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Irony In The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald

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The Great Gatsby: an intuitive story The rain present at Gatsby's funeral echoes, drip drip. As the book ends with Nick's final thoughts, Fitzgerald is adamant about creating a melancholy tone that is omnipresent, as a great man is taken away before his time. The Great Gatsby is an incredible book by F. Scott Fitzgerald that shows off its impressive literary prowess through its revolutionizing storytelling. The Great Gatsby has a myriad of characters that have great significance throughout the book, but what transforms them into surreal characters is the remarkable way Fitzgerald can control every detail in each scene. Fitzgerald makes The Great Gatsby revolutionary by laying down the mood as if it were a thick blanket of snow. The mood …show more content…

An incredible use of weather is when Daisy is first meeting Gatsby, with Nick, after not seeing each other for five years since their relationship. At first it is raining to establish the droll and awkward mood that is five years thick sitting between Gatsby and Daisy. Then as the evening went on, the weather adjusted to keep up with Daisy's and Gatsby’s sparkling chemistry. While they were dancing to “The Love Nest,” the wind is howling, mocking their excitement out of the joyous occasion. At the end of the dancing, a bountiful ray of sunshine is cast upon Daisy and Gatsby to symbolize that their love for each other still held true even after five years of being apart. Nick tags out; watching Gatsby and Daisy dance, he describes the weather with compelling force: “Outside the wind was loud and there was a faint flow of thunder along the sound” (95). This excerpt not only describes the feeling of excitement from the rush of fast paced dancing with Nick, Daisy, and Gatsby, but the crackling chemistry rising to the surface starting to spark like thunder between Jay Gatsby and Daisy

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