Jay Gatsby- he is the protagonist who gives his name to the story. James Gatz is his real name. His parents were shiftless and unsuccessful parents. Jay Gatsby, of West Egg, Long Island, sprang from his Platonic conception of himself. He was a son of God.
After the first dinner at the Buchanan’s, Nick Carraway recalls Gatsby was reaching toward the green lights and he “was trembling (1.152)” while doing so. Gatsby’s action of trembling exemplifies him as a hard worker individual because he’s trying his best to reach for what he wants. Also,trembling can also indicates coldness and represents how Gatsby disregard the hardships to fight for what he wants. His actions define him as an obsessive pursuit of his Platonic Ideal of himself. In the drawing, I highlighted this aspect of Gatsby
Daisy is unhappy with her marriage to Tom, this leads her to have bursts of unsettlement. Daisy, it seems desires to be with Gatsby, even after he leaves for the war. This leads her to say the day of her wedding,“Daisy’s change’ her mine” (pg 76). Daisy says this after she has been quite drunk,by revealing her true feelings. She during this scene,is described by Jordan who states, “She groped around in a waste-basket she had on her bed and pulled out the string of pearls”(pg 76).
Conflicting feelings influence people’s actions, even if they are wrong. In The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Daisy’s conflicting feelings about Gatsby influenced Daisy’s decisions because he led her to drink, and how Daisy wanted to back out of her engagement with Tom. Before the bridal dinner, Jordan, Daisy’s friend, walked into Daisy’s room and saw her drunk with a letter in her hand. Once Jordan saw that the letter was from Gatsby, Daisy said “‘Never had a drink before, but oh how I do enjoy it’”
Finally, the final color that was mentioned in F. Scott Fitzgerald novel that supports the novel’s everlasting optimism theme are the color blue. The color blue was used to symbolize calm and heaven. Fitzgerald used the color blue to symbolize calm and heaven for when Nick Carraway came back home after Jay Gatsby was funeralize, and he went on a stroll down into Gatsby’s backyard,”[....] I thought of Gatsby’s wonder when he first picked out the green light at the end of Daisy’s dock. He had come a long way to this blue lawn, and his dream must have seemed so close that he could hardly fail to grasp it.
American Dream is the idea that anyone can achieve financial success and happiness through hard work and determination. But author F. Scott Fitzgerald gives readers a twist in his novel, The Great Gatsby, when his hero loses everything he worked to achieve. The great American Dream is not always the best dream. Gatsby had become a great success and was close to achieving the great American dream. Gatsby was an Archetypal character because the typical archetypal character goes through searches of fulfillment.
In the novel, there is a lack of emphasis on Gatsby’s homicide, including the moments leading up to it. Fitzgerald mentions the firearm used in the murder shortly after the event but does not discuss the details of its acquisition and blurs the moments leading up to the homicide. The lack of detail is significant because it demonstrates Fitzgerald’s intent to pry the attention away from Gatsby’s death, instead laying it onto the other aspects of Gatsby’s character that define his life, such as his loyalty, determination, and love for Daisy. For example, the final moment before the gunshots were heard portray comprehensive descriptions of Gatsby losing hope that Daisy would call: “No telephone message arrived [...] I have an idea
Gatsby's feelings of nervousness and uncertainty are expressed through the weather and once the mood clears up so does Gatsby as once he was no longer nervous talking to Daisy, Nick proceeded to point out “How the sun shone again” (Fitzgerald 88). Overall, as the weather clears up so does the mood between Gatsby and Daisy between the isolating rain and the Bright energetic
The Code of Silence The pounding at the door was incessant, in sheer rhythm of desperation. The heavy downpour and cracks of thunder did nothing to drown out the urgency. Mr. Hemmingway waved his butler aside and barely unlocked the door before it swung open.
Gatsby’s “Greatness” Greatness is showed by the choices we make in life. From how we see the circumstances and how we react to them. Gatsby is not as great of a man as Nick claims that he is. Gatsby makes foolish, childish and delusional decisions and not at all great.
Throughout the novel, The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, and the poem, “Richard Cory” by Edwin Arlington Robinson, both authors are in fact pointing out; don't judge someone for how they look or what they posses, because no one knows what they feel inside and what they are living. In The Great Gatsby, there are many characters whom live the American Dream, but only one best fits with the theme and that is Jay Gatsby. As the final lines of the poem get closer, it becomes more clear that the author's point is; Luxury does not fulfill someone's life. The people in town see Richard Cory with all his luxuries and wish to be in his place, “In fine, we thought that he was everything/ To make us wish that we were in his place” (Robinson 11-12).
Her enchanting voice works to “commensurate [one’s] capacity for wonder,” and it is this eluding charm of her voice that really draws in not only Nick and Gatsby, but the reader as well. Daisy’s voice carries mystery around it, and it is this alluring quality that really makes her elusive nature even more dangerous. Her intrigue brought about Gatsby’s downfall as he had completely fallen for her. This attraction pulls him to reach greatness in his life, but it is also his complete
In the story "The Great Gatsby" Nick has a favorable opinion of Jay Gatsby. In the first chapter of the book Nick states "When I came back from the East last autumn I felt that I wanted the world to be in uniform and at a sort of moral attention forever; I wanted no more riotous excursions with privileged glimpses into the human heart. Only Gatsby, the man who gives his name to this book, was exempt from my reaction- Gatsby, who represented everything for which I have an unaffected scorn. " The book gives many examples of Nick thinking of Gatsby as the "Great" such as Gatsby 's smile, what Gatsby was willing to do for Daisy, and what Gatsby did for himself.
The ongoing downpour in F. Scott Fitzgerald 's, “The Great Gatsby” symbolizes tension growing and declining between Gatsby and Daisy because of the past memories that flood Gatsby once in Daisy’s presence again. The rain creates clear tone shifts as Gatsby enters and exits Nick’s bungalow through the fifth chapter, Daisy being mentioned with clear apprehension and fear experienced by Gatsby. As Daisy awaits Gatsby in Nick’s living room, Nick has taken account of Gatsby through the weather, “Aware of the loud beating of my own heart I pulled the door to against the rain.” (Fitzgerald 86) The rain symbolizes the growing fear of past Daisy altering her present self, expressed through Jordan’s story, affecting Gatsby whose apprehension of meeting
In F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby, characters have very distinct identities that develop throughout the book and many inferences are needed to understand the characters. One example of this is Daisy Buchanan. Daisy Buchanan cares greatly about wealth and is a very careless person. Throughout the novel, many of her decisions are due to her greed and carelessness, even though those decisions may not be the best decisions for her. Daisy displays her greed throughout the novel; she marries Tom Buchanan because of his wealth.