Chapter five – Gatsby’s offer to “pay”
Nick for his favor made me think that apart from his choice of getting rich,
Jay Gatsby is quite a nice person. He is very polite, hate of asking favor from
friends (his intricate ways in asking Nick to arrange meeting with Daisy), and
he is the only one who doesn’t drink. And when he loves a woman, he respects
her, and is loyal to her to the end.
According to
Careless People, T.S. Eliot’s poem
The Waste Land has major influence in Fitzgerald’s ideas for writing Gatsby—not the plot, but the general
theme and atmosphere. I have never read Eliot, and this can be my good excuse
to mark him.
Now, I have
mentioned in my previous post about Gatsby
as a “novel noir”. So We Read On
dedicated a chapter titled Rhapsody in
Noir to discuss this; and it’s very interesting. First of all, the origin
of Gatsby’s real name “Gatz” is gat—a
slang for ‘gun’ in the twenties. There are at least three deaths caused by gun
in this story. And don’t forget the car crashes that happened too many in such a
short story (including Tom Buchanan’s which then revealed his affair with a
chambermaid only a week after his marriage with Daisy!). Add it all with the
desolate valley of ashes, the abandoned billboard of the oculist, and Wilson’s
shabby garage. Yes… this is not a romantic story of unrequited love or the lost
of illusion; it is the gloomy image that Fitzgerald felt was happening in
America—emptiness and deadliness. Corrigan even questioned about Myrtle’s
accident: “Who can say for certain whether Daisy’s hit-and-run murder of
Myrtle, her husband’s mistress, is just an accident or a subconscious homicidal
drive realized?” Yeah… that has made me shiver a little! And horrifyingly, it
made sense to me.
Gatsby-Daisy’s
reunion is full of emotion. Daisy was crying, but for what? Remember when
Gatsby thrown his colorful shirts and Daisy cried? Of course she’s crying not because
she has never seen such beautiful shirts before, but I think, because she lamented
her faith of being a wife of the brutal man: Tom. If only she had waited for
three more years, she would have had a rich AND loving husband: Gatsby. But
after their trip, where Tom confronted Gatsby, and Gatsby persuaded her to flee
with him, I think Daisy got so confused… and drunk. I think she realized that
Gatsby would never fit in her circle—no matter how she loved him, her husband
would always be Tom. But then seeing his mistress on the road… I don’t know
whether she knew about Myrtle or not—probably she did—but that is enough to
lead her to Corrigan’s homicidal theory.
I am still wondering
about the history of Gatsby’s mansion which Nick told us, particularly this
passage: “Americans, while occasionally willing to be serfs, have always been
obstinate about being peasantry”. To what exactly did Fitzgerald want to allude
with it? What do you think?