Well I hope today will go as planned. I hate that I have to be the one to tell them the news, but I guess thats what happens when you are the chairman of the New Neighbors Orientation Committee. I just hope they will be calm so we can "sit down and talk to each other". The last thing I want is for them to get all aggressive, I mean what were they expecting, trying to move into a neighborhood where they just aren't wanted. There are many negro neighborhoods that they would fit in just fine. Although ill be clear that this decision isn't on any basis of racial prejudice, its simply for the benefit of everyone. They should just be thankful that we are giving them such a generous offer, but the people would do anything to keep our "little community... [of] hard-working, honest people" free of people that don't have the same "common background" as us. They could take the offer and buy an even bigger house! I hope they will have some brains and think sensibly, I mean who wouldn't take the money when its given to you on such easy terms? Well, I finally arrived at the place, wish me luck.
Sunday, December 21, 2014
Sunday, December 14, 2014
Pink Elephants
Once upon a time, there was a place where life was perfect, simply because diamonds lined the walls. They say money can't buy happiness, which is evident in the lives of Percy and Gatsby. The wealth that Gatsby and Percy have cannot buy them the love and companionship that they wish for. Everyone today would love to live the extravagant life of the Washington's, however, would you give up your happiness to become "the richest man in the world"? Kismine is, for example, a pink elephant: glorious on the outside, a symbol of "physical perfection", but in reality is fake as she pretends to be girly and unintelligent so John would like her. Fitzgerald uses rhetoric to illustrate the false lives of the Washington's and how they wish to portray themselves to the other "best friends" who they wish to show off to. Fitzgerald also uses analogies to exemplify the distance between the Washington's lives and the real world. The mention of slaves in the story is used to portray the gap between the Washington's world and the real world as if Moses himself had parted the two. In The Diamond as Big as the Ritz, Fitzgerald conveys the unimportance of wealth to the well being of someone.
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