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Chapter I
Summary
The narrator of The Great Gatsby is a
young man from Minnesota named Nick Carraway. He not only narrates
the story but casts himself as the book’s author. He begins by commenting
on himself, stating that he learned from his father to reserve judgment
about other people, because if he holds them up to his own moral
standards, he will misunderstand them. He characterizes himself
as both highly moral and highly tolerant. He briefly mentions the
hero of his story, Gatsby, saying that Gatsby represented everything
he scorns, but that he exempts Gatsby completely from his usual
judgments. Gatsby’s personality was nothing short of “gorgeous.”
In the summer of 1922, Nick writes,
he had just arrived in New York, where he moved to work in the bond
business, and rented a house on a part of Long Island called West
Egg. Unlike the conservative, aristocratic East Egg, West Egg is
home to the “new rich,” those who, having made their fortunes recently,
have neither the social connections nor the refinement to move among
the East Egg set. West Egg is characterized by lavish displays of
wealth and garish poor taste. Nick’s comparatively modest West Egg
house is next door to Gatsby’s mansion, a sprawling Gothic monstrosity.
Nick is unlike his West Egg neighbors; whereas they lack
social connections and aristocratic pedigrees, Nick graduated from
Yale and has many connections on East Egg. One night, he drives
out to East Egg to have dinner with his cousin Daisy and her husband, Tom
Buchanan, a former member of Nick’s social club at Yale. Tom, a
powerful figure dressed in riding clothes, greets Nick on the porch.
Inside, Daisy lounges on a couch with her friend -Jordan Baker,
a competitive golfer who yawns as though bored by her surroundings.
Tom tries to interest the others in a book called The
Rise of the Colored Empires by a man named Goddard. The book espouses
racist, white-supremacist attitudes that Tom seems to find convincing. Daisy
teases Tom about the book but is interrupted when Tom leaves the
room to take a phone call. Daisy follows him hurriedly, and Jordan
tells Nick that the call is from Tom’s lover in New York.
After an awkward dinner, the party breaks up. Jordan wants
to go to bed because she has a golf tournament the next day. As
Nick leaves, Tom and Daisy hint that they would like for him to
take a romantic interest in Jordan.
When Nick arrives home, he sees Gatsby for the first time,
a handsome young man standing on the lawn with his arms reaching out
toward the dark water. Nick looks out at the water, but all he can
see is a distant green light that might mark the end of a dock.
“I hope she’ll be a fool—that’s the best thing a girl can be in this world, a beautiful little fool.” Analysis
Nick Carraway’s perceptions and attitudes regarding the
events and characters of the novel are central to The Great
Gatsby. Writing the novel is Nick’s way of grappling with
the meaning of a story in which he played a part. The first pages
of Chapter I establish certain contradictions in Nick’s point of
view. Although he describes himself as tolerant and nonjudgmental,
he also views himself as morally privileged, having a better sense
of “decencies” than most other people. While Nick has a
strong negative reaction to his experiences in New York and eventually
returns to the Midwest in search of a less morally ambiguous environment,
even during his initial phase of disgust, Gatsby stands out for
him as an exception. Nick admires Gatsby highly, despite the fact
that Gatsby represents everything Nick scorns about New York. Gatsby
clearly poses a challenge to Nick’s customary ways of thinking about
the world, and Nick’s struggle to come to terms with that challenge
inflects everything in the novel.
In the world of East Egg, alluring appearances serve to
cover unattractive realities. The marriage of Tom and Daisy Buchanan seems
menaced by a quiet desperation beneath its pleasant surface. Unlike
Nick, Tom is arrogant and dishonest, advancing racist arguments
at dinner and carrying on relatively public love affairs. Daisy, on
the other hand, tries hard to be shallow, even going so far as to say
she hopes her baby daughter will turn out to be a fool, because women
live best as beautiful fools. Jordan Baker furthers the sense of
sophisticated fatigue hanging over East Egg: her cynicism, boredom,
and dishonesty are at sharp odds with her wealth and beauty. As
with the Buchanans’ marriage, Jordan’s surface glamour covers up
an inner emptiness.
Gatsby stands in stark contrast to the denizens
of East Egg. Though Nick does not yet know the green light’s origin,
nor what it represents for Gatsby, the inner yearning visible in
Gatsby’s posture and his emotional surrender to it make him seem
almost the opposite of the sarcastic Ivy League set at the Buchanans’.
Gatsby is a mysterious figure for Nick, since Nick knows neither
his motives, nor the source of his wealth, nor his history, and
the object of his yearning remains as remote and nebulous as the
green light toward which he reaches.
The relationship between geography and social values is
an important motif in The Great Gatsby. Each setting
in the novel corresponds to a particular thematic idea or character
type. This first chapter introduces two of the most important locales,
East Egg and West Egg. Though each is home to fabulous wealth, and
though they are separated only by a small expanse of water, the
two regions are nearly opposite in the values they endorse. East
Egg represents breeding, taste, aristocracy, and leisure, while
West Egg represents ostentation, garishness, and the flashy manners
of the new rich. East Egg is associated with the Buchanans and the
monotony of their inherited social position, while West Egg is associated
with Gatsby’s gaudy mansion and the inner drive behind his self-made
fortune. The unworkable intersection of the two Eggs in the romance between
Gatsby and Daisy will serve as the fault line of catastrophe. |
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