These are the final lines of the novel,
presenting
Brett and
Jake’s final dialogue, spoken in a taxi at
the end of Chapter XIX. Jake has endured an attack by
Cohn and helped
Brett in her seduction of
Romero. Brett has pushed Romero away and
now finds herself alone again. In this concluding passage, the lament
over what could have been is truly poignant, and for many this represents
the novel’s finest moment. Just as Brett voices, one last time,
the dream that the two of them could have had a relationship, a
policeman raises his baton and symbolically signals a halt. The
car’s sudden deceleration presses Brett tantalizingly close to Jake,
echoing a number of similar scenes earlier in the novel, but the
barrier between them is quite clear now. Moreover, Jake’s slightly
cynical and bitter reply shows that he has no illusions about their
relationship. He seems to appreciate the fact that a relationship
between himself and Brett, if such a thing had been possible, would
have been unlikely to end differently than any of her other failed
relationships. Yet Jake’s subtle doubts only increase the poignancy
of the novel’s closing lines. Their relationship is revealed to
have been merely a beautiful dream, a dream that is now slipping
away forever.