Ch. 9
In the last chapter of this book, I swear I was about to cry. I cannot believe that no one came to Gatsby’s funeral, after they all came to his parties and trashed his house and yard. Again, this shows that money can’t buy you everything, and the owl-eyed man comments and says, (175) “The poor son-of-a-bitch.” This is an ironic way of describing Gatsby, because he was everything but “poor.” He was rich in the material items, but not in his personal life. He had, really, no friends and not even Wolfsheim wanted to go to the funeral.
At the end, the green light is mentioned again, which parallels the beginning. Fitzgerald describes it as “the orgastic future that year by year recedes before us” (180). The light represented the future, which, for Gatsby, was Daisy. But he could never reach it because Daisy was forever in his past.