Did Gatsby Deserve His Death

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One question readers often find themselves wondering while reading The Great Gatsby, written by F. Scott Fitzgerald, is whether the characters in the novel have good morals and beliefs. Many people have different opinions on the important character, Jay Gatsby. Is he a character with good beliefs, or is he unworthy of the extravagant life he seems to live? There is no answer that can be found in the book, however the reader can make their own judgement. But one question that everyone has to ask themselves by the end of the novel is whether Jay Gatsby deserves the early end to his life or if he deserves to live much longer than he does. Jay Gatsby does not deserve the murder that he receives at the hands of George Wilson based on the short and …show more content…

Gatsby does not deserve the murder that ends his life because he does not have anyone in his life who will love and care for him. Gatsby lives far away from his family and had no contact with them and other than Nick, he does not have any friends besides a man that is no longer alive. Gatsby tells Nick, "He's dead now. He used to be my best friend years ago." (Fitzgerald 93). Gatsby has no one that will be there for him whenever he would need someone to be. Another example of Gatsby having no one that cares about him is that no one came to his funeral besides Nick and Jay’s father. "The minister glanced several times at his watch, so I took him aside and asked him to wait for half an hour. But it wasn't any use. Nobody came." (Fitzgerald 174). This is almost like an outward statement from the people that know Gatsby saying that they do not care enough about him to bother to show up. And as Nick is beginning to plan Gatsby’s funeral, he very quickly realizes that he is the only one that truly cares for him. "...It grew upon me that I was responsible, because no one else was interested..." (Fitzgerald 164). Ironically enough, Nick is the only one who sticks by …show more content…

An example of this is when Daisy is driving and hits and kills Myrtle Wilson. When Nick asks him if Daisy is the one driving, Gatsby tells him she is but immediately says that he will take the blame. ""Yes," he said after a moment, "but of course I'll say I was."" (Fitzgerald 143). This conflict is how Gatsby ends up murdered, so by covering for her, Gatsby literally saves her life. Even though this is true and Daisy knows it, she still does not come to his funeral. Throughout the novel, Nick’s opinion of Gatsby constantly changes but by the end, he takes a side (and it is not Daisy’s). As Barbara Will explains, Nick sees Gatsby’s bad qualities but yet still respects him because he believes that the bad things outweigh the good. "For Nick, Gatsby's lies, his pretensions, and his corruption are "no matter"; nor is his failure to win back Daisy; what matters is the sustaining belief in the value of striving for a "wondrous" object, not its inevitable disappearance and meaninglessness." (Will). And as many readers of The Great Gatsby believe, he has his faults, yet there is no way you could hate him. "Amazingly, the novel often draws the same reaction from diverse teen readers in my classroom today, as they are disheartened to watch the mysterious gangster-turned-romantic hero meet his demise." (Ruggieri). Lastly, Gatsby is a good person in the way that he never does anything

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