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    Jay Gatsby Monologue

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    to most of you‚ but I’ve honestly only ever been drunk twice in my life. Quite unusual in the year of 1922 you may say. But something even more surprising is that only once in my life have I truly encountered a man of wonders‚ and that man was Jay Gatsby. Jay really was the landmark of the American Dream‚ a gentleman with passion and power that never failed to astonish you time after time. He was someone who regardless of the toll‚ persistently offered you his hospitality. I remember first moving

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    The Great Gatsby‚ a novel of forbidden love and disarray‚ we look at the novel and see the character‚ Jay Gatsby‚ as someone who has to contend with the aspects of his past. The frame narrative of the novel follows Nick Carrway‚ a reserved and quietly judge mental young fellow‚ who observes the success and demise of the "Great Gatsby" and becomes haunted by the people around him. Furthermore‚ we look at the past of Jay Gatsby‚ his dreams‚ and the analyzation of the literature due to the character’s

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    The Great Gatsby Analysis

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    The Great Gatsby: Plot Analysis Our narrator Nick Carraway is back from World War I and is renting a house in West Egg‚ a small but fancy town on Long Island. His cousin Daisy and her ex-football player husband Tom live across the bay in fancier East Egg. Jay Gatsby‚ Nick’s next door neighbor‚ is a wealthy newcomer who throws large parties weekly‚ during which his guests are happy to drink his (illegal) booze while snubbing him for being “nouveau riche” and possibly involved in some shady activities

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    Great Gatsby Response

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    this quote from The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald completely encompases the entirety of the novel of which it concludes. The meaning behind it serves its purpose as a message for the Modernist novel’s audience as well as a lesson for the intricate characters trapped in their pasts. The quote ends the novel saying that people want to reclaim an idealistic past‚ or a pure moment or memory‚ but when this desire for the past turns into an obsession‚ it leads to destruction. Gatsby believes throughout

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    Great Gatsby Romanticism

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    logical and factual sides of things which is basically consists of everything but romanticism. In the novel The Great Gatsby one of the main characters Gatsby‚ is said to be a “romantic” living in the modern world. If one knows anything about the two eras they know that is frankly quiet true. Mostly everything big thing Gatsby has done in his life has been in some form because of Daisy.

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    Summary of “The Great Gatsby” The Great Gatsby is a book about rich people that are fighting about women‚ money etc. After I read this book I realized that even if you are rich you don’t have to be happy. There are two main characters: Nick Carraway and Jay Gatsby‚ both rich men. Here’s the story in a short version... Nick Carraway is a young man from a wealthy family‚ living in a Middle Western city. The Carraway’s are something of a clan actually

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    Money in the Great Gatsby

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    Money and The Great Gatsby Though the Great Gatsby is only nine chapters long‚ F. Scott Fitzgerald was able to convey many messages in this short book. The most recurring and powerful message was one dealing with money. In the roaring 1920’s when The Great Gatsby took place‚ how you obtained your money was very important and determined who you acquainted yourself with. It basically came down to the fact that there were two classes of people‚ those who were born with money and those who had to

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    The Great Gatsby Greed

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    classic novel The Great Gatsby‚ James Gatz‚ better known as Jay Gatsby shows this to be true. He grew up in North Dakota and came from a poor family. He strived for a better life‚ a life better than the one he grew up with. ”So he invented just the sort of Jay Gatsby that a seventeen year old boy would be likely to invent‚ and to this conception he was faithful to the end.” (Fitzgerald 104)

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    The Great Gatsby Response

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    The Great Gatsby The Great Gatsby is a novel set in the 1920’s when “gin was the national drink and sex was the national obsession.” The Jazz age‚ as some may call the ‘20’s‚ was right after the years of World War One. The novel begins with Nick Carraway telling his audience of some advice about not criticizing others his father had given him when he was younger. “Whenever you feel like criticizing any one‚ just remember that all the people in this world haven’t had the advantages that you’ve had”

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    The Great Gatsby Essay

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    The Great Gatsby Essay: Analyze Fitzgerald’s symbolic use of colour Colour‚ a means of differentiation‚ understanding‚ and a sense of perception. There are about 16.8 million colours known in the English language and when you see each everyone it usually always brings a thought to mind. Colours are very useful in everyday life it makes everything that much more real but specifically colour can be used as a way of showing the real story. In The Great Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerald uses colour symbolically

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