What did Joseph Conrad blue plaque do at 17 Gillingham Street?

17 Gillingham StreetBlue Plaque

The Story

# Joseph Conrad at 17 Gillingham Street Standing before this modest Victorian townhouse near Victoria Station, you're at the threshold of one of literature's most transformative periods. Conrad arrived at 17 Gillingham Street in 1896, a former merchant sailor still grappling with the English language, determined to establish himself as a novelist after years of rejection from publishers. It was within these walls that he completed *The Nigger of the "Narcissus"* and conceived the brilliant but tormented Marlow, the narrative voice who would carry his masterpieces *Heart of Darkness* and *Lord Jim* into the world—stories that would fundamentally reshape how fiction could explore the psychological depths of empire and human morality. This address represents the crucial moment when Conrad transformed from an obscure Polish émigré into the visionary writer who would influence generations, making this ordinary London street corner the birthplace of modernist literature's most penetrating examinations of power, corruption, and the human soul.

Location

17 Gillingham Street, Westminster, SW1

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