Demonstrating Daisy’s sudden behavioral change, Fitzgerald expresses how she immediately feels uncomfortable, upset, and overall guilty. Not only does this scare Daisy because she’s been having an affair with a now obvious sketchy untrustworthy man, but it demonstrates how…
Gatsby and Daisy’s relationship was mainly just a fantasy created by Gatsby. Gatsby imagined this great life that he and Daisy would have together, when in reality, Daisy was married and could not leave her husband. When Gatsby and Daisy did get reunited, their love sparked again, but never took full effect because of Tom. The idea of “fake love” is also seen in George Wilson and Myrtle’s relationship. Although they were married, they did not have a true romantic relationship. George only married Myrtle because he did not try to make a better life for himself. George and Myrtle were on the same economic level and social class: poor. Wilson loved Myrtle to an extent, but he did not have a deep passion for her as Gatsby did for…
Fitzgerald emphasises these negative feelings we should feel towards Tom through his attack on his mistress Myrtle, despite her encouraging behaviour, ‘making a short deft movement, Tom Buchanan broke her nose with his open hand’ describing how Tom not only hits his wife but also hits his mistress. It highlights to the reader Tom’s brutality in addition to his need of a mistress only to satisfy him so when…
I believe that the character ‘Myrtle Wilson’ was created by Fitzgerald not to sympathise with but, to judge and be shown the disgusting truths of which people had thought upon others. Myrtle conveys a theme of snobbish class and wealth as she has an affair with Tom due to his…
In order to fulfill her dreams of being wealthy and glamorous, Myrtle “has some sort of life apart from [George] in another world” (Fitzgerald 124). Essentially, Myrtle believes that by having an affair with Tom Buchanan, she is moving up the social ladder. But instead of helping her situation, the affair eventually leads to Myrtle’s fate, death. Furthermore, Myrtle was a character who wanted to achieve the American Dream so badly, but could never fully achieve it because of her social…
Wilson’s overall thesis in “Terrible Beauty” is that: it is in recognizing and accepting death's inevitability that one can appreciate episodes of melancholy and the abnormalities of life as beautiful and necessary to genuinely experience what is profound. The author develops this thesis through Keats’ posthumous outlook of life, stating that he is taking a “double stance” and “suffering death while transcending death.” Keats ultimately accepted life’s fleeting nature and discovered beauty through suffering. Through this awareness, he realized that pain promotes true joy as everything is temporary, and complacent or ignorant tendencies limits us from our real…
Myrtle Wilson is Fitzgerald's vessel for illustrating the modern wasteland. His conception of the wasteland as an unavoidable, vulgar part of the 1920s society is parallel to his characterization of Myrtle as an unavoidable, vulgar character that refuses to be ignored. He uses her to point out what he sees as the faults of modern society. Myrtle is materialistic, superficial, and stuck living in the physical wasteland referred to as "the valley of ashes." Fitzgerald uses her to portray the social wasteland, particulaly the growing materialism and superficiality of modern society. He makes a huge statement about the repression of the impoverished by the upper-class in the modern wasteland through Myrtle. She not only lives in the geographical wasteland, but she also embodies the moral and social wasteland that Fitzgerald is condemning.…
Tom uses this as a reason come by so that he can continue his affair with Myrtle behind his back. His passiveness is his most outlined and important trait because, when the tragedy of his wife come, he couldn’t do anything, he was just a bystander. The death of Geroge’s wife Myrtle is tragedy for many characters directly like Tom and Georges grief, but also indirectly. It leads to the death of Gatsby and determines the future of the relationship between Tom and Daisy and Nick and Jordan. However, these characters knew what they were doing, they were engaged in deceit. These characters knew the efforts of their own actions upon themselves, but George was the innocent one who in the end would face the consequences of their actions. It shows an innocent person can be affected by the corruption and greed of others. The Great Gatsby is a book that depicts a society in which the moral actions of the characters receive some form of judgment, in the creative piece George is the centerpiece and is just looking blankly, rectifying that every action is observed and judged. George shows us that everyone is part of the same…
Despite the novel’s setting in the most enchanting society America has experienced, Fitzgerald established a gloomy tone through the dismal diction used to describe the Valley of Ashes and the decrepit eerie billboard overlooking the whole sad area. For example, he established a cheerless tone by…
Commentary 1. Fitzgerald’s use of imagery in this passage helps to form a gripping mood. 2. At this time, Nick is telling the story through Wilson’s eyes soon after his wife’s passing. This indicates to the reader that the mood has switched from a positive and honest one to both serious and a bit incensed. Fitzgerald effectively uses imagery by mentioning the “ashheaps,” “gray clouds,” and “dissolving light” to create an eerie feeling in the atmosphere and his surroundings. The overall mood is depicted through Wilson’s words and attitude, that creates the image; “glazed eyes” and the phrase ,“You may fool me, but you can’t fool God!”. Wilson’s behavior and language suggest that he is emotional and scarred by Myrtle’s…
