In "Crazy Sunday," F. Scott Fitzgerald portrays wealth as superficial and unfulfilling, as characters immerse themselves in lavish parties and material excess to escape their underlying insecurities and unhappiness. Poverty is symbolized by the struggles of characters like Maury and Lucy, who are forgotten by the wealthy elite and face societal exclusion despite their talents and aspirations. Fitzgerald uses these contrasting depictions to critique the emptiness of the Jazz Age's obsession with wealth and status.
poverty is when someone is poor and wealth is when someone is rich.
poverty
poverty
wealth
Wealth and poverty are god-given and transient to shape life and soul realisation.
Their acquistion of wealth is not relevant to the poverty and deprivation elsewhere.
poverty
abundance, wealth, luxury, affluence, richness
There is poverty in every part of the world, and so there is poverty in Europe as well as lots of wealth.
poverty
Everyone loves wealth, wealth kills true love
Riches, abundance, wealth, or plenty. Those are opposites of poverty.