РУБРИКИ

American Literature books summary

 РЕКОМЕНДУЕМ

Главная

Историческая личность

История

Искусство

Литература

Москвоведение краеведение

Авиация и космонавтика

Административное право

Арбитражный процесс

Архитектура

Эргономика

Этика

Языковедение

Инвестиции

Иностранные языки

Информатика

История

Кибернетика

Коммуникации и связь

Косметология

ПОДПИСАТЬСЯ

Рассылка рефератов

ПОИСК

American Literature books summary

want to turn back. They tell them that the Californians hate the migrant

workers. A good deal of the land is owned by the Land and Cattle Company

that leaves the land largely untouched. Sheriffs push around migrant

workers, whom they derisively call "Okies." Noah tells Tom that he is going

to leave everyone, for they don't care about him. Although Tom protests,

Noah leaves them. Granma remains ill, suffering from delusions. She

believes that she sees Grampa. A Jehovite woman visits their tent to help

Granma, and tells Ma that she will die soon. The woman wants to organize a

prayer meeting, but Ma orders them not to do so. Nevertheless, soon she can

hear from a distance chanting and singing that eventually descends into

crying. Granma whines with the whining, then eventually falls asleep. Rose

of Sharon wonders where Connie is. Deputies come to the tent and tell Ma

that they cannot stay there and that they don't want any Okies around. Tom

returns to the tent after the policeman leaves, and is glad that he wasn't

there; he admits that he would have hit the cop. He tells Ma about Noah.

The Wilsons decide to remain even if they face arrest, since Sairy is too

sick to leave without any rest. Sairy asks Casy to say a prayer for her.

The Joads move on, and at a stop a boy remarks how hard-looking Okies are

and how they are less than human. Uncle John speaks with Casy, worried that

he brings bad luck to people. Connie and Rose of Sharon need privacy. Yet

again the Joads are pulled over for inspection, but Ma Joad insists that

they must continue because Granma needs medical attention. The next morning

when they reach the orange groves, Ma tells them that Granma is dead. She

died before they were pulled over for inspection.

Chapter Nineteen: California once belonged to Mexico and its land to the

Mexicans. But a horde of tattered feverish American poured in, with such

great hunger for the land that they took it. Farming became an industry as

the Americans took over. They imported Chinese, Japanese, Mexican and

Filipino workers who became essentially slaves. The owners of the farms

ceased to be farmers and became businessmen. They hated the Okies who came

because they could not profft from them. Other laborers hated the Okies

because they pushed down wages. While the Californians had aspirations of

social success and luxury, the barbarous Okies only wanted land and food.

Hoovervilles arose at the edge of every town. The Okies were forced to

secretly plant gardens in the evenings. The deputies overreacted to the

Okies, spurred by stories that an eleven year old Okie shot a deputy. The

great owners realized that when property accumulates in too few hands it is

taken away and that when a majority of the people are hungry and cold they

will take by force what they need.

Chapter Twenty: The Joads take Granma to the Bakersfield coroner's office.

They can't afford a funeral for her. They go to a camp to stay and ask

about work. They ask a bearded man if he owns the camp and whether they can

stay, and he replies with the same question to them. A younger man tells

them that the crazy old man is called the Mayor. According to the man, the

Mayor has likely been pushed by the police around so much that he's been

made bull-simple (crazy). The police don't want them to settle down, for

then they could draw relief, organize and vote. The younger man tells them

about the handbill fraud, and Tom suggests that everybody organize so that

they could guarantee higher wages. The man warns Tom about the blacklist.

If he is labeled an agitator he will be prevented from getting from

anybody. Tom talks to Casy, who has recently been relatively quiet. Casy

says that the people unorganized are like an army without a harness. Casy

says that he isn't helping out the family and should go off by himself. Tom

tries to convince him to stay at least until the next day, and he relents.

Connie regrets his decision to come with the Joads. He says that if he had

stayed in Oklahoma he could have worked as a tractor driver. When Ma is

fixing dinner, groups of small children approach, asking for food. The

children tell the Joads about Weedpatch, a government camp that is nearby

where no cops can push people around and there is good drinking water. Al

goes around looking for girls, and brags about how Tom killed a man. Al

meets a man named Floyd Knowles, who tells them that there was no steady

work. A woman reprimands Ma Joad for giving her children stew. Al brings

Floyd back to the family, where he says that there will be work up north

around Santa Clara Valley. He tells them to leave quietly, because everyone

else will follow after the work. Al wants to go with Floyd no matter what.

