Monday, September 2, 2019
Free Essays - The Mirage in The Great Gatsby :: Great Gatsby Essays
      The Mirage in The Great Gatsby                       The Great Gatsby, written by F. Scott Fitzgerald, is a book of love and  tragedy that all leads back to dreams and ideas, but never reality. Gatsby is a  man of great wealth and is truly rich. Or is he? The Great Gatsby has many  disguises that play a major role in several characters' lives, but mostly  Gatsby's'. Gatsby believes that he will be very successful and get what he  wants, including Daisy, if he is rich. He succeeded in getting money and living  a life of luxury, but is never truly rich. He is always so set on the future and  what things could be if this, or if that happens, that he never lives in the  present. Because Gatsby never lives in the present, he ends up doing that  permanently, and by the end of the book, he lives no more. When Gatsby was  alive, he seemed never to be happy, because he was never satisfied with himself;  Gatsby tried to change himself. He always tried to reach for his vision, which  is represented by the green light, but never seemed to achieve    it because he  didn't ever live in the life he had; Gatsby lived in the life he wanted. F.  Scott Fitzgerald uses green light to represent the unreachable dream in the  future that is always being sought after and wanted by Gatsby, but never  obtained.            In The Great Gatsby, the green light is visible to many and always distant.  To some, like Tom, it is just a light, but to others, like Gatsby, it is their  hopeful future. As Tom said in chapter one, "I glanced seaward-and distinguished  nothing except a green light, minute and far away, that might have been the end  of the dock. When I looked once more for Gatsby he had vanished, and I was alone  again in the unquiet darkness"(Gatsby 26). He saw a green light. That is all,  just a light that may have been at the end of the dock. When Gatsby vanished,  this represented him approaching and trying to attain the green light, which was  his future he sought after and believed in. As Marius Bewley agrees, the green  light represents his faith, "An image of that green light, symbol of Gatsby's  faith, burns across the bay,"(Bewley 24).  					    
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