How Does Jay Gatsby Confidant

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A confidant is a character that the main character confides in sometime in a story. In the novel The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, the narrator and one of the main characters, Nick Carraway, acts as a confidant for the other characters in the story. Throughout the book, Nick listens presently to the thoughts and plights of Jay Gatsby and other characters throughout the entire novel, which is used to provide information about the characters and advance the plot. Nick’s characteristic of “reserving all judgments” (Fitzgerald 1) makes him the ideal character for multiple characters to confide in. The main person that Nick acts as a confidant for is Jay Gatsby. Jay Gatsby starts the story as a very illustrious and mysterious character, but …show more content…

In this dialogue, we learn that Gatsby’s parents were “shiftless and unsuccessful farm people, and his imagination had never really accepted them as his parents at all” (Fitzgerald 74). We also learn that a previous employer, Dan Cody, made Gatsby the man he is and that “the vague contour of Jay Gatsby had filled out to the substantiality of a man” (Fitzgerald 76). From this interaction we learn that Gatsby grew up a poor man, but never saw himself as one and aspired to be among the great, wealthy elite, and ran away from home to become successful, and fully became the person he is in the story after his time spent with Dan Cody. This interaction in which Nick is used as a confidant by the author provides the reader with insight into Gatsby’s motives and characteristics: he was a man driven by his hunger for wealth and success. Upon achieving this wealth and success, he threw extravagant parties and lied to people to further elaborate upon the fabricated character he created for himself. Nick is also used by Fitzgerald as a confidant in chapter …show more content…

Gatsby was excited by Daisy and greatly desired her from the moment he met her as a soldier. However, we also learn from this passage that Gatsby was well aware of the social status and wealth disparity between them at the time and despised himself for it, and that he “was in Daisy’s house by a colossal accident” (Fitzgerald 112). The entire plot of the story was enveloped around Gatsby’s love for Daisy, and Nick’s role as a confidant is the vessel to the information that explains it. Gatsby’s love for Daisy drove him to become wealthy, buy a house across the water from her and host extravagant parties in hopes of seeing her. It also led to the argument with Tom and eventually Gatsby’s demise. Without Nick’s role as a confidant, the reader would not know the context to which the story is based. One of Nick’s primary roles in the story, outside of being the narrator, is to be a confidant for the other characters in The Great Gatsby. The novel highlights the importance of having someone to talk to about your life, and why friendship is

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