The Great Gatsby
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The Obscenities
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"I'd like to shoot the bastard."
"On the white steps an obscene word, scrawled by some boy with a piece of brick,..."
"Fuck" More to the point, what point was Fitzgerald making? That Nick felt paternal, protective or possessive toward Gatsby?


"I'd like to shoot the bastard."
"On the white steps an obscene word, scrawled by some boy with a piece of brick,..."
"Fuck" More to the point, wh..."
Nick was certainly protective of Gatsby

"I'd like to shoot the bastard."
Interesting. I took the word "violent" as more of a characterization of her tone, but it would make sense if it was actually a violent expletive.
Monty J wrote: "On the white steps an obscene word, scrawled by some boy with a piece of brick,..."
"Fuck" More to the point, what point was Fitzgerald making? That Nick felt paternal, protective or possessive toward Gatsby?"
There's a been a lot of speculation on what that sequence means. Was writing on the "white" steps an indication of purity, race, innocence or death? Was Nick's action (he erases the word with his shoe) an indication of his acceptance/approval of Gatsby? Was it an act of defiance?
I think it would be interesting if the word written there were "BASTARD" because of what that would imply about Gatsby.

The "obscenity" really was the inaccuracy of that single word, whatever it was, diminishing the complexity of the man himself, and his dream and/or quest.

And Daisy had remorse? Daisy kills a woman and has no remorse, nor does she assume responsibility but is complicit after the fact in her lover's death, unless she did tell her husband that it was her behind the wheel.And she also has an illicit affair.
No, Daisy's miscreance far outweighs Myrtles.

I finally fingered out, after days of agonizing, what bothers me about this thread.
Why is anyone so sure that F. Squatt KNEW what the "Obscenities" were? Maybe he just decided there was "An Obscenity" written, or something "Violent And Obscene" said, but didn't really *have* anything specific in mind? Where do WE get off blithely assuming that he just didn't dare say it because some coven of pecksniffian tweezerbeaks in tweed jackets were going to ban his book someplace, and then taking the whole idea and running with it like we actually *know* something??
I mean, *really*... (there, I feel lots better now)
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At two points in The Great Gatsby Fitzgerald describes the language used as "obscene" or as an "obscenity." He doesn't tell us what those words are, though.
The first is at Myrtle's impromptu party. When Nick is talking to Myrtle's sister, they are discussing the respective marriages of Myrtle and Tom. What do you think Myrtle said?
The second is after Gatsby's funeral as Nick is preparing to leave. What do you think that word was?