How Does F Scott Fitzgerald Use Internal Conflict In Winter Dreams

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Winter is a cold metamorphasis that consumes all life in its path, sadly for one man his dream will be the ultimate snowstorm that disillusions him. This becomes evident in F. Scott Fitzgerald's short story "Winter Dreams" as Dexter Green is introduced to the cunning Judy Jones. Judy becomes an unattainable target that Dexter persistently yearns for even after her glamour withers away with age. Fitzgerald depicts this immense obsession through the use of metaphor, symbolism, and internal conflict. Fitzgerald utilizes literary metaphor regarding Dexter's relationship with Judy to display how hazardous and enthralling the romance can be. After the excitement of the budding affection passes, Dexter begins to realize how drained her love makes …show more content…

Declaring that her presence is a drug in Dexter's life hints at how debilitating her guile will always be. The decision to use symbolism within this text reveals the conflict that goes on in Dexter's psyche. Long before readers are given a glimpse into the protagonist's life, it is stated that his dreams have unwavering control over him. "As so frequently would be the case in the future, Dexter was unconsciously dictated to by his winter dreams." His goals become his focal point in life, Dexter obsesses over perfection and pride. Even after he has become a successful businessman he longs for that which he cannot have. It has been said that your worst battle is between what you know and what you feel. Dexter Greene ponders the world and happenings around him, but he never takes action. On the first night that he visits Judy's home he thinks about its previous guests. "Next evening while he waited for her to come down-stairs, Dexter peopled the soft deep summer room and the sun-porch that opened from it with the men who had already loved Judy Jones." Although he knows that various men have loved and lost her in years past, he does not