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Let's talk quotes.
100

This house was "lit from tower to cellar". 

Gatby's house

100

Nick instructs Daisy to NOT do what, regarding her future visit to Nick's home?

Don't bring Tom.

100

invited to tea

Daisy

100

"Five years next November" tells us what?

Gatsby has been keeping close track of how long he and Daisy have been apart.

100

"...a faint doubt had occurred to him as to the quality of his present happiness."

Gatsby isn't as happy with Daisy, at this moment, as he had dreamed he would be.

200

Gatsby asked Nick to "take a plunge in the swimming pool" because...

He hadn't made use of it all summer.

200

Gatby is pale and has dark circles under his eyes. Nick assumes this to be due to what?

Gatsby's sleeplessness

200

apologizes for the clock that doesn't work

Gatsby

200

"Who is Tom?" Daisy says. Explain the deeper meaning.

Daisy doesn't care about Tom and wants Nick to know that she can easily forget who he is.

200

"No amount of fire or freshness can challenge what a man can store up in his ghostly heart."

The reality that Gatsby now sees, after being with Daisy again, has fallen short of the fantasy he has built over the past five years.

300

Nick says he is going to call this person soon.

Daisy

300

Gatsby is visibly upset, and wants to leave Nick's house. Why?

Time has passed and Daisy has not shown up.

300

invites two people to his home

Gatsby

300

"You're acting like a little boy...Not only that...you're rude."

Nick tells Gatsby that he is ridiculous for wanting to leave and is being rude for leaving Daisy all alone in the next room. 

300

"Possibly it had occurred to him that the colossal significance of that light had now vanished forever."

His hope has turned into reality; he no longer has to look at it and yearn for Daisy. His dream had become reality.

400

the reason Nick is going to "call someone up".

to invite her to tea, per Gatsby's invitation, through Jordan

400

Gatsby's main goal during the "tea" is to show Daisy what? 

his house and his wealth

400

hosts Gatsby and Daisy, for tea

Nick

400

Cite the lie that Gatsby tells Daisy on Page 53, top.

"I keep it always full of interesting people...People who do interesting things. Celebrated people."
400

"His count of enchanged objects had diminished by one."

Gatsby's world is only magical (enchanted) as long as he is longing for something he does not have. The very act of achieving his dream inevitably strips it of its enchantment. He is no longer enchanted by the thought of meeting her; this is a reality among humans. Sadly.

500

Gatsby wants to (and ultimately has this done), do what to Nick's property?

get the grass cut

500

Gatsby does not remain in the living room, waiting for Daisy's arrival. Instead he does what?

Gatsby goes outside, in the rain, and knocks on the front door.

500
Yes, this can be a character. This character now is a simple something, no longer enchanting Gatsby.

the green light at the end of Daisy's dock

500

"Americans, while willing, even eager, to be serfs, have always been obstinate about being peasantry."

  •  They will endure "serfdom"—working tirelessly to build someone else's wealth, becoming wage laborers, or trapping themselves in debt—because they believe the system offers the potential for upward mobility.  What Americans fiercely reject is the rigid, inherited, and permanent class structure of "Peasantry", which implies a fixed social identity, an acceptance of an inferior status that you are born into and can never escape. 


500

"There must have been moments even that afternoon when Daisy tumbled short of his dreams -- not through her own fault, but because of the colosssal vitality of his illusion." 

Daisy is simply a woman, no longer an esteemed illusion. Reality has set in for Gatsby. Maybe at this point he can finally see her faults, unlike when he was a young man who didn't think someone like Daisy could ever love someone like him.