"A man's most open actions have a secret side to them"
About this Quote
Conrad is writing from the pressure cooker of late-19th- and early-20th-century imperial modernity, where identity is mobile, work is bureaucratized, and violence can be outsourced to "civilization". In that world, actions acquire plausible official narratives - duty, honor, enterprise - while their private engines (fear, resentment, desire, shame) stay half-buried. The genius of the phrasing is its quiet paranoia: "most open" suggests maximum visibility, yet secrecy persists anyway. The sentence implies that opacity isn't an exception; it's built into agency.
The subtext is also gendered and psychological. "A man's" signals a social training in restraint and performance: masculinity as competence on the surface, turbulence underneath. Conrad's fiction repeatedly returns to that split, where a seemingly decisive act reveals a second agenda, and where self-knowledge arrives late, if at all. The "secret side" isn't simply a hidden confession; it's the shadow logic that makes public virtue possible - and sometimes makes it catastrophically hollow.
Quote Details
| Topic | Wisdom |
|---|---|
| Source | Help us find the source |
| Cite |
Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Conrad, Joseph. (2026, January 16). A man's most open actions have a secret side to them. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-mans-most-open-actions-have-a-secret-side-to-129684/
Chicago Style
Conrad, Joseph. "A man's most open actions have a secret side to them." FixQuotes. January 16, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-mans-most-open-actions-have-a-secret-side-to-129684/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"A man's most open actions have a secret side to them." FixQuotes, 16 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/a-mans-most-open-actions-have-a-secret-side-to-129684/. Accessed 12 Feb. 2026.










