Examples Of Forbidden Love In The Great Gatsby

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Love In the novel The Great Gatsby author F. Scott Fitzgerald expresses the different experiences of love that each character goes through. Fitzgerald takes his readers on a journey of not only how the 1920s were like as but also what the idea of love was in the era. Fitzgerald informs us on how love truly worked. The definition of love is an intense feeling of deep affection, but The Great Gatsby definition involves lies, status, and forbidden love. Nick Carraway is a character in the novel that happens to be a closeted gay man. The last page of chapter two ignites Nick Carraway’s deep and dark secret of being a homosexual man. In the 1920s being homosexual was not socially accepted nor common. “Come to lunch someday.” “Where?” “Anywhere.” with the hidden message in between Carraway and Mr. Mckee informs the elevator boy of their secret. So when the elevator boy snaps telling Mr. McKee telling him “Keep your hands of my lever.” the reader becomes aware that the elevator boy does not agree nor accept their …show more content…

I was standing beside his bed and he was sitting up between the sheets, clad in his underwear, with a great portfolio in his hand”. “Beauty and the beast… Loneliness… Old Grocery Horse… Brook’n Bridge…” The author uses the books in the portfolio that holds forbidden love stories in it to enhance the forbidden moment that happen between Nick and Mr. McKee. Later in the novel we learn that Nick Carraway is secretly in love with Gatsby. “When I looked once more for Gatsby he had vanished, and I was alone again in the unquiet darkness.” As Nick Carraway was searching for the love from Gatsby, he was searching for the old love of Daisy Buchanan. Gatsby waited five years for the love of his life who had married Tom Buchanan. Daisy Buchanan loved Gatsby but stayed with Tom due to his respected status that Gatsby did not have. With a in the closet homosexual and a forbidden love triangle, love is set up to stir up

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