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
It has now been confirmed that Myrtle Wilson was in fact the wife of George Wilson, primary suspect of the case of Mr. Gatsby’s murder. Residents of New York might find the yellow automobile familiar, as it is often reported to be seen at Mr. Gatsby’s parties or being recklessly driven on the streets of New York by Mr. Gatsby himself. Principal witness at the inquest of the car accident, Mr. Mavro Michaelis, provided more details on the Wilsons. Mr. Michaelis has been running the coffee joint beside Mr. Wilson’s auto-mechanic shop for four years, and appears to be the closest acquaintance of Mr. Wilson.
Living A Lie The Roaring Twenties as an era full of pizzazz, glamour and ambition. In the novel, The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, the author illustrates his thoughts and opinions on many societal issues through the use of setting, characters and context. The valuable qualities of the 1920’s hides the true identity of the generation. In particular, the contrast of Daisy Buchanan and Myrtle Wilson emphasizes the moral corruption in society.
Within The Great Gatsby, the audience perceives a summer spent through the eyes of Nick. As Nick, we witness the tragic love story of Gatsby and Daisy, as well as another story, hidden in the context of the many encounters and conversations held; the wealth of the Roaring Twenties. Many of the characters show an interesting aspect of the wealth brought upon by the Roaring Twenties, and how it has affected them. Several characters are exceptional examples, including Myrtle, Tom, Gatsby, and Nick himself.
In the novel, The Great Gatsby, Jay Gatsby tries to find Daisy Buchanan. Daisy, is a women who fell in love with jay, but ended up marrying Tom Buchanan. There are a lot of mixed feelings with who loves who, and a massive indecisiveness throughout the whole book. The way Jay pursued love, was the same was he pursued wealth. Love and wealth play big parts in The Great Gatsby.
In chapter five of The Great Gatsby we learn many new details about Daisy’s former feelings for Jay Gatsby. The book clues us in on their love story, “. . . Her mother had found her packing her bag one winter night to go to New York and say good-by to a soldier who was going overseas. She was effectually prevented, but she wasn’t on speaking terms with
Life with more money that one can imagine appears to be the best possible way to live. But people in this situation can agree that this is not necessarily the best possible way to live. It appears that Gatsby has his life all set, but once he is rich, his life in regards to love and other people’s point of view shows that he is really on a path that leads to a lonely and melancholy life. In The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, society in the Roaring Twenties believes money is the true key to happiness. Gatsby proves them wrong because even with the myriad of wealth, he lives a miserable life.
“In the beginning, some people try to appear that everything about them is "in black and white," until later their true colors come out.” As humans, we do this in order to keep life as simple as possible, but it is an undeniable fact that there is more to us than meets the eye. That quote was written by a man of the name Anthony Liccione. He is an American writer who produces books, but people know him for his sophisticated yet simple quotes. Though this quote has no correlation to F.Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby, the meaning of it relates to several significant characters.
Myrtle is Tom Buchanan’s lover, her husband George owns a rundown garage in the valley of ashes and she possesses fierce vitality and desperately looks for ways to improve her situation. Sadly she chooses Tom who treats her as an object of his desire. She is mid-thirties, short and plump but carries her extra flesh voluptuously. She wears clothes that are stretched tight over her fairly broad hips. (Fitzgerald p.28) Myrtles personality and behavior show that she wants to climb the social status with her acute manner and vigor.
By convincing himself that Myrtle Wilson was killed by her secret lover, George Wilson uses the tragedy as an opening to decompress everything he had been bottling up within himself. Michaelis assures George Wilson after he finds out the news that Myrtle Wilson was killed by saying, “this has been a strain to you and you don’t know what you’re saying”, but unfortunately, George Wilson ignores him (Fitzgerald 166). Later, George Wilson continues to rant about how “God knows” what Myrtle Wilson was doing, and to Michaelis’s surprise, George Wilson is staring at the eyes of Doctor T. J. Eckleburg (Fitzgerald 167). While it may seem humorous that George Wilson is so faithful to the eyes of Doctor T. J. Eckleburg, the same foolishness can be seen in society during the 1920s because “business had become…the national religion of America” (Allen Doc E). For that reason, Fitzgerald uses George Wilson’s disillusionment towards his wife as a parallel to the business world during the
Different Women in the Unjustified Situations The Gilded Age was described, by those that bestowed the name upon it, as a time in history that showed incredible feats and fame on the outside, with grim appearances lying beneath. Similar to The Gilded Age in the late 1800s, The Roaring Twenties was filled with a booming economy and a radical change in thoughts and ideas in Americans. Unfortunately, as The Great Gatsby shows, maybe it all was not as good as it seemed. With the rising economy came the possibility of injustices, including males and females.
Following her recent death, Mrs. Wilson has been identified as Mr. Gatsby’s ‘Mystery Mistress’ who has been spotted many times inside his large mansion in West Egg. George Wilson, Myrtle’s husband has said that he knew she was having an affair, but with whom he did not know. In light of recent events, he had the following to say; “I loved Myrtle. We were planning
Throughout The Great Gatsby, Myrtle Wilson desired to fit in with the upper class; however, her marriage to George Wilson prevented such from occurring. Myrtle failed to recognize her husband’s hard work and true character due to her efforts to rise in social status. In The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald emphasized Myrtle’s hatred towards her marriage through her conversation with Catherine, depicting how people of the twenties focused more on wealth and power compared to moral American values. As readers closely evaluate the moment of Myrtle’s dialogue, she dictated her feelings towards her marriage in a way that supposedly justified her infidelity.
Her father was a military officer. One day Daisy meet a young man by the name of Jay Gatsby, and they fell in love. Gatsby was then sent to Germany to fight in the war. All the while, Daisy waited on him. She received a letter from Jay telling her that he had no money to get back to her.
The American Family Myrtle and George Wilson were once two passionate lovers, caring for nothing else in the world but each other. However, Myrtle’s selfish aura led her to fall in love with not a man, but a thing: money. She became unhappy with her husband and decided to move on to someone more enticing, someone wealthy like Tom Buchanan. In the novel The Great Gatsby written by Fitzgerald, the Wilsons are discontent with their lives by portraying the theme of how when money is involved, they will become dissatisfied with one another and turn to lives of greed and selfishness.
Although the novel The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald emphasizes the parties and prosperity of the American 1920's, it reveals many major characters meeting tragic ends. The characters who meet these ends - Jay Gatsby, Myrtle Wilson, and George Wilson - possess the same tragic characteristic: they endeavor for something more out of their lives than what they have. This ambition for what they could not have ultimately spelled their doom: Gatsby wanted money and Daisy; Myrtle wanted wealth and luxury, and sought it from Tom Buchanan; Wilson earned what he could only to please Myrtle. The Great Gatsby reveals a tragic nature through the trials and tribulations these characters endure to progress and prosper, only to receive death for their ambition. The exciting and wild time period of the "Roaring Twenties" provides a stark contrast to the deaths in order to further highlight the tragic nature of the novel, and leaves a theme that even those with the most hope and strong ambitions can fail and die miserably, no matter how much money they have.