How Does Myrtle Wilson See In The Great Gatsby

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Living in the Limelight When you live in the limelight, the public eye is always on you. However they are blind of what lies behind the closed doors. Oblivious of what happens in the shadows of the light. Eyes are everywhere in the novel with Dr. T.J. Eckleburg’s judging eyes to the party guests of the extravagant Gatsby parties. This theme of seeing and not seeing is embedded in the novel The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Without the tabloids or Nick Carroway, common people do not get to catch sight of the small intricate details beyond the lights of the exclusive lives of Myrtle Wilson, Tom Buchanan, Daisy, and Jay Gatsby. When the characters look at the old blue gigantic eyes on the Dr. T.J. Eckleburg billboard, they feel the sense of someone watching their every move. The same feeling Christians think of God watching from up above. That, however, did not stop Myrtle Wilson and Tom Buchanan from having their affair. Since it was behind closed doors, it did not even bother them until George Wilson, Myrtle’s unobservant husband, found out. He threatened to move their family out west causing her to run out in the dark streets to stop her secret lover only to be ran over by the housewife. Dr. Eckleburg saw it all go down and laughed once the secret reached the light of the public. …show more content…

Five years ago, she met and fell in love with a soldier named Jay Gatsby. They spent so much time together making memories and getting to know one another. Soon it had to come to an end, Gatsby had to leave for the war. They wrote some letters to each other but once he came home he found that his Golden Girl had moved on and was now married. That day forward, Gatsby vowed to make it big so he could sweep Daisy away from the polo player, Tom Buchanan. With a little help and some time, Gatsby achieved his wealth and the ability to take back his girl. However in the 1920s, divorce was looked down upon by the public no matter the

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