What Does The Green Light Symbolize In The Great Gatsby

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The final page of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby fleshes out the illustrious Jay Gatsby in ways not known to the mere spectators of his life. Despite the grandeur of his lifestyle and the admirers drawn to it, Gatsby’s truest desire remains quite simple: to reunite with Daisy, his first love. “Gatsby believed in the green light, the orgastic future that year by year recedes before us.” (Fitzgerald 174). The “green light” symbolizes Gatsby’s greed and his American dream of climbing the social ladder to reach a financial level he deemed suitable enough to reach Daisy. Through his incessant need to obtain his love, he becomes blind to the fact that he had long fulfilled his dream of creating a name for himself by only using his relationship