Body Language In The Great Gatsby

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As the middle of the novels draws closer, Gatsby’s true intentions are revealed when he asks Nick to invite Daisy around for tea alone. It had been Gatsby’s dream for five years to reconnect with Daisy after they fell in love only for him to have to go to war and an impatient Daisy to get married to Tom. It is in this passage that Gatsby’s dream comes to life when Daisy pulls up at Nick’s doorstep. When Daisy first sees the sopping wet Gatsby in Nick’s living room, the novel does a complete turn as now that Gatsby is living his dream the less amazing it seems and the more unhappy he becomes. From the same moment that the ‘clock took this moment to tilt’ does Daisy get put into Gatsby’s unreal dream which she can never live up to even though …show more content…

Fitzgerald uses imagery to display the body language of the characters which is used to illustrate the change in mood after Daisy cannot live up to Gatsby’s dream. Gatsby is ‘pale as death, with his hands plunged like weights into his coat pockets.’ He was ‘glaring tragically into my eyes’ and not for one moment was there any enthusiasm or hope shown on his face. Gatsby was ‘reclining’ trying to find a way how of this nightmare. Daisy was there ‘frightened, on the edge of a stiff chair’ portraying the tension that was between the two not the happiness and joy which was expected in Gatsby’s daydreams. All of this continues to completely describe the actions of the characters and portrays the strain and stiffness in the room. Fitzgerald writes how Gatsby ‘with trembling fingers…sat down, rigidly, his elbow on the arm chair and his chin in his hand’. The most important image in the passage though is the clock, which ‘took this moment to tilt dangerously’. This illustrates the point in the novel where Gatsby begins to realize that his dream is impossible and the closer that he gets to Daisy the further away it gets. The clock also represents Gatsby’s dream and when ‘we all believed for a moment that it had smashed in pieces in the floor’, Fitzgerald is displaying how Gatsby’s dream is broken and can never be achieved due to the monumentality of it. The highly vivid images, both describing the

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