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Great Gatsby


He had inscribed in the book his daily schedule: .
             Rise from bed . 6.00 A.M.
             Dumbbell exercise and wall scaling 6.15-6.30.
             Study electricity .7.15-8.15.
             Work 8.30-4.30.
             Baseball and sports .4.30-5.00.
             Practice elocutions, poise .
             and how to attain it .5.00-6.00.
             Study needed inventions .7.00-9.00 (181).
             As Gatsby's father said, "It just shows you" (182) how determined to attain his goal and self-disciplined Gatsby was as a young dreamer. He wanted to change the world by being the one who would invent a "needed invention" (181). He recognized the importance of studying and "no more smokeing or chewing" or "wasting time" (181). He even made himself "read one improving book or magazine every week" (182). Young Gatz was bound to get make it big. He had what it took: the brains, the will-power, the looks, and the ambition. However pure Gatsby's intentions were when he was young boy, by the time he is a grown man and has made it in the world, his story of success is quite different from that which his dreams foretold. What Fitzgerald is trying to show is the change of Gatsby's original pure American dream to his success, spawned from corruption. Nick's opinion of Gatsby has changed many times throughout the novel, and it isn't until the end that he can identify what had happened to Gatsby's dream, what had "preyed on Gatsby" (123). Gatsby evidently is involved in shady business. He has friends who are gamblers, who wear human molars as cuff links, and who have rigged the World Series. He has been involved in bootlegging grain alcohol and now makes living selling bonds. He has become the kind of man who takes lightly "playing with the faith of fifty-million people" and does business with men who should be in jail, except "They can't get him" (78). Business which is "his own affair" often beckons him away from his friends or guests, business which he is most unwilling to speak of.


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