A man arrives in a Chevrolet coupe, wearing a business suit. He tells them

about work picking fruit around Tulare County. Floyd tells the man to show

his license -this is one of the tricks that the contractor uses. Floyd

points out some of the dirty tactics that the contractor is using, such as

bringing along a cop. The cop forces Floyd into the car and says that the

Board of Health might want to shut down their camp. Floyd punched the cop

and ran off. As the deputy chased after him, Tom tripped him. The deputy

raised his gun to shoot Floyd and fires indiscriminately, shooting a woman

in the hand. Suddenly Casy kicked the deputy in the back of the neck,

knocking him unconscious. Casy tells Tom to hide, for the contractor saw

him trip the deputy. More officers come to the scene, and they take away

Casy, who has a faint smile and a look of pride. Rose of Sharon wonders

where Connie has gone. She has not seen him recently. Uncle John admits

that he had five dollars. He kept it to get drunk. Uncle John gives them

the five in exchange for two, which is enough for him. Al tells Rose of

Sharon that he saw Connie, who was leaving. Pa claims that Connie was too

big for his overalls, but Ma scolds him, telling him to act respectfully,

as if Connie were dead. Because the cops are going to burn the camp

tonight, they have to leave. Tom goes to find Uncle John, who has gone off

to get drunk. Tom finds him by the river, singing morosely. He claims that

he wants to die. Tom has to hit him to make him come. Rose of Sharon wants

to wait for Connie to return. They leave the camp, heading north toward the

government camp.

Chapter Twenty-One: The hostility that the migrant workers faced changed

them. They were united as targets of hostility, and this unity made the

little towns of Hoovervilles defend themselves. There was panic when the

migrants multiplied on the highways. The California residents feared them,

thinking them dirty, ignorant degenerates and sexual maniacs. The number of

migrant workers caused the wages to go down. The owners invented a new

method: the great owners bought canneries, where they kept the price of

fruit down to force smaller farmers out. The owners did not know that the

line between hunger and anger is a thin one.

Chapter Twenty-Two: The Joads reach the government camp, where they are

surprised to find that there are toilets and showers and running water. The

watchman at the camp explains some of the other features of the camp: there

is a central committee elected by the camp residents that keeps order and

makes rules, and the camp even holds dance nights. The next morning, two

camp residents (Timothy and Wilkie Wallace) give Tom breakfast and tell him

about work. When they reach the fields where they are to work, Mr. Thomas,

the contractor, tells them that he is reducing wages from thirty to twenty-

five cents per hour. It is not his choice, but rather orders from the

Farmers' Association, which is owned by the Bank of the West. Thomas also

shows them a newspaper, which has a story about a band of citizens who burn

a squatters' camp, infuriated by presumed communist agitation, and warns

them about the dance at the government camp on Saturday night. There will

be a fight in the camp so that the deputies can go in. The Farmers'

Association dislikes the government camps because the people in the camps

become used to being treated humanely and are thus harder to handle. Tom

and the Wallaces vow to make sure that there won't be a fight.

While they work, Wilkie tells Tom that the complaints about agitators are

false. According to the rich owners, any person who wants thirty cents an

hour instead of twenty-five is a red. Back at the camp, Ruthie and Winfield

explore the camp, and are fascinated by the toilets they are frightened by

the flushing sound. Ma Joad makes the rest of the family clean themselves

up before the Ladies Committee comes to visit her. Jim Rawley, the camp

manager, introduces himself to the Joads and tells them some of the

features of the camp. Rose of Sharon goes to take a bath, and learns that a

nurse visits the camp every week and can help her deliver the baby when it

is time. Ma remarks that she no longer feels ashamed, as she had when they

were constantly harassed by the police. Lisbeth Sandry, a religious zealot,

speaks with Rose of Sharon about the alleged sin that goes on during the

dances, and complains about people putting on stage plays, which she calls

Њsin and delusion and devil stuff.' The woman even blames playacting for a

mother dropping her child. Rose of Sharon becomes frightened upon hearing

this, fearing that she will drop her child. Jessie Bullitt, the head of the

Ladies Committee, gives Ma Joad a tour of the camp and explains some of the

problems. Jessie bickers with Ella Summers, the previous committee head.

The children play and bicker. Pa comforts Uncle John, who still wants to

leave, thinking that he will bring the family punishment. Ma Joad confronts

Lisbeth Sandry for frightening Rose and for preaching that every action is

sinful. Ma becomes depressed about all of the losses Granma and Grampa,

John and Connie because she now has leisure time to think about such

things.

Chapter Twenty-Three: The migrant workers looked for amusement wherever

they could find it, whether in jokes or stories for amusement. They told

stories of heroism in taming the land against the Indians, or about a rich

man who pretended to be poor and fell in love with a rich woman who was

also pretending to be poor. The workers took small pleasures in playing the

harmonica or a more precious guitar or fiddle, or even in getting drunk.

Chapter Twenty-Four: The rumors that the police were going to break up the

dance reached the camp. According to Ezra Huston, the chairman of the

Central Committee, this is a frequent tactic that the police use. Huston

tells Willie Eaton, the head of the entertainment committee, that if he

must hit a deputy, do so where they won't bleed. The camp members say that

the Californians hate them because the migrants might draw relief without

paying income tax, but they refute this, claiming that they pay sales tax

and tobacco tax. At the dance, Willie Eaton approaches Tom and tells him

where to watch for intruders. Ma comforts Rose of Sharon, who is depressed

about Connie. Tom finds the intruders at the dance, but the intruders begin

a fight and immediately the police enter the camp. Huston confronts the

police about the intruders, asking who paid them. They only admit that they

have to make money somehow. Once the problem is defused, the dance goes on

without any problems.

