Theme Of Dishonesty In The Great Gatsby

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The salient discovery of chapter three was Gatsby and his parties. Gatsby evidently throws extravagant parties, which a myriad of people of a variety of social classes assists. From the information in chapter three, Gatsby is evidently displayed as a generous, charming, and mysterious gentlemen. However, rumors about Gatsby murdering a man juxtaposes his image of the epitome of a gentleman. Chapter four and five asserts some information about Gatsby to better understand his true identity and intentions. Both chapter four and five assert Jay Gatsby is part of an organized crime group, Gatsby is dishonest towards Nick, and he is evidently in love with Daisy, but he crafts an egregious first impression.

After Gatsby returned from fighting
Throughout both chapters four and five, Gatsby evidently displayed his dishonesty towards Nick. From lying about his “wealthy” past to lying about how he earned the money to buy his mansion, Gatsby has the tendency to display the dichotomy in his stories. When Gatsby “clarifies” the rumors speculating his true identity, Nick evidently knows Gatsby is lying about his claim, “His right hand suddenly ordered divine retribution to stand by. ‘I am the son of some wealthy people in the Middle West--all dead now. I was brought up in America but educated in Oxford...He looked at me sideways--and I knew why Jordan Baker had believed he was lying. He hurried the phrase ‘educated in Oxford’...’What part of the Middle West?’ I inquired casually. ‘San Francisco” (Fitzgerald 65). Gatsby evidently is a terrible liar since he is unable to assert his lie about getting educated at the University of Oxford. Furthermore, Gatsby displays his ignorance since San Francisco, California is evidently not part of the Middle West. Gatsby and Nick’s honesty are juxtaposed since Nick is an honest man and Gatsby is a liar. Gatsby’s dishonesty may engender consequences later in the story and expose the truth about who he evidently

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