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Money In F. Scott Fitzgerald's Babylon Revisited

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It all begins and ends in Paris for Charlie Wales. Whatever one might choose to name those years in Paris- the Jazz Age; the Roaring Twenties; the Age of Excess- it all amounts to the same thing. The Great War was over and the money was coming in like never before. The years were filled with parties, clubs, dancing, booze, and never-ending late nights. For Charlie Wales, the protagonist in this story, it all came to an end when the stock market crashed, when his money “went as quick as it came” (Fitzgerald 709), and when his wife passed away. In “Babylon Revisited,” F. Scott Fitzgerald questions his own personal extravagance in Paris during the 1920s and the consequences of those actions through the themes of fortune, alcoholism, and the memory …show more content…

Charlie Wales’ fortune gave birth to a lifestyle that was very much a drunken blur. His wealth ended up being destructive instead of beneficial to his family and their lives. Fitzgerald emphasizes this when Charlie is at the bar thinking about the night he locked Helen out in the snow: “…the snow of twenty nine wasn’t real snow. If you didn’t want it to be snow, you just paid some money” (712). Money also serves as a division between Charlie and a relationship with his daughter. Honoria has been living with Marion and Lincoln Peters, Helen’s sister and brother-in-law, while Charlie has been in Prague starting a new career. When he returns to Paris, Charlie makes the mistake of bragging about his newfound successes and incoming wealth to convince Marion and Lincoln, who are living rather simply in comparison to the extravagance of Charlie’s past, that he is prepared to provide a comfortable home for Honoria. Charlie pleads, “’I’m able to give her certain advantages now. I’m going to take a French governess to Prague with me. I’ve got a lease on a new apartment-‘” (Fitzgerald 707). Marion is offended by this comment, seeing as Charlie’s income “was again twice as large as their own” (Fitzgerald 707). This encounter illustrates that in Charlie’s world, money stands for something other than hard work; it is more often synonymous with squandering and

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