Pain In The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald

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Loving someone is a wondrous experience, giving life light and a sense of fulfillment. But frequently the love does not last, causing deep emotional pain and a new dullness to life. In F.Scott Fitzgerald’s novel, The Great Gatsby, Fitzgerald repeatedly uses the motif and imagery of the eyes to present how much the lack of love can affect the happiness and joy in a person’s life. When people are separated and possibly reunited, their eyes seem to show the emotional turmoil that was caused by the time apart.
The eyes are said to be the window to the soul, and often give away one’s emotions and feelings in times of discomfort and longing. When Gatsby and Daisy reconnect for the first time in five years, their eyes portray their intense pain as they reminisce on their past and what they used to have. The meeting is intended to be a happy, romantic reunion; however, Gatsby and Daisy end up “looking conscientiously from one to the other with tense, unhappy eyes” (Fitzgerald 87). …show more content…

Wilson and Myrtle had a strained partnership, exacerbated by Myrtle’s affair with Tom and Wilson’s lack of confidence in the relationship. But when Myrtle dies, Wilson shows a surprising amount of grief for Myrtle, who frequently aired her discontent for the marriage. His “faded” (157) and “glazed eyes” (159) portray how much he truly loves Myrtle even if he has a hard time showing it and how her death ruined Wilson. Fitzgerald uses the emptiness in Wilson’s eyes to explain how Myrtle’s death shakes Wilson. He does not know what to do with himself and may not ever be the same ever again, which is evident in the loss of his entire personality. The sudden separation takes a toll and it is hard to recover the lost parts of oneself when one loses the love of their life. There may never come a time where the pain is truly

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