Chapter Twenty-Five: Spring is beautiful in California, for behind the

fruitfulness of the trees in the orchards are men of understanding who

experiment with the seeds and crops to defend them against insects and

disease. Yet the fruits become rotten and soft. The rotten grapes are still

used for wine, even if contaminated with mildew and formic acid. The

rationale is that it is good enough for the poor to get drunk. The decay of

the fruit spreads over the state. The men who have created the new fruits

cannot create a system whereby the fruits may be eaten. There is a crime

here that goes beyond denunciation, a sorrow that weeping cannot symbolize.

Children must die from pellagra because the profft cannot be taken from an

orange.

Chapter Twenty-Six: One evening, Ma Joad watches Winfield as he sleeps; he

writhes as he sleeps, and he seems discolored. In the month that the Joads

have been in Weedpatch, Tom has had only five days of work, and the rest of

the men have had none. Ma worries because Rose of Sharon is close to

delivering her baby. Ma reprimands them for becoming discouraged. She tells

them that in such circumstances they don't have the right. Pa fears that

they will have to leave Weedpatch. When Tom mentions work in Marysville, Ma

decides that they will go there, for despite the accommodations at

Weedpatch, they have no opportunity to make money. They plan to go north,

where the cotton will soon be ready for harvest. Regarding Ma Joad's

forceful control of the family, Pa remarks that women seem to be in

control, and it may be time to get out a stick. Ma hears this, and tells

him that she is doing her job as wife, but he certainly isn't doing his job

as husband. Rose of Sharon complains that if Connie hadn't left they would

have had a house by now. Ma pierces Rose of Sharon's ears so that she can

wear small gold earrings. Al parts ways with a blonde girl that he has been

seeing; she rejects his promises that they will eventually get married. He

promises her that he'll return soon, but she does not believe him. Pa

remarks that he only notices that he stinks now that he takes regular

baths. Before they leave, Willie remarks that the deputies don't bother the

residents of Weedpatch because they are united, and that their solution may

be a union.

The car starts to break down as the Joads leave Al has let the battery run

down but he fixes the problem and they continue on their way. Al is

irritable as they leave. He says that he's going out on his own soon to

start a family. On the road, they get a flat tire. While Tom fixes the

tire, a businessman stops in his car and offers them a job picking peaches

forty miles north. They reach the ranch at Pixley where they are to pick

oranges for five cents a box. Even the women and children can do the job.

Ruthie and Winfield worry about settling down in the area and going to

school in California. They assume that everyone will call them Okies. At

the nearby grocery store owned by Hooper Ranch, Ma finds that the prices

are much higher than they would be at the store in town. The sales clerk

lends Ma ten cents for sugar. She tells him that it is only poor people who

will help out. That night, Tom goes for a walk, but a deputy tells him to

walk back to the cabin at the ranch. The deputy claims that if Tom is

alone, the reds will get to him.

While continuing on his walk, Tom finds Casy, who has been released from

jail. He is with a group of men that are on strike. Casy claims that people

who strive for justice always face opposition, citing Lincoln and

Washington, as well as the martyrs of the French Revolution. Casy, Tom and

the rest of the strikers are confronted by the police. A short, heavy man

with a white pick handle swings it at Casy, hitting him in the head. Tom

fights with the man, and eventually wrenches the club from him and strikes

him with it, killing him. Tom immediately fled the scene, crawling through

a stream to get back to the cabin. He cannot sleep that night, and in the

morning tells Ma that he has to hide. He tells her that he was spotted, and

warns his family that they are breaking the strike they are getting five

cents a box only because of this, and today may only get half that amount.

When Tom tells Ma that he is going to leave that night, she tells him that

they aren't a family anymore: Al cares about nothing more than girls, Uncle

John is only dragging along, Pa has lost his place as the head of the

family, and the children are becoming unruly. Rose of Sharon screams at Tom

for murdering the man she thinks that his sin will doom her baby. After a

day of work, Winfield becomes extremely sick from eating peaches. Uncle

John tells Tom that when the police catch him, there will be a lynching.

Tom insists that he must leave, but Ma insists that they leave as a family.

They hide Tom as they leave, taking the back roads to avoid police.

Chapter Twenty-Seven: Those who want to pick cotton must first purchase a

bag before they can make money. The men who weigh the cotton fix the scales

to cheat the workers. The introduction of a cotton-picking machine seems

inevitable.

