Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Unrequited Love

Unrequited Love:

(Noun) Love that is not given mutually.




   Jay Gatsby’s reunion with Daisy is where the novel starts to come alive. The story of their relationship exists only in prospect before Gatsby starts to move toward a dream that no one else can quite understand. The plot begins to shift its focus to the tensions between Gatsby and Daisy’s relationship as they actualize themselves. After Gatsby’s history with Daisy is revealed, a meeting between the two becomes incapable of being avoided, and it is obvious that the theme of the past’s significance to the future is called forth in this chapter. As the plot thickens its ideas of love and the American dream, it becomes clearer and clearer that Gatsby’s emotions are out of sync with the passage of time. Nervousness about the present and how Daisy’s attitude toward Gatsby, may have caused him to knock over Nick’s clock, symbolizing the clumsiness of his attempt to stop time and retrieve the past.

   Before the meeting, Daisy displays her usual sarcastic humor; when Nick invites her to tea and asks her not to bring Tom, she responds,
“Who is ‘Tom’?”
Yet, seeing Gatsby strips her of her bitterly ironic self. Gatsby forgets to play the role of the Oxford-educated socialite and shows to be a love-struck and awkward young man at his purest and most revealing state. Daisy’s emotions get the better of her when she is moved to sincerity by the passion Gatsby feels for her. When she goes to Gatsby’s house, she is overwhelmed with tears of joy at his success and sobs upon his piles of expensive English shirts.

   Nick’s arrangement of the meeting brings his practice of tolerance almost to a level of guilt, just as he had tolerantly observed Tom’s secret affair with Myrtle, so he eases the begging of what seems to be an affair for Daisy as well, aware of helping her wreck a meaningless marriage. However, Nick’s actions may be at least partially justified by the intense and sincere love that Gatsby and Daisy clearly feel for each other, a love that Nick sees to be absent from Daisy’s relationship with Tom.






1 comment:

  1. Very good post. You have great information and wonderful pictures. 75/75

    Ms.Donahue

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