8
After
the day’s traumatic events, Nick passes a sleepless night. Before
dawn, he rises restlessly and goes to visit Gatsby at his mansion.
Gatsby tells him that he waited at Daisy’s until four o’clock in
the morning and that nothing happened—Tom did not try to hurt her
and Daisy did not come outside. Nick suggests that Gatsby forget
about Daisy and leave Long Island, but Gatsby refuses to consider
leaving Daisy behind. Gatsby, melancholy, tells Nick about courting
Daisy in Louisville in 1917. He says that he loved her for her youth
and vitality, and idolized her social position, wealth, and
popularity. He adds that she was the first girl to whom he ever felt
close and that he lied about his background to make her believe that
he was worthy of her. Eventually, he continues, he and Daisy made
love, and he felt as though he had married her. She promised to wait
for him
when he left for the war, but then she married Tom, whose social
position was solid and who had the approval of her parents.Gatsby’s
gardener interrupts the story to tell Gatsby that he plans to drain
the pool. The previous day was the hottest of the summer, but autumn
is in the air this morning, and the gardener worries that falling
leaves will clog the pool drains. Gatsby tells the gardener to wait
a day; he
has never used the pool, he says, and wants to go for a swim. Nick
has stayed so long talking to Gatsby that he is very late for work.
He finally says goodbye to Gatsby. As he walks away, he turns back
and shouts that Gatsby is worth more than the Buchanans and all of
their friends.Nick goes to his office, but he feels too distracted to
work, and even refuses to meet Jordan Baker for a date. The focus of
his narrative then shifts to relate to the reader what happened at
the garage after Myrtle was killed (the details of which Nick learns
from Michaelis): George Wilson stays up all night talking to
Michaelis about Myrtle. He tells him that before Myrtle died, he
confronted her about her lover and told her that she could not hide
her sin from the eyes of God. The morning after the accident, the
eyes of Doctor T. J. Eckleburg, illuminated by the dawn, overwhelm
Wilson. He believes they are the eyes of God and leaps to the
conclusion that whoever was driving the car that killed Myrtle must
have been her lover. He decides that God demands revenge and leaves
to track down the owner of the car. He looks for Tom, because he
knows that Tom is familiar with the car’s owner—he saw Tom
driving the car earlier that day but knows Tom could not have been
the driver since Tom arrived after the accident in a different car
with Nick and Jordan. Wilson eventually goes to Gatsby’s house,
where he finds Gatsby lying on an air mattress in the pool, floating
in the water and looking up at the sky. Wilson shoots Gatsby, killing
him instantly, then shoots himself.Nick hurries back to West Egg and
finds Gatsby floating dead in his pool. Nick imagines Gatsby’s
final thoughts, and pictures him disillusioned by the meaninglessness
and emptiness of life without Daisy, without his dream.
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