Two colonial officers extol the benefits they are bringing to an African
village in the form of "quays and warehouses, and barracks - and
billiard-rooms". A French republican who has fathered three idiot sons
makes his peace with the Church, only to have an idiot daughter. A woman
chooses not to leave her husband...but he leaves her. Such are the
ironies of Conrad's earliest short stories, which are not apprentice
work but miniature masterpieces in their own right. As astoundingly
original in construction as the great novels that were to come, these
tales are in many ways more challenging and more disturbing still. A
sense of human existence as surprising and often perplexing informs
every part of this remarkable collection. Complex, arresting, and
unsettling, these are indeed "tales of unrest".