Greats Gatsby
A dream is defined in the Webster's New World Dictionary as: a
fanciful vision of the conscious mind; a fond hope or aspiration; anything
so lovely, transitory, etc. as to seem dreamlike. In the beginning pages
of F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel The Great Gatsby, Nick Carraway, the
narrator of the story gives us a glimpse into Gatsby's idealistic dream
which is later disintegrated. "No- Gatsby turned out all right at the end;
it is what
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of a supreme object, to restore to
himself an illusion he had lost; he set about it, in a pathetic American
way. Gatsby is a man with a dream at the mercy of the "foul dust" that
sometimes seems only to exist in order to swarm against the dream. It is
a strange dream, Gatsby's but he was a man who had hopes and aspirations.
He was a child, who believed in a childish thing.
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