“The Great Gatsby” was a book written by, F. Scott Fitzgerald, was a book of love and tragedy. The story is about a young, rich man, who throws extravagant parties, yet he is a “mystery man: to most people that attend his parties. Once a young man moves next door, Nick Carraway, he meets Gatsby and they become close friends. It just so happens that Gatsby “long lost” lover, Daisy, is Nick’s cousin. Gatsby reveals to Nick that he only throws the parties he does in hopes of Daisy, along with her husband Tom, which isn’t Gatsby’s biggest fan. At the end Gatsby is killed, shot and killed because he was falsely accused of something. I know ther gun killed Gatsby but what things lead up to Gatsby’s death? The things I believe lead to his death were …show more content…
3 of the 7 deadly sins. Lust, Gluttony, and Envy. These things all lead up to the death of Gatsby. Lust.
The reason I believe lust was one of the factors of Gatsby’s death was because Gatsby was in love with the thought of Daisy, and her wealth was one of the things he craved about her . He said “ "Her voice is full of money... That was it. I'd never understood before. It was full of money - that was the inexhaustible charm that rose and fell in it, the jingle of it, the cymbal's song of it..." (Fitzgerald, 120) This quote contains symbolism as Daisy is the ultimate symbol of the American Dream. She is wealthy and well off, and she fits right into Gatsby's elaborate dream. Daisy was an illusion of innocence to Gatsby but also the reality of corruption. Gatsby also for some reason loved Daisy’s voice, they said that even the sound of her voice and even her name were undeniably linked to material wealth, which adds to the reason Gatsby is so infatuated with her and it is the reason for her "inexhaustible charm" …show more content…
(120). Gluttony. Gluttony is an obsession. Gatsby had an obsession with Daisy, the obsession over winning her over, over Tom. Gatsby rearranged his entire life in order to keep her love and eventually creating a sublime image of her in his head. "No amount of fire or freshness can challenge what a man will store up in his ghostly heart" (Fitzgerald, 101) In Gatsby’s mind, the fantasy of Daisy and of their relationship outweighs the reality, while in real life it is the opposite. This theme of Gatsby's powerful love for Daisy is throughout the book. Gatsby would also grow and make memories of her, waiting till the day that he would actually see her again.. For 5 years he waited, standing across the shore from her, wanting her, and dreaming of her. A little, and far green light would become a sign of hope, and a signal of his dreams. Even Nick could see that Gatsby was completely in love with Daisy. Nick says,” He knew that when he kissed this girl, and forever wed his unutterable visions to her perishable breath, his mind would never romp again like the mind of God, so he waited.” Envy.
Jay Gatsby envy’s Tom Buchanan because his importance in Daisy's life, Tom is also jealous of Gatsby. Tom Buchanan is jealous of Gatsby because his wife is in love with him. Tom is hypocrite because he is in love with Myrtle Wilson, his mistress that Daisy does knows about, but he is angry when he see’s that his wife is in love with Gatsby. Tom has envy for Gatsby because both Daisy and Gatsby have known each other for five years, and along that period of time, they have had a romantic past. Therefore, both Gatsby and Tom are jealous and envy each other. Towards the end of the novel, Tom and Gatsby have a moment of pure envy. The are both making Daisy which of them she loves more. Tom, her husband, or Gatsby, someone she has loved for the past 5 years. Gatsby insists that she tells Tom she never loved him, but Daisy says "Oh, you want too much!" she cried to Gatsby. "I love you now--isn't that enough? I can't help what's past." She began to sob helplessly. "I did love him once--but I loved you too." (Fitzgerald) This quote completely shatters Gatsby’s dream he has been living for 5 years. When forced to choose between Tom and Gatsby, Daisy remains with her wealthy husband and doesn’t react at all when Gatsby is murdered. I believe this shows Daisy’s true character and the about of selfishness she has. Daisy never loved Gatsby for him, she loved him for his money, reputation, and the
image. Through all of these points, such as lust, gluttony, and envy, I believe that Envy played the biggest role, because if the hatred between Tom and Gatsby didn’t exists Gatsby would still be alive. Even though the points of his gluttony and lust for Daisy did still lead up to his death, I feel like if the relationship between those 2 weren't so toxic, wouldn't have ended as badly as it did.
The character of Jay Gatsby was a wealthy business man, who the author