воскресенье, 9 ноября 2014 г.

Nick wondered his neighbor. Many people said that his name Gatsby. All he knew this is what summer evenings at the villa at the Nick's neighbor was sounds of music; on weekends it "Rolls-Royce" turns into a shuttle bus to New York, carrying a huge amount of visitors, and multi-seat "Ford" runs between the villa and the station. On Mondays eight servants, and specially hired gardener second all day removes traces of destruction.

Soon Nick receives a formal invitation to a party at Mr. Gatsby and is one of the very few guests: there were not expecting an invitation, just come back. No one in the crowd of guests are not familiar with a host of close; not everyone knows his face. His mysterious, romantic figure is intense interest - and the crowd multiplied conjectures: some argue that Gatsby killed a man, others - that he Bootleggers, nephew von Hindenburg and second cousin of the devil, and during the war was a German spy. They also say that he studied at Oxford. In the crowd of his guests, he is lonely, sober and restrained. Society, which enjoyed the hospitality of Gatsby, pay him what did not know about him. Nick meets Gatsby almost by accident: a conversation with some man - they were fellow soldiers - he noticed that his somewhat restrict the visitors unfamiliar with the owner, and receives the answer: "So it's me - Gatsby."

суббота, 8 ноября 2014 г.

So...when Nick has met with her cousin, Daisy said a great phrase on my opinion...

She said it about her doughter, but everyone know that it about any girl. It's true! This phrase is a century's dictum!
Just once I get acquainted with the hero-narrator Nick Carraway. He belongs to a respectable family of a prosperous small town in the Midwest. In 1915 he graduated from Yale University, and then had fought in Europe; Having returned to his native town, "could not find a place," and in 1922 moved to the east - in New York, to study the loan deal. He settled in the suburbs, on the outskirts of Long Island protrude into the water two completely identical headland, separated by a narrow cove: East Egg and West Egg; in West Egg, between two luxurious villas, and room for oneself a house, which he took off for eighty dollars a month. In the more fashionable East Egg lives his second cousin Daisy. She is married to Tom Buchanan. Tom fabulously rich, he studied at Yale at the same time with Nick, Nick, and even then it was very unsympathetic aggressively flawed demeanor. Tom began to change his wife still in the honeymoon; and now he does not bother to hide their relationship from Nick with Myrtle Wilson, the wife of the owner of a gas station and car repairs, which is located halfway between the West Eggom and New York, where the highway runs very close to the railway, and a quarter of a mile runs beside her. Daisy also knows about her husband's infidelity, it hurts her; from the first visit to them Nick left the impression that Daisy need to run out of the house immediately.