The Great Gatsby Paper

The Great Gatsby Paper

  • Submitted By: twalker2
  • Date Submitted: 01/06/2009 10:09 AM
  • Category: English
  • Words: 1137
  • Page: 5
  • Views: 706

Nick Carraway has a special place in The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald. He is not just one character among several; it is through his eyes and ears that the story takes place. In this novel, Nick goes to some length to establish his credibility, indeed his moral integrity, in telling this story about this "great" man called Gatsby. He begins with a reflection on his own upbringing, quoting his father's words about Nick's "advantages” (17), which we could assume were material but, he soon makes clear, were spiritual or moral advantages and lessons that enable him to mature throughout the story.
Nick wants his reader to know that his upbringing gave him the moral fiber with which to withstand and pass judgment on an amoral world, such as the one he had observed the previous summer. He says, rather pompously, that as a consequence of such an upbringing, he is "inclined to reserve all judgments" (20) about other people, but then goes on to say that such "tolerance . . . has a limit” (20). This is the first sign the narrator gives the reader to show he will give an even-handed insight to the story that is about to unfold. Later the reader learns he neither reserves all judgments nor does his tolerance reach its limit. Nick is very partial in his way of telling the story about several characters, which shows a great maturity that he does not side with his own family.
He admits early into the story that he makes an exception of judging Gatsby, for whom he is prepared to suspend both the moral code of his upbringing and the limit of intolerance, because Gatsby had an "extraordinary gift for hope, a romantic readiness” (27). This inspired him to a level of friendship and loyalty that Nick seems unprepared to extend toward others in the novel. Nick overlooks the moral implications of Gatsby's bootlegging, his association with speakeasies, and with Meyer Wolfsheim, the man rumored to have fixed the World Series in 1919. Yet, he is...

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