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Nick Carraway's Judgement In The Great Gatsby

546 Words3 Pages
“Reserving judgements is a matter of infinite hope.” Set in a society full of social breakdown, reserving judgement seems like a lost hope, rather than infinite. Nick Carraway continues to reserve his judgement fairly well; considering he’s surrounded by mansions, odd elite people, and rampant cheating between partners. He reserves judgement for everyone except Jay Gatsby, who is the epitome of social breakdown; his mansion is nothing more than ostentatious, he’s unforthcoming about his past, and his weekly parties draws more unfavorable crowds. Throughout the novel, F. Scott Fitzgerald fills Nick Carraway’s dreams of a wealthy lifestyle in New York City with more social breakdown than he could imagine. Starting off in even the first few
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