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Significance Of Weather In The Great Gatsby

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The American Dream is the idea that anyone, regardless of where they come from, can attain their version of success. This success is different for different people, each person has their idea of the American dream. F. Scott Fitzgerald's book The Great Gatsby, published in 1925, explores the character Jay Gatsby’s American Dream through the narration of his close friend Nick Caraway. Nick narrates his experience of a summer with Jay Gatsby, in 1922, who spends his life a single dream of being reunited with his love Daisy Buchanan, who he lost five years earlier. The story of Gatsby takes him from poverty to immense wealth, to his love Daisy, and eventually to his demise. Despite the use of other symbols such as weather, the most important symbol F. Scott Fitzgerald uses in the book is the green light at the end of Daisy’s dock, as it is significant to the plot of the story and directly connects to the main theme of the story about the …show more content…

This heat also represented the boiling point or the climax of the book, which emphasizes the weather's significance and connection to the plot and tone. The weather was again brought up in chapter 8 when Nick wrote, “The night had made a sharp difference in the weather and there was an autumn flavor in the air” (153). This weather description of ‘autumn flavor’ has significance to the plot of the story. Autumn symbolizes the end of things, specifically summer, which tells the reader that this story is settling down and coming to an end. Autumn is also the season where plants begin to wither and die which foreshadows the death of Gatsby. While weather was significant to the plot and tone of the story, it didn’t have any connection to its theme. For this reason, the green light is the most dominant symbol in the book because it illustrates the theme and plot of The Great

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