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The Great Gatsby13

on the hottest day of the summer, beneath a fiery and intense sun. Now that the fire has gone out of Gatsby's life with Daisy's decision to remain with Tom, the weather suddenly cools, and autumn creeps into the air—the gardener even wants to drain the pool to keep falling leaves from clogging the drains. In the same way that he clings to the hope of making Daisy love him the way she used to, he insists on swimming in the pool as though it were still summer. Both his downfall in Chapter VII and his death in Chapter VIII result from his stark refusal to accept what he cannot control: the passage of time.Gatsby has made Daisy a symbol of everything he values, and made the green light on her dock a symbol of his destiny with her. Thinking about Gatsby's death, Nick suggests that all symbols are created by the mind— they do not possess any inherent meaning; rather, people invest them with meaning. Nick writes that Gatsby must have realized "what a grotesque thing a rose is." The rose has been a conventional symbol of beauty throughout centuries of poetry. Nick suggests that roses aren't inherently beautiful, and that people only view them that way because they choose to do so. Daisy is "grotesque" in the same way: Gatsby has invested her with beauty and meaning by making her the object of his dream. Had Gatsby not imbued her with such value, Daisy would be simply an idle, bored, rich young woman with no particular moral strength or loyalty.Likewise, though they suggest divine scrutiny both to the reader and to Wilson, the eyes of Doctor T. J. Eckleburg are disturbing in part because they are not the eyes of God. They have no precise, fixed meaning. George Wilson takes Doctor T. J. Eckleburg's eyes for the all-seeing eyes of God and derives his misguided belief that Myrtle's killer must have been her lover from that inference. George's assertion that the eyes represent a moral standard, the upholding of which means that he must ...

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