George Wilson embodies the underprivileged laborers of the urban world struggling for the American Dream. Fitzgerald describes Wilson as lifeless, hard-working, and submissive. In addition, his wife, Myrtle Wilson, whips him around while…
Myrtle is the wife of Gorge Wilson who is an auto mechanic. She represents the lower class in society and more than anything she wants to become part of the upper class. Myrtle is very unsatisfied with her husband everything in her life is dull and gray. Even her husband is always covered in dull brown colour of dirt and he does not wear the kind of vibrant clothes that Tom Buchanan wears, the person with whom she is having an affair with. The apartment she shares with Tom in New York, is the complete opposite of the house she lives in. The Wilson's home is in "a valley of ashes... where ashes take to form of houses and chimneys... a line of gray cars crawls along... the ash-gray men..." (Fitzgerald, 23) The author describes the part of the region in which Myrtle lives, as well as the other people of the lower class as this very hideous place full of pollution. Her life with Wilson is very colourless, she does not attended any parties with him like the rich people do. Myrtle wants colour and joy in her life and that is why she has a romance with Tom who is part of the upper class. Once she is with Tom she begins to act and dress differently. The clothes she wears are glamorous. The first time Nick meets Myrtle in the garage he describes her wearing "dress of dark blue... containing no facet or gleam of beauty..." (Fitzgerald, 25) When she is with her…
Myrtle is the wife of George Wilson, and the mistress to Tom. When she married George she thought he was a gentleman with money, but soon found him to be the opposite. When Myrtle is talking to Catherine and she said “The only crazy I was when I married him. I knew right away I made a mistake. He borrowed somebody’s best suit to get married in, and never even told me about it....’Oh is that your suit ?’ I said ‘ this is the first I have heard about it. But I gave it to him and then lay down crying” (Fitzgerald 35) shows how when she married to George she thought he had money. When she found out she did not express her discontent but instead put up a false front and used that hide her feelings. One of the reasons that Myrtle cheats on George is that he can’t buy her all that she wants, but Tom who is rich can. When Myrtle tells Tom to buy her a dog, he said to the dog seller “Heres your money. Go buy ten more with it” this shows how willing he is to spend money on his mistress. Myrtle is very object oriented so she cheats on Tom to get more possessions. Myrtle not only uses false facade to hide her discontent in her marriage but uses false front as an outlet, where she can get all the things she wants like gifts from Tom. False front seems to be the source of her problems by letting her continue this facade of her acting content, but at the same time the solution where she can be the mistress of Tom…
Myrtle’s effort to become a part of Tom’s elite group is destined to be unsuccessful, due to the fact that he is of a more sophisticated, wealthier class. She is simply a form of entertainment for Tom for he reached “such an acute limited excellence at twenty-one that everything afterwards savours of anti-climax,” (Fitzgerald 6) and he needs something to amuse himself with. Myrtle takes advantage of her liveliness and energy in an attempt to get away from the rest of her class. As she gets involved with Tom she begins to take on his values and way of living. However, it is known that the chance of breaking out of an economic class diminishes as inequality increases. Based off of this, it will prove troubling for Myrtle because, in this she merely manages to demoralize herself as she becomes corrupt living up to the stereotype of the rich. Along the way she loses any sense of honor that she may have had at any point, as she belittles even those in her own class. Even with her immense desire to be a part of the highest social class, she never really finds a place in Tom’s elite world of the rich.…
Tom’s physical abuse of his mistress, Myrtle, reveals his need for dominance over women. When Myrtle mentions Daisy’s name, Tom’s extreme anger causes him to break “her nose with his open hand.” (37) Tom’s need to exert physical control over Myrtle emphasizes his sexist need for control. His infuriation over her mentions of Daisy illustrate his inability to see Myrtle beyond an object for his sexual gratification. Furthermore, his immediate invalidation of his mistress’s accusations of infidelity portray his ignorance of female opinions, again exemplifying his need for dominance over the women in his life. Moreover, Tom’s disregard for Daisy and their family by having an affair further emphasizes his lack of respect for women. Additionally, Gatsby’s obsession with Daisy’s wealth displays his glorification of money and reveals his view of Daisy as a tool to break out of the confines of poverty. While describing Daisy as a “nice girl,” Gatsby focuses on her “rich house” and “rich, full life.” (149) His fixation on her material wealth reveals his identification of her as a means to achieve his desired success. This objectification of Daisy further highlights the overall dehumanization of women. Tom’s marginalization of Myrtle and Gatsby’s advantageous use of Daisy illustrate the ultimately negative and condescending attitude toward women throughout society, particularly in the wealthiest…