Re-examination of character analysis of Babylonian Charlie of Fitzgerald I think Charlie is a victim of his own success, considering the plight of Charlie Wales in Fitzgerald's "Revisiting of Babylon". As a two successful businessman, he burned many bridges behind him, and sincerely he blindly turned to this continuous mistake. His current success did not seem to be aware of the shame of Marion and Lincoln's contempt before Helen's death. I saw Charlie desperately trying to get rid of her personality.
"Revisit Babylon" written by F. Scott Fitzgerald in 1930 is a short story where its character and environment are closely related to the character and the environment in the author's own life. A reformed drunkard, Charlie Wales represents who Fitzgerald wants to be, and other characters represent relatives. For example, Honoria is Charlie 's 9 - year - old daughter, representing the daughter of Fitzgerald. In addition, Charlie 's in - law Maria and Lincoln Peters represent Celda Fitzgerald' s older sister and husband. However, other people like Lorraine and Duncan arrived at Petersfoil and Charlie is planning to take Onoria home. And it represents the writer and the old ghost of his protagonist.
The character of Charlie Wales is an important part of the Babylonian's revisit. Because he is a reliable, compassionate and comprehensive individual presented through advice and reasoning, dialogue and reference. As the story goes in and out of Charlie's present and past, the reader mainly begins to understand more than talking in public just through the details of Fitzgerald. Fitzgerald's style of "Revisit Babylon" is amazing: Instead of the rich romantic essay of the early story like "diamonds as big as diamonds", he expresses discreet, careful I will use technology. Strong and painful emotions. Meaning The word is supple, powerful, elegant, and the reader knows little about it, but a careful and in-depth study shows that Fitzgerald became a masterpiece of contemporary short stories.
My idea was directed to Fitzgerald's short story "Revisit Babylon". In this story, Fitzgerald's criticism of American culture is similar to his comment in "Great Gatsby". In the early 1930s, "Babylon's revisit" gave Fitzgerald the opportunity to show men's failure, not nationwide. He did not write it when I wrote "Great Gatsby" in the mid-2020s. It is a chance. The general prosperity of the 1920s undoubtedly brought the emergence of numerous "American dreams". In short, attractive times, through the luck of the stock it will be easy to become rich quickly; 10 years prosperity and confidence make everyone impossible to realize their dreams. Then, the collapse of '29 removed the illusion of the masses. When the bartender said he heard Charlie crashed and lost money, Charlie replied, "I did, but I lost whatever I wanted during the boom.