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Love Quote by Joseph Conrad

"For all that has been said of the love that certain natures (on shore) have professed for it, for all the celebrations it has been the object of in prose and song, the sea has never been friendly to man. At most it has been the accomplice of human restlessness"

About this Quote

Conrad punctures the shoreline romance of the sea with a sailor's cold laugh. He’s not arguing against beauty; he’s arguing against sentimentality. The line is built as a rebuttal to the entire cultural industry of ocean-worship: poems, songs, and the safe, landlocked people who "profess" devotion to something they don’t have to negotiate in the dark. That parenthetical jab, "(on shore)", is doing a lot of work. It’s class critique and epistemology in eight characters: the ones most fluent in ocean myth are the ones least exposed to ocean fact.

The real twist is his choice of verb. The sea isn’t an enemy in some melodramatic sense; it’s simply not "friendly", a word that implies obligation, reciprocity, even manners. Nature, Conrad implies, owes us none of that. What it will be, if anything, is an "accomplice" to a specifically human condition: restlessness. Accomplice suggests conspiracy, but also moral ambiguity. The sea doesn’t create our desire to flee, to expand, to gamble our bodies against distance; it facilitates it, magnifies it, and occasionally collects payment.

Context matters: Conrad wrote as a working mariner turned novelist, shaped by imperial shipping routes, labor, risk, and the hypocrisy of heroic narratives about exploration and trade. The subtext is anti-epic. Maritime adventure isn’t a noble communion with the sublime; it’s a negotiated delusion that lets humans dress up compulsion as destiny. The sea becomes the perfect stage for modernity’s itch: a vast, indifferent surface onto which we project meaning, then mistake our projection for a welcome.

Quote Details

TopicOcean & Sea
Source
Verified source: The Mirror of the Sea (Joseph Conrad, 1906)
Text match: 96.80%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
For all that has been said of the love that certain natures (on shore) have professed to feel for it, for all the celebrations it had been the object of in prose and song, the sea has never been friendly to man. At most it has been the accomplice of human restlessness, and playing the part of dangerous abettor of world-wide ambitions. (Chapter XXII (“The Character of the Foe”), p. 123 (in the 1907 Methuen 3rd ed.)). This passage appears in Joseph Conrad’s own prose work The Mirror of the Sea: Memories and Impressions. Project Gutenberg’s transcription (from the Methuen & Co. 1907 third edition) explicitly lists: “First published October 1906” (i.e., the earliest book publication date), with a second edition in December 1906 and third edition in January 1907. The quote is often circulated in shortened form (usually dropping “to feel for it” and the follow-on clause about ‘dangerous abettor of world-wide ambitions’).
Other candidates (1)
... For all that has been said of the love that certain natures (on shore) have professed for it, for all the celebra...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Conrad, Joseph. (2026, February 22). For all that has been said of the love that certain natures (on shore) have professed for it, for all the celebrations it has been the object of in prose and song, the sea has never been friendly to man. At most it has been the accomplice of human restlessness. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/for-all-that-has-been-said-of-the-love-that-103677/

Chicago Style
Conrad, Joseph. "For all that has been said of the love that certain natures (on shore) have professed for it, for all the celebrations it has been the object of in prose and song, the sea has never been friendly to man. At most it has been the accomplice of human restlessness." FixQuotes. February 22, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/for-all-that-has-been-said-of-the-love-that-103677/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"For all that has been said of the love that certain natures (on shore) have professed for it, for all the celebrations it has been the object of in prose and song, the sea has never been friendly to man. At most it has been the accomplice of human restlessness." FixQuotes, 22 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/for-all-that-has-been-said-of-the-love-that-103677/. Accessed 28 Feb. 2026.

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About the Author

Joseph Conrad

Joseph Conrad (December 3, 1857 - August 3, 1924) was a Novelist from Poland.

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