Francis Scott Fitzgerald: All that jazz
I n my younger and more
vulnerable years my father gave me some advice that I’ve been turning over in
my mind ever since. ‘Whenever you feel like criticizing any one,’ he told me,
‘just remember that all the people in this world haven’t had the advantages that
you’ve had.’ He didn’t say any more but we’ve always been unusually
communicative in a reserved way, and I understood that he meant a great deal
more than that.
In consequence I’m inclined to reserve all
judgments, a habit that has opened up many curious natures to me and also made
me the victim of not a few veteran bores. The abnormal mind is quick to detect
and attach itself to this quality when it appears in a normal person, and so it
came about that in college I was unjustly accused of being a politician,
because I was privy to the secret griefs of wild, unknown men. Most of the
confidences were unsought—frequently I have feigned sleep, preoccupation, or a
hostile levity when I realized by some unmistakable sign that an intimate
revelation was quivering on the horizon—for the intimate revelations of young
men or at least the terms in which they express them are usually plagiaristic
and marred by obvious suppressions. Reserving judgments is a matter of infinite
hope.
I am still a little afraid of
missing something if I forget that, as my father snobbishly suggested, and I
snobbishly repeat a sense of the fundamental decencies is parcelled out
unequally at birth. And, after boasting this way of my tolerance, I come to the
admission that it has a limit. Conduct may be founded on the hard rock or the
wet marshes but after a certain point I don’t care what it’s founded on. When I
came back from the East last autumn I felt that I wanted the world to be in
uniform and at a sort of moral attention forever; I wanted no more riotous
excursions with privileged glimpses into the human heart.
Only Gatsby, the man who gives his name to
this book, was exempt from my reaction—Gatsby who represented everything for
which I have an unaffected scorn. If personality is an unbroken series of
successful gestures, then there was something gorgeous about him, some
heightened sensitivity to the promises of life, as if he were related to one of
those intricate machines that register earthquakes ten thousand miles away.
(First pages from “The great Gatsby”,
AVAILABLE IN ENGLISH AT THE LIBRARY)
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