Valley of the Doldrums

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“Gatsby turned out all right at the end,” narrator Nick Carraway reflects in the opening pages of F. Scott Fitzgerald’s timeless novel The Great Gatsby. “It is what preyed on Gatsby, what foul dust floated in the wake of his dreams that temporarily closed out my interest in the abortive sorrows and short-winded elations of men.” The destructive dust that plagues Gatsby permeates the life of every character that passes through the valley of ashes, a desolate wasteland nestled between the newly affluent West Egg and the bustling metropolis of New York City. This consuming dust renders each uniquely miserable and unfulfilled; it clouds even the brightest moment with a pervading darkness. Though the valley of ashes lacks the glamour of East Egg and the lively soirees of West Egg, Fitzgerald uses his initial description of the locale to underscore its significance. His grim selection of words, melancholy tone, and evocative use of figurative language poignantly reflect to the reader the underlying desolation and hopelessness that characterize the author’s commentary on the social structure of the early 1920s.

Fitzgerald infuses his description of the valley of ashes with a plethora of words that evoke the valley’s bleakness and misery. Everything therein is “desolate,” “grotesque,” “crumbling,” “dimmed,” “solemn,” “foul,” and “grey” (Fitzgerald 23-24). The grayness alone is ironically spectacular, for Fitzgerald’s work is defined by its use of brilliant colors, from Daisy’s virginal white to Gatsby’s luxurious gold. That he characterizes the valley with such a muted, achromatic shade betrays the hopelessness that underlies Fitzgerald’s novel. Though the characters themselves are saturated with bright, spectral hues, the worl...

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...hances his perception of the novel as a whole.

In the 1920s, Americans enjoyed the benefits of economic and political prosperity. It was an era characterized by frivolous luxury and rampant excess, of the quest to fulfill the American Dream. Surely success could be bought and sold; surely an emptiness of spirit could be filled for the right price. As Americans sought fulfillment in the material, F. Scott Fitzgerald recognized that their loneliness remained, an unyielding gray dust that plagued even the most wealthy, an emotional vacancy that could not be filled with any measure of wealth. The valley of ashes, Fitzgerald’s symbolic characterization of this spiritual poverty, endures as a poignant reminder of the ultimate futility of money and as the graveyard of the American Dream.

Works Cited
Fitzgerald, F. Scott. The Great Gatsby. New York: Scribner, 2004.

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