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The Theme Of Failure In 'The Great Gatsby'

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When someone tries to achieve something great, they look for success, but things don’t often go as planned and may end badly. The quote presented means that generally, when someone strives for something greater or better than it often makes things worse. This meaning is shown through the characters Jay Gatsby, with his passion for success, Goneril, with her desire for power, and finally Edmund with his evil plots to win over the kingdom. Overall in the two texts, The Great Gatsby, as well as King Lear, when characters strive for something they desire, it is not achieved, and things end quite badly. In the novel, The Great Gatsby, Jay Gatsby relates to the idea of failure when striving for something he desires, through the symbol of the green light, his love and emotional desire for Daisy, as well as his striving towards a higher class in society or for the American Dream. In the novel, a “single green light, minute and far away,” (1) is mentioned and this symbol of a green light represents the goals or dreams that Gatsby has in his life. Since the green light is distant as the quote describes it, being across a bay, it shows that these goals that Gatsby has, aren’t achievable. This ties back into the quote by William Shakespeare because although Gatsby pursues his goals and achieves some of them, in the end, the light remains glowing, and this shows that there still is a goal that he keeps having to reach, this in the end, results in him losing Daisy, which is failure. As

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