Significance Of The Green Light In The Great Gatsby

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Are Gatsby’s flaws his most fatal ones or the most obvious ones? In the novel The Great Gatsby, the author F. Scott Fitzgerald portrays a place infused with love affairs, new and old money, corruption and dreams. On the last page Nick talks about Gatsby’s hopes and dreams were crumbling before him and the significance of the Green Light and “Time” has a big impact on the passage. On the last page there is body or a bay of water that separates Gatsby from the Green Light. The distance between Gatsby and the Green light illustrates the impossibility of attaining the American Dream. Also him recapturing the heart of Daisy back his love. Nick states that "He (Gatsby) had come a long way to his blue lawn, and his dream must have seemed so close that he could hardly fail to grasp it." …show more content…

Which was for him to be the “father” he wants to be and repeat the past. Continuing on the same quote "He (Gatsby) had come a long way to his blue lawn, and his dream must have seemed so close that he could hardly fail to grasp it." (189) Gatsby’s dream represents what he wanted to be, be rich to throw big parties and etc. The significance of the blue grass is mostly just to bring attention to how much money Gatsby had to spend and how rich he was. When Nick says, “and his dream must have seemed so close that he could hardly fail to grasp it”, the dream that he is referring to is Daisy. Gatsby had gotten so close to being with Daisy and must have driven him emotionally crazy, though he didn’t show it. If he had, Daisy may have thought him to be strange or crazy and may not have wanted to have anything to do with him at all. Until the last moment, Gatsby believed that he could still “obtain” his dream which was Daisy and giving the life that Daisy wanted to

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