Chapter Twenty-Eight: The Joads now stay in a boxcar that stood beside the

stream, a small home that proved better than anything except for the

government camp. They were now picking cotton. Winfield tells Ma that

Ruthie told about Tom she got into an argument with some other kids, and

told them that her brother was on the run for committing murder. Ruthie

returns to Ma, crying that the kids stole her Cracker Jack the reason that

she threatened them by telling about Tom but Ma tells her that it was her

own fault for showing off her candy to others. That night, in the pitch

black, Ma Joad goes out into the woods and finds Tom, who has been hiding

out there. She crawls close to him and wants to touch him to remember what

he looked like. She wants to give him seven dollars to take the bus and get

away. He tells her that he has been thinking about Casy, and remembered how

Casy said that he went out into the woods searching for his soul, but only

found that he had no individual soul, but rather part of a larger one. Tom

has been wondering why people can't work together for their living, and

vows to do what Casy had done. He leaves, but promises to return to the

family when everything has blown over. As she left, Ma Joad did not cry,

but rain began to fall. When she returned to the boxcar, she meets Mr. and

Mrs. Wainwright, who have come to talk to the Joads about their daughter,

Aggie, who has been spending time with Al. They're worried that the two

families will part and then find out that Aggie is pregnant. Ma tells them

that she found Tom and that he is gone. Pa laments leaving Oklahoma, while

Ma says that women can deal with change better than a man, because women

have their lives in their arms, and men have it in their heads. For women,

change is more acceptable because it seems inevitable. Al and Aggie return

to the boxcar, and they announce that they are getting married. They go out

before dawn to pick cotton before everyone else can get the rest, and Rose

of Sharon vows to go with them, even though she can barely move. When they

get to the place where the cotton is being picked, there are already a

number of families. While picking cotton, it suddenly starts to rain,

causing Rose of Sharon to fall ill. Everybody assumes that she is about to

deliver, but she instead suffers from a chill. They take her back to the

boxcar and start a fire to get her warm.

Chapter Twenty-Nine: The migrant families wondered how long the rain would

last. The rain damaged cars and penetrated tents. During the rain storms

some people went to relief offices, but there were rules: one had to live

in California a year before he could collect relief. The greatest terror

had arrived no work would be available for three months. Hungry men

crowded the alleys to beg for bread; a number of people died. Anger

festered, causing sheriffs to swear in new deputies. There would be no work

and no food.

Chapter Thirty: After three days of rain, the Wainwrights decide that they

have to keep on going. They fear that the creek will flood. Rose of Sharon

goes into labor, and the Joads cannot leave. Pa Joad and the rest of the

man at the camp build up the embankment to prevent flooding, but the water

breaks through. Pa, Al and Uncle John rush toward the car, but it cannot

start. They reach the boxcar and find that Rose of Sharon delivered a

stillborn baby. They realize that the car will eventually flood, and Mr.

Wainwright blames Pa Joad for asking them to stay and help, but Mrs.

Wainwright offers them help. She tells Ma Joad that it once was the case

that family came first. Now they have greater concerns. Uncle John places

the dead baby in an apple box and floats it down the flooded stream as Al

and build a platform on the top of the car. As the flood waters rise, the

family remains on the platform. The family finds a barn for refuge until

the rain stops. In the corner of the barn there are a starving man and a

boy. Ma and Rose of Sharon realize what she must do. Ma makes everybody

leave the barn, while Rose of Sharon gives the dying man her breast milk.

The Great Gatsby

Summary

Chapter One: The novel begins with a personal note by the narrator, Nick

Carraway. He relates that he has a tendency to reserve all judgments

against people and that he has been conditioned to be understanding toward

those who haven't had his advantages. Carraway came from a prominent family

from the Midwest, graduated from Yale and fought in the Great War. After

the war and a period of restlessness, he decided to go East to learn the

bond business. At the book's beginning, Carraway has just arrived in New

York, living in West Egg village. He was going to have dinner with Tom

Buchanan and his wife Daisy. Tom was an enormously wealthy man and a noted

football player at Yale, and Daisy was Carraway's second cousin. Jordan

mentions that, since Carraway lives in West Egg, he must know Gatsby.

Another woman, Jordan Baker, is also there. She tells Nick that Tom is

having an affair with some woman in New York. Tom discusses the book "The

Rise of the Colored Empires," which claims that the colored races will

submerge the white race eventually. Daisy talks to Carraway alone, and

claims that she has become terribly cynical and sophisticated. After

visiting with the Buchanans, Carraway goes home to West Egg, where he sees

Gatsby come from his mansion alone, looking at the sea. He stretches out

his arms toward the water, looking at a faraway green light.

Chapter Two: Fitzgerald begins this second chapter with the description of

a road running between West Egg and New York City. A large, decaying

billboard showing two eyes (advertising an optometrist's practice)

overlooks the desolate area. It is here, at a gas station, where Tom

Buchanan introduces Nick Carraway to Myrtle Wilson, the woman with whom he

is having an affair. Myrtle herself is married to George B. Wilson, an auto

mechanic. Tom has Myrtle meet them in the city, where Tom buys her a dog.

They go to visit Myrtle's sister and also visit her neighbors, Catherine

McKee and her husband, who is an artist. They gossip about Gatsby, and

Myrtle discusses her husband, claiming that she was crazy to marry him, and

how she met Tom. Later, Myrtle and Tom argue about whether or not she has a

right to say Daisy's name, and he breaks Myrtle's nose.

Chapter Three: Nick Carraway describes the customs of Gatsby's weekly

parties: the arrival of crates of oranges and lemons, a corps of caterers

and a large orchestra. On the first night that Carraway visits Gatsby's

house, he was one of the few guests who had actually been invited. When he

arrives, he sees Jordan Baker, who had recently lost a golf tournament.

