he was alone in the end. |
Ironically, the only person who came to his funeral other than the ever so constant Nick is the father who James Gatz left as a young man. As a man who was never influenced by the materialism wealth (he stayed in the West all of his life), Gatsby's father does not have the fickleness that the residents of the East do: he values people with moral values without regarding them as mere temporary items. It seems that the people we encounter in this book are only worried about the material wealth tied with events and items- if it is no longer relevant, it is not worth their time and resources to consider. Even Daisy, the one person Gatsby focused over half a decade of his life on, sent no condolences or even recognition of the tragedy. Yet Mr. Gatz remembers his son and even reminisces over the determination Gatsby had as a young boy to improve himself and his social status. This goes back to the importance of speed during this time period. Time seems to move at an infinte speed for the residents of East Egg- the past is only a distant memory. However, it seems that this "speed" never reached Gatsby. He is and always will be a man living in the past. At the same time, it is important to note how much his obsession over the dream of Daisy has consumed Gatsby. It seems as though Gatsby had a fresh and morally right future in front of him- he was a bright boy with ambitions and the right of mind (as noted by his father). Yet Nick knows who he has become. He knows that through the process of trying to gain material wealth and consequently Daisy, Gatsby succumbed to the ruins and corruption that characterized so much of this time period.
corruption consumed him. |
The demise of Gatsby seems to highlight the moral fraud many of those during the infamous "Jazz Age". The moral values Nick tried to find so desperately in the opulent Eggs was nonexistent: those caught up in this lifestyle could not see past the lavish parties and the swiftness of life. Real relationships never truly happened. All the relationships in this book were characterized with insincerity, hopelessness, and artificiality. This age destroyed even the most pristine of characters.
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