Period 6 Main Page Chapter Summaries Literary Topics About the 1920s Gatsby Project

BLUE

F. Scott Fitzgerald uses blue to represent dreams and to add an element of other worldliness. Dr. T. J. Eckleburg has enormous "floating" blue eyes, which are said to be God's eyes. They are believed to view the world as God himself would. At one point Myrtle is clothed in a blue dress, which is present to represent her dreams of escaping her mundane life and running away with Tom. Most importantly, Gatsby's gardens are described as being shades of blue and are initially shown as a place where people could escape from the world and be out of touch with reality. In direct relation to Gatsby, the gardens were an essential part of his life. As Nick says in the story, "He'd come a long way to this blue lawn" (189).

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