dead horse
I really feel like doing another Gatsby post is like beating a dead horse but here we go! The passage in question is at the end of chapter 7 and I was PLANNING on analyzing it in in-class essay but it was a contrast essay this so sad. Anyways, I thought this passage as interesting because about a chapter or two ago we discussed how Gatsby caught the broken clock and tried to save the disconnected relationship. In that chapter, Gatsby remains at Daisy’s house, keeping watch and making sure that Tom doesn’t do anything to her. However, there’s a little bit of dramatic irony because when Nick is in the house with Daisy and Tom, it’s clear that they were getting along perfectly well. So Gatsby, who represents the American dream, is trying to protect something that he didn’t need to; he is trying to save the unsavable. This mirrors the first time we see Gatsby, when he is striving to reach for the unreachable. Gatsby is a tragic hero, someone who constantly strives to catch his dream (...