They hear more gossip about Jay Gatsby he supposedly killed a man, or was

a German spy. Jordan and Nick look through Gatsby's library, where she

thinks that his books are not real. Later in the party, a man who

recognized Nick from the war talks to him Nick does not know that it is

Gatsby. Suddenly, after he identifies himself, Gatsby gets a phone call

from Chicago. Afterwards, Gatsby asks to speak to Jordan Baker alone. When

she finishes talking to Gatsby, she tells Nick that she heard the most

amazing thing and says that she wishes to see him. Guests leaving the party

have a car wreck in Gatsby's driveway. This was merely one event in a

crowded summer. Carraway, who spent most of his time working, began to like

New York. For a while he lost sight of Jordan Baker. He was not in love

with her, but had some curiosity toward her.

Chapter Four: At a Sunday morning party at Gatsby's, young women gossip

about Gatsby (he's a bootlegger who killed a man who found out that he was

a nephew to Von Hindenburg and second cousin to the devil). One morning

Gatsby comes to take Nick for lunch. He shows off his car: it had a rich

cream color and was filled with boxes from Gatsby's purchases. Gatsby asks

Nick what his opinion of him is, and Nick is evasive. Gatsby gives his

story: he is the son of wealthy people in the Middle West, brought up in

America and educated at Oxford. Carraway does not believe him, for he

chokes on his words. Gatsby continues: he lived in the capitals of Europe,

then enlisted in the war effort, where he was promoted to major and given a

number of declarations (from every Allied government, even Montenegro).

Gatsby admits that he usually finds himself among strangers because he

drifts from here to there, and that something happened to him that Jordan

Baker will tell Nick at lunch. They drive out past the valley of ashes and

Nick even glimpses Myrtle Wilson. When Gatsby is stopped for speeding, he

flashes a card to the policeman, who then does not give him a ticket.

At lunch, Gatsby introduces Carraway to Meyer Wolfsheim, a small, flat-

nosed Jew. He talks of the days at the Metropole when they shot Rosy

Rosenthal, and proudly mentions his cufflinks, which are made from human

molars. Wolfsheim is a gambler, the man who fixed the 1919 World Series.

Tom Buchanan is also there, and Nick introduces him to Gatsby, who appears

quite uncomfortable and then suddenly disappears. Jordan Baker tells the

story about Gatsby: Back in 1917, Daisy was eighteen and Jordan sixteen.

They were volunteering with the Red Cross, making bandages, and Daisy asked

Jordan to cover for her that day. She was meeting with Jay Gatsby, and

there were wild rumors that she was going to run off to New York with him.

On Daisy's wedding day to Tom, she nearly changes her mind, and goes into

hysterics. According to Jordan, Gatsby bought his house just to be across

the bay from Daisy. Nick becomes more drawn to Jordan, with her scornful

and cynical manner. Jordan tells Nick that he is supposed to arrange a

meeting between Gatsby and Daisy.

Chapter Five: Nick speaks with Gatsby about arranging a meeting with Daisy,

and tries to make it as convenient for Nick as possible. Gatsby even offers

him a job, a "confidential sort of thing," although he assures Nick that he

would not have to work with Wolfsheim. On the day that Gatsby and Daisy are

to meet, Gatsby has arranged everything to perfection. They start at Nick's

home, where the conversation between the three (Nick, Gatsby, Daisy) is

stilted and awkward. They are all embarrassed, and Nick tells Gatsby that

he's behaving like a little boy. They go over to Gatsby's house, where

Gatsby gives a tour. Nick asks Gatsby more questions about his business,

and he snaps back "that's my affair," before giving a half-hearted

explanation. Gatsby shows Daisy newspaper clippings about his exploits, and

has Ewing Klipspringer, a boarder, play the piano for them. One of the

notable mementos that Gatsby shows Daisy is a photograph of him with Dan

Cody, his closest friend, on a yacht. As they leave, Carraway realizes that

there must have been moments when Daisy disappointed Gatsby during the

afternoon, for his dreams and illusions had been built up to such grandiose

levels.

Chapter Six: On a vague hunch, a reporter comes to Gatsby's home asking him

if he had a statement to give out. The actual story of Gatsby is revealed:

he was born James Gatz in North Dakota. He had his named legally changed at

the age of seventeen. His parents were shiftless and unsuccessful farm

people, and the young man was consumed by fancies of what he might achieve.

His life changed when he rowed out to Dan Cody's yacht on Lake Superior.

Cody was then fifty, a product of the Nevada silver fields and of the Yukon

gold rush. Cody took Gatsby in and brought him to the West Indies and the

Barbary Coast as a personal assistant. When Cody died, Gatsby inherited

$25,000, but didn't get it because Cody's mistress, Ella Kaye, claimed all

of it. Gatsby told Nick this much later.

Nick had not seen Gatsby for several weeks when he went over to his house.

