Thursday, September 19, 2019
The Importance of George Wilson in The Great Gatsby Essay -- Great Gat
The Importance of George Wilson in The Great Gatsby       à  Ã  Ã   F. Scott  Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby is a superbly written and an intrinsically  captivating novel that deals with the decline of the American Dream and how  vapid the upper class is. To illustrate and capture the essence of these themes,  Fitzgerald uses characters Gatsby, who epitomizes the actual American Dream, and  Daisy, who is based on the ideal girl. Yet, as these characters grasp the topics  Fitzgerald wants to convey, there is something inherently like missing from the  story as a whole. To fill this void, Fitzgerald utilizes minor characters as a  means to move the plot along, develop characters further, and build upon the  themes present in the novel. One such character is George Wilson.      à       George Wilson is the naà ¯ve husband to Myrtle Wilson, the woman having an  affair with Tom Buchanan, who is the "brute of a man, a great, big, hulking  physical specimen"(Fitzgerald 16) husband to Daisy Buchanan, the woman whom Jay  Gatsby, the main character, is in love with: a very removed yet significant role  in the story. Evidently playing the role of the common man, in a story revolving  around wealth and possessions, George Wilson is the owner of an auto body shop  and is described as a "spiritless man, anemic and faintly handsome"(29).  Wilson's common man image helps to further develop the theme of Wilson is deeply  in love with Myrtle to a point where he is paranoid of losing her. "`I've got my  wife locked in up there,' explained Wilson calmly. `She's going to stay there  till the day after tomorrow and then we're going to move away"(143).      à       Truly a character that centers on irony, Wilson's wife is indeed having an  affair with Tom Buchanan. ...              ...murder of Myrtle, neither of which he committed. After fulfilling his vengeance,  George sees no need to continue his life and kills himself, as his only reason  for living was his love for the late Myrtle. As well as being a climatic point  in the plot, the murder of Gatsby concludes the prevalent theme of the decline  of the American Dream.      à       George Wilson's role, however small it may be, in F. Scott Fitzgerald's The  Great Gatsby is nonetheless clearly one of consequence and importance. Through  Fitzgerald's use of Wilson, major characters, prevalent themes, and points in  the plot are developed further. And, ultimately, through these characters that  at first seem superficial to the story, Fitzgerald is able to weave a complex  and charismatic novel.      à       Work Cited     Fitzgerald, F. Scott. The Great Gatsby. London: Penguin Books, 1990.     à       à                        
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