In this manner both Tennessee Williams and Fitzgerald present our preference for possibilities over actualities, for riotous dreams in which our minds “romp like the mind of God” and are “magic!” rather than “grotesque reality”, both writers bringing forth the idea that a dream realized, is a dream destroyed, and the fragility of
In this manner both Tennessee Williams and Fitzgerald present our preference for possibilities over actualities, for riotous dreams in which our minds “romp like the mind of God” and are “magic!” rather than “grotesque reality”, both writers bringing forth the idea that a dream realized, is a dream destroyed, and the fragility of