Tom Buchanan arrived there. He had been horseback riding with a woman and a

Mr. Sloane. Gatsby invites the group to supper, but the lady counters with

an offer of supper at her home. Mr. Sloane seems quite opposed to the idea,

so Nick turns down the offer, but Gatsby accepts. Tom complains about the

crazy people that Daisy meets, presumably meaning Gatsby. On the following

Saturday Tom accompanies Daisy to Gatsby's party. Tom is unpleasant and

rude during the evening. Tom suspects that Gatsby is a bootlegger, since he

is one of the new rich. After the Buchanans leave, Gatsby is disappointed,

thinking that Daisy surely did not enjoy herself. Nick realizes that Gatsby

wanted nothing less of Daisy than that she should tell Tom that she never

loved him. Nick tells Gatsby that he can't ask too much of Daisy, and that

"you can't repeat the past," to which Gatsby replies: "Of course you can!"

Chapter Seven: It was when curiosity about Gatsby was at its highest that

he failed to give a Saturday night party. Nick goes over to see if Gatsby

is sick, and learns that Gatsby had dismissed every servant in his house

and replaced them with a half dozen others who would not gossip, for Daisy

had been visiting in the afternoons. Daisy invites Gatsby, Nick and Jordan

to lunch. At the lunch, Tom is supposedly on the telephone with Myrtle

Wilson. Daisy shows of her daughter, who is dressed in white, to her

guests. Tom claims that he read that the sun is getting hotter and soon the

earth will fall into it or rather that the sun is getting colder. Daisy

makes an offhand remark that she loves Gatsby, which Tom overhears. When

Tom goes inside to get a drink, Nick remarks that Daisy has an indiscreet

voice. Gatsby says that her voice is "full of money." They all go to town:

Nick and Jordan in Tom's car, Daisy in Gatsby's. On the way, Tom tells Nick

that he has investigated Gatsby, who is certainly no Oxford man, as is

rumored. They stop to get gas at Wilson's garage. Mr. Wilson wants to buy

Tom's car, for he has financial troubles and he and Myrtle want to go west.

Wilson tells Tom that he "just got wised up" to something recently, the

reason why he and Myrtle want to get away.

While leaving the garage, they see Myrtle peering down at the car from her

window. Her expression was one of jealous terror toward Jordan Baker, whom

she took to be his wife.

Feeling that both his wife and mistress are slipping away from him, Tom

feels panicked and impatient. To escape from the summer heat, they go to a

suite at the Plaza Hotel. Tom begins to confront Gatsby, irritated at his

constant use of the term "old sport." Tom attempts to expose Gatsby as a

liar concerning Gatsby's experience at Oxford. Tom rambles on about the

decline of civilization, and how there may even be intermarriage between

races. Gatsby tells Tom that Daisy doesn't love him, and never loved him

the only reason why she married him was because Gatsby was poor and Daisy

was tired of waiting. Daisy hints that there has been trouble in her and

Tom's past, and then tells Tom that she never loved him. However, she does

concede that she did love Tom once. Gatsby tells Tom that he is not going

to take care of Daisy anymore and that Daisy is leaving him. Tom calls

Gatsby a "common swindler" and a bootlegger involved with Meyer Wolfsheim.

Nick realizes that today is his thirtieth birthday.

The young Greek, Michaelis, who ran the coffee joint next to Wilson's

garage was the principal witness at the inquest. While Wilson and his wife

were fighting, she ran out in the road and was hit by a light green car.

She was killed. Tom and Nick learn this when they drive past on their way

back from the city. Tom realizes that it was Gatsby who hit Myrtle. When

Nick returns home, he sees Gatsby, who explains what happened. Daisy was

driving the car when they hit Myrtle.

Chapter Eight: Nick cannot sleep that night. Toward dawn he hears a taxi go

up Gatsby's drive, and he immediately feels that he has something to warn

Gatsby about. Gatsby is still there, watching Daisy's mansion across the

bay. Nick warns him to get away for a week, since his car will inevitably

be traced, but he refuses to consider it. He cannot leave Daisy until he

knew what she would do. It was then when Gatsby told his entire history to

Nick. Gatsby still refuses to believe that Daisy ever loved Tom. After the

war Gatsby searched for Daisy, only to find that she had married Tom. Nick

leaves reluctantly, having to go to work that morning. Before he leaves,

Nick tells Gatsby that he's "worth the whole damn bunch put together." At

work, Nick gets a call from Jordan, and they have a tense conversation.

That day Michaelis goes to comfort Wilson, who is convinced that his wife

was murdered. He had found the dog collar that Tom had bought Myrtle hidden

the day before, which prompted their sudden decision to move west. Wilson

looks out at the eyes of T.J. Eckleburg and tells Michaelis that "God sees

everything." Wilson left, "acting crazy" (according to witnesses), and

found his way to Gatsby's house. Gatsby had gone out to the pool for one

last swim before draining it for the fall. Wilson shot him, and then shot

himself.

Chapter Nine: Most of the reports of the murder were grotesque and untrue.

Nick finds himself alone on Gatsby's side. Tom and Daisy suddenly left

town. Meyer Wolfsheim is difficult to contact, and offers assistance, but

cannot become too involved because of current entanglements. Nick tracks

down Gatsby's father, Henry C. Gatz, a solemn old man, helpless and

dismayed by news of the murder. Gatz says that his son would have "helped

build up the country." Klipspringer, the boarder, leaves suddenly and only

returns to get his tennis shoes. Nick goes to see Wolfsheim, who claims

that he made Gatsby. He tells Nick "let he learn to show our friendship for

a man when he is alive and not after he is dead," and politely refuses to

attend the funeral. Gatz shows Nick his son's daily schedule, in which he

has practically every minute of his day planned. He had a continual

interest in self-improvement. At the funeral, one of the few attendees is

the Owl-Eyed man from Gatsby's first party. Nick thinks about the

differences between the west and the east, and realizes that he, the

Buchanans, Gatsby and Jordan are all Westerners who came east, perhaps

possessing some deficiency which made them unadaptable to Eastern life.

After Gatsby's death the East was haunted and distorted. He meets with

Jordan Baker, who recalls their conversation about how bad drivers are

dangerous only when two of them meet. She tells Nick that the two of them

are both 'bad drivers.' Months later Nick saw Tom Buchanan, and Nick scorns

him, knowing that he pointed Wilson toward Gatsby. Nick realizes that all

of Tom's actions were, to him, justified. Nick leaves New York to return

West.

Fitzgerald concludes the novel with a final note on Gatsby's beliefs.

It is this particular aspect of his character his optimistic belief in

achievement and the ability to attain one's dreams that defines Gatsby, in

contrast to the compromising cynicism of his peers. Yet the final symbol

contradicts and deflates the grand optimism that Gatsby held. Fitzgerald

ends the book with the sentence "So we beat on, boats against the current,

borne ceaselessly into the past," which contradicts Gatsby's fervent belief

that one can escape his origins and rewrite his past.

Long Day's Journey Into the Night

Act I, Part One The play begins in August, 1912, at the summer home of

the Tyrone family. The setting for all four acts is the family's living

room, which is adjacent to the kitchen and dining room. There is also a

staircase just off stage, which leads to the upper-level bedrooms. It is

8:30 am, and the family has just finished breakfast in the dining room.

While Jamie and Edmund,Tyrone enter and embrace, and Mary comments on being

pleased with her recent weight gain even though she is eating less food.

Tyrone and Mary make conversation, which leads to a brief argument

about Tyrone's tendency to spend money on real estate investing. They are

interrupted by the sound of Edmund, who is having a coughing fit in the

next room. Although Mary remarks that he merely has a bad cold, Tyrone's

body language indicates that he may know more about Edmund's sickness than

Mary. Nevertheless, Tyrone tells Mary that she must take care of herself

and focus on getting better rather than getting upset about Edmund. Mary

immediately becomes defensive, saying, "There's nothing to be upset about.

What makes you think I'm upset?" Tyrone drops the subject and tells Mary

that he is glad to have her "dear old self" back again.

Edmund and Jamie are heard laughing in the next room, and Tyrone

immediately grows bitter, assuming they are making jokes about him. Edmund

and Jamie enter, and we see that, even though he is just 23 years old,

Edmund is "plainly in bad health" and nervous. Upon entering, Jamie begins

to stare at his mother, thinking that she is looking much better. The

conversation turns spiteful, however, when the sons begin to make fun of

Tyrone's loud snoring, a subject about which he is sensitive, driving him

to anger. Edmund tells him to calm down, leading to an argument between the

two. Tyrone then turns on Jamie, attacking him for his lack of ambition and

laziness. To calm things down, Edmund tells a funny story about a tenant

named Shaughnessy on the Tyrone family land in Ireland, where the family's

origins lie. Tyrone is not amused by the anecdote, however, because he

could be the subject of a lawsuit related to ownership of the land. He

attacks Edmund again, calling his comments socialist. Edmund gets upsets

and exits in a fit of coughing. Jamie points out that Edmund is really

sick, a comment which Tyrone responds to with a "shut up" look, as though

trying to prevent Mary from finding out something. Mary tells them that,

despite what any doctor may say, she believes that Edmund has nothing more

than a bad cold. Mary has a deep distrust for doctors. Tyrone and Jamie

begin to stare at her again, making her self-conscious. Mary reflects on

her faded beauty, recognizing that she is in the stages of decline.

As Mary exits, Tyrone chastises Jamie for suggesting that Edmund really

may be ill in front of Mary, who is not supposed to worry during her

recovery from her addiction to morphine. Jamie and Tyrone both suspect that

Edmund has consumption (better known today as tuberculosis), and Jamie

thinks it unwise to allow Mary to keep fooling herself. Jamie and Tyrone

argue over Edmund's doctor, Doc Hardy, who charges very little for his

services. Jamie accuses Tyrone of getting the cheapest doctor, without

regard to quality, simply because he is a penny-pincher. Tyrone retorts

that Jamie always thinks the worst of everyone, and that Jamie does not

understand the value of a dollar because he has always been able to take

comfortable living for granted. Tyrone, by contrast, had to work his own

way up from the streets. Jamie only squanders loads of money on whores and

liquor in town. Jamie argues back that Tyrone squanders money on real

estate speculation, although Tyrone points out that most of his holdings

are mortgaged. Tyrone accuses Jamie of laziness and criticizes his failure

to succeed at anything. Jamie was expelled from several colleges in his

younger years, and he never shows any gratitude towards his father; Tyrone

thinks that he is a bad influence on Edmund. Jamie counters that he has

always tried to teach Edmund to lead a life different from that which Jamie

leads.

Act I, Part Two Tyrone and Jamie continue their discussion about

Edmund, who works for a local newspaper. Tyrone and Jamie have heard that

some editors dislike Edmund, but they both acknowledge that he has a strong

creative impulse that drives much of his plans. Tyrone and Jamie agree also

that they are glad to have Mary back. They resolve to help her in any way

possible, and they decide to keep the truth about Edmund's sickness from

her, although they realize that they will not be able to do so if Edmund

has to be committed to a sanatorium, a place where tuberculosis patients

are treated. Tyrone and Jamie discuss Mary's health, and Tyrone seems to be

fooling himself into thinking that Mary is healthier than she really is.

Jamie mentions that he heard her walking around the spare bedroom the night

before, which may be a sign that she is taking morphine again. Tyrone says

that it was simply his snoring that induced her to leave; he accuses Jamie

once again of always trying to find the worst in any given situation.

Between the lines, we begin to learn that Mary first became addicted to

morphine 23 years earlier, just after giving birth to Edmund. The birth was

particularly painful for her, and Tyrone hired a very cheap doctor to help

ease her pain. The economical but incompetent doctor prescribed morphine to

Mary, recognizing that it would solve her immediate pain but ignoring

potential future side effects, such as addiction. Thus we see that Tyrone's

stinginess (or prudence, as he would call it), has come up in the past, and

it will be referred to many more times during the course of the play.

Mary enters just as Tyrone and Jamie are about to begin a new

argument. Not wishing to upset her, they immediately cease and decide to go

outside to trim the hedges. Mary asks what they were arguing about, and

Jamie tells her that they were discussing Edmund's doctor, Doc Hardy. Mary

says she knows that they are lying to her. The two stare at her again

briefly before exiting, with Jamie telling her not to worry. Edmund then

enters in the midst of a coughing fit and tells Mary that he feels ill.

Mary begins to fuss over him, although Edmund tells her to worry about

herself and not him. Mary tells Edmund that she hates the house in which

they live because, "I've never felt it was my home." She puts up with it

only because she usually goes along with whatever Tyrone wants. She

criticizes Edmund and Jamie for "disgracing" themselves with loose women,

so that at present no respectable girls will be seen with them. Mary

announces her belief that Jamie and Edmund are always cruelly suspicious,

and she thinks that they spy on her. She asks Edmund to "stop suspecting

me," although she acknowledges that Edmund cannot trust her because she has

broken many promises in the past. She thinks that the past is hard to

forget because it is full of broken promises. The act ends with Edmund's

exit. Mary sits alone, twitching nervously.

Act II, Scene i The curtain rises again on the living room, where

Edmund sits reading. It is 12:45 pm on the same August day. Cathleen, the

maid, enters with whiskey and water for pre-lunch drinking. Edmund asks

Cathleen to call Tyrone and Jamie for lunch. Cathleen is chatty and flirty,

and tells Edmund that he is handsome. Jamie soon enters and pours himself a

drink, adding water to the bottle afterwards so that Tyrone will not know

they had a drink before he came in. Tyrone is still outside, talking to one

of the neighbors and putting on "an act" with the intent of showing off.

Jamie tells Edmund that Edmund may have a sickness more severe than a

simple case of malaria. He then chastises Edmund for leaving Mary alone all

morning. He tells him that Mary's promises mean nothing anymore. Jamie

reveals that he and Tyrone knew of Mary's morphine addiction as much as ten

years before they told Edmund.

Edmund begins a coughing fit as Mary enters, and she tells him not to

cough. When Jamie makes a snide comment about his father, Mary tells him to

respect Tyrone more. She tells him to stop always seeking out the

weaknesses in others. She expresses her fatalistic view of life, that most

events are somehow predetermined, that humans have little control over

their own lives. She then complains that Tyrone never hires any good

servants; she is displeased with Cathleen, and she blames her unhappiness

on Tyrone's refusal to hire a top-rate maid. At this point, Cathleen enters

and tells them that Tyrone is still outside talking. Edmund exits to fetch

him, and while he is gone, Jamie stares at Mary with a concerned look. Mary

asks why he is looking at her, and he tells her that she knows why.

Although he will not say it directly, Jamie knows that Mary is back on

morphine; he can tell by her glazed eyes. Edmund reenters and curses Jamie

when Mary, playing ignorant, tells him that Jamie has been insinuating

nasty things about her. Mary prevents an argument by telling Edmund to

blame no one. She again expresses her fatalist view: "[Jamie] can't help

Страницы: 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13


© 2008
Полное или частичном использовании материалов
запрещено.