with the 1978 volume The Congo Diary and Other Uncollected Pieces, edited by Zdzislaw Najder, they contain all of Conrad's miscellaneous writing.
The essays in Last Essays are mainly about sea travel or literature. They contain many passages of interest to the enthusiast. The volume contains "Legends," the unfinished essay Conrad was working on when he died, and "The Congo Diary", Conrad's first known writing, since often reprinted, and of great interest to the student of Heart of Darkness. It also contains Conrad's preface to Curle's Into the East (1921), in which Conrad laments the passing of an earlier form of travel and its replacement by tourism.[1]
"The Dover Patrol" was commissioned by Lord Northcliffe in 1921 for the unveiling of a monument commemorating the British naval efforts in protecting the English Channel during World War I.[2]