“The Secret Sharer” is a short story by author Joseph Conrad. The psychological seafaring story was originally written in two weeks in 1909 and published in
Harper’s Magazine in 1910 in two parts. It is also one of three short stories in Conrad’s
Twixt Land and Sea. The story has been adapted numerous times, including for a segment in the 1952 film
Face to Face, a one-act play in 1969, and for the 2014 film
Secret Sharer directed by Peter Fudakowski. A new 2019 play explores the possible homosexual relationship between the two main characters.
The story begins with an insecure narrator assuming his first command on a ship in the Gulf of Siam. The crew is older and more experienced than he is, and he is anxious to pass as a capable commander. To the crew’s astonishment, the narrator takes the first five-hour watch while the ship is still anchored at port waiting for a favorable wind. Another ship, the
Sephora, is anchored nearby. During the watch, he finds a ladder hauled over the side to the water, which he assumes was a crewman’s mistake. To his surprise, he finds a naked man swimming at the other end of the ladder. The man, Leggatt, is at first hesitant to come aboard but when he discovers he is speaking to the captain, he decides to climb up. Leggatt explains that he has escaped from the
Sephora, where he was the First Mate and awaiting trial for a murder he believes was just and saved lives while at sea. During a storm, Leggatt had been wrestling over a rope with a bully of a crewman, insisting that they must pull the rope to survive the storm. A freak wave killed the crewman and Leggatt was blamed. Leggatt and the narrator get along easily, to the point where the narrator wonders if he is speaking to a version of himself. He fetches some of his own clothes for Leggatt to wear and agrees to hide him in his quarters.
Now an accomplice to Leggatt’s crime, the narrator must keep his presence a secret from the rest of the crew. Things become tricky when the captain of the
Sephora comes aboard in search of Leggatt. The captain’s demeanor confirms that Leggatt will be treated harshly if caught, so once the captain leaves, the two of them devise a plan for Leggatt to escape on land.
The wind arrives and the narrator helps Leggatt avoid the gaze of the steward and other crewmembers. Leggatt has several narrow escapes where he is almost seen. The two devise a plan: the captain will command the ship to sail as close to land as possible. Leggatt, a fine swimmer, will then swim to shore. The narrator orders the crew to sail the ship close to land in search of a “land wind.” His career and the safety of the ship and crew are all at risk. He finally gives the order to turn toward the sea, narrowly avoiding sinking the ship on some rocks. When he sees Leggatt by the shore waving the white hat that he gave him, he knows that the mission was a success.
Like other stories by Conrad,
The Secret Sharer explores an unusual decision and a protagonist making what most would consider the “wrong” choice. There is no clear moment of when the narrator decides to hide Leggatt, a man whom he has only known for minutes. He risks his entire reputation on this man. The story is told in the past tense as the narrator reflects on his past experiences. The narrator is seen as somewhat unreliable, unable to perceive events completely accurately or in a non-judgmental manner.
It is also possible to read “The Secret Sharer” believing that Leggatt is a figment of the narrator’s imagination. At no point in the story does anybody else see him, and the two are so alike it is possible that the narrator is projecting his insecurities onto his subconscious.
Conrad spent time at sea as a merchant marine, but when illness prevented him from continuing, he retired and became a writer. There are some autobiographical elements to the story, with Conrad drawing from his own experiences aboard the
Otago including his own perilously close encounter with steering the ship too close to rocks.
The short story is one of Conrad’s most widely read seafaring tales and is considered one of his best works, a feat made more impressive given that he wrote the story in two weeks. Written ten years after his most famous work,
Heart of Darkness, critics consider “The Secret Sharer” typical Conrad, with a theme of self-discovery, a character of psychological depth, and evocative details. Though the story is relatively simple, critics’ interpretations of the psychological elements widely differ.