“On Sunday morning while church bells rang in the villages alongshore, the world and its mistress returned to Gatsby's house and twinkled hilariously on his lawn.Chapter 4 · Narrator · ★★★☆☆→
“Gatsby bought that house so that Daisy would be just across the bay.Chapter 4 · Jordan Baker · ★★★☆☆→
“those who accepted Gatsby's hospitality and paid him the subtle tribute of knowing nothing whatever about him.Chapter 4 · Narrator · ★★★☆☆→
“"He's a bootlegger," said the young ladies, moving somewhere between his cocktails and his flowers. "One time he killed a man who had found out that he was nephew to Von Hindenburg and second cousin to the devil. Reach me a rose, honey, and pour me a last drop into that there crystal glass."Chapter 4 · Party guests · ★★★☆☆→
“Two o'clock and the whole corner of the peninsula was blazing with light, which fell unreal on the shrubbery and made thin elongating glints upon the roadside wires. Turning a corner, I saw that it was Gatsby's house, lit from tower to cellar.Chapter 5 · Narrator · ★★★☆☆→
“It was when curiosity about Gatsby was at its highest that the lights in his house failed to go on one Saturday night—and, as obscurely as it had begun, his career as Trimalchio was over.Chapter 7 · Narrator · ★★★☆☆→
“His house had never seemed so enormous to me as it did that night when we hunted through the great rooms for cigarettes. We pushed aside curtains that were like pavilions, and felt over innumerable feet of dark wall for electric light switches—once I tumbled with a sort of splash upon the keys of a ghostly piano.Chapter 8 · Narrator · ★★★☆☆→
“There was a ripe mystery about it, a hint of bedrooms upstairs more beautiful and cool than other bedrooms, of gay and radiant activities taking place through its corridors, and of romances that were not musty and laid away already in lavender but fresh and breathing and redolent of this year's shining motorcars and of dances whose flowers were scarcely withered.Chapter 8 · Narrator · ★★★☆☆→
“He had reached an age where death no longer has the quality of ghastly surprise, and when he looked around him now for the first time and saw the height and splendor of the hall and the great rooms opening out from it into other rooms, his grief began to be mixed with an awed pride.Chapter 9 · Narrator · ★★★☆☆→