Chapter VI.
Written from Nick's point of view, some part of Chapter VI is articulated through speech. This chapter starts with a reporter who has come from New York to visit Gatsby and ask him if he has anything to say. We get to know that Gatsby's real name is James
Gatz and he changed it at the age of seventeen and Dan Cody was a man who helped Gatsby to change his life. This chapter also introduces us to Gatsby's past, as Nick tells us that "His parents were shiftless and unsuccessful farm people - his imagination had never really accepted them as his parents at all". Later in this chapter Gatsby meets Tom and tells him he knows Daisy, Gatsby even invites him to his next party, which also happens in this chapter. Gatsby tells Nick about his plans of getting together with Daisy and at the end, Nick writes about an event that happened "one autumn night, five years before" when Daisy and Gatsby were together.
We get to know Gatsby even more, as he reveals his plans. He is probably very nostalgic and cannot forget Daisy, "I'm going to fix everything just the way it was before" he said. He obviously likes Daisy and doesn't care about Tom at all.
Chapter 6 shows us that Daisy enjoys Gatsby's company very much and probably still has feelings for him.
Tom is showing even more of his
aggression in this chapter.
Nick is a bystander and he gives his descriptions and opinions on other people.
Romance - "Daisy blossomed as Gatsby's lips touched hers", said Nick. Romantic descriptions are seen throughout the novel. And maybe Nick as a narrator
over describes things.
Jealousy - Gatsby is
jealous of Tom and Daisy, as they are married and spend most of the time together. Myrtle is
jealous of Daisy because she gets everything she wants and lives a beautiful, rich life, while Myrtle has to spend most of her time in Wilson's garage.Gatsby's house, another party in moonlight. A street in one autumn night "when leaves were falling and they came to a place where there were no trees and sidewalk was white with moonlight. "
Nick is seeing a violence in the world, just by describing Tom. There are affairs which are thought to be a normal thing by some persons.Romantic descriptions, for example, "At his lips' touch she blossomed for him like a flower and the incarnation was complete". "Daisy began to sing with the music of a husky, rhythmic whisper, bringing out a meaning in each word that it had never had before and would never have again. When the melody rose her voice broke up sweetly, following it, in a way contralto voices have, and each change tipped out a little of her warm human magic upon the air", by saying this, Nick puts Daisy in another world.
Chapter VII.
Chapter VII is written from Nick's point of view, as the majority of the novel. This chapter reveals us that Gatsby and Daisy are now meeting quite often. At the beginning, Nick gets to know that Gatsby has fired all servants, because he "wanted somebody who wouldn't gossip". It continues with a hottest day in the whole summer when Gatsby, Daisy, Tom and Jordan got together, drove to a hotel where they started arguing and at the end of the day these events lead to Myrtle's death.
Gatsby, who, as we get to know, had fired all his servants and replaced them with others because he "wanted somebody who wouldn't gossip". We also get to know that he is meeting Daisy quite often, because she comes over in the afternoons. All the servants were brothers and sisters who used to run a small hotel. Gatsby later meets Daisy, Jordan, Nick and Tom and they are planning to have a lunch together. They drove to a hotel where Gatsby tells Tom that his wife doesn't love him, "She has never loved you. She loves me.'' he said. Gatsby and Daisy later drove home in Gatsby's car, when Daisy hit Myrtle. He waits for Daisy to go to bed at the end of this chapter.
Tom Buchanan is suspicious in this chapter. He was ''feeling the hot whips of panic.. His wife and his mistress, until an hour ago secure and inviolate, were slipping precipitately from his control. '' He later argues with Gatsby and tries to prove him that Daisy has always loved her husband.
Daisy is in the centre of the conflict, as Tom and Gatsby fight about her. She invites Gatsby to lunch and later suggests renting "five bathrooms" to cool down from the hotness. When Tom, Gatsby, Jordan, Nick and Daisy get into a hotel room, they start arguing. Daisy is the one who drives Gatsby's car when it hits Myrtle and she didn't even stop it.
In this chapter, George B. Wilson is feeling sick, as he says, and he has locked Myrtle in his house. Apparently, he gets to know about Myrtle's affairs, just doesn't know who are they with. He feels even more sick as the events lead to Myrtle's cruel death. He sits in his garage and barely talks.
Michaelis is George's neighbour , a young Greek "who ran the coffee joint beside the ashheaps'', he goes to Wilson's garage and finds him really sick. He tries to find out what had happened between George and Myrtle, but Wilson wouldn't say a word. Michaelis was the one who reached Myrtle's dead body first.
Myrtle is the victim in this Chapter. Her death almost starts the ending of the book, as the death of Gatsby follows. As Wilson gets to know her affairs, he locks her in the apartment, later in the evening they start arguing and Myrtle runs on the road where she gets hit by Gatsby's car while Daisy is driving. "The mouth was wide open and ripped a little in the corners, as though she had choked a little in giving up the tremendous vitality she had stored so long".
Nick is the narrator. He is the bystander, but tries to calm Gatsby and Tom down several times. Although he doesn't see Myrtle's death, he writes about it poetically in a way like he has been there.
Death is an important theme in this chapter, as it starts the ending of the book. Myrtle's is killed cruely and this event leads to missunderstoodmant by George.
Love also takes an important place, as Gatsby reveals his love for Daisy to Tom. Love is the thing which leads to death.
Missunderstoodman takes place in this chapter, as the killer of Myrtle is confused.
Tom's house. He show Gatsby that his house is visible from the bay. A hotel room, where they are having a time together. George's garage is the place where Myrtle's body is lying while the investigation is going on. The last part of the chapter is set in Daisy's and Tom's house, where they were sitting in the kitchen.
Tom's view on the world is expressed in this chapter, as he feels in danger of losing his wife and mistress, and he doesn't want Gatsby to meet Daisy.
Poetic descritpitons, that are seen throughout the novel. Nick also describes events which he hasn't seen himself. He uses words that seem like he has been there, for example, he describes the moment when Myrtle died, but he hadn't actually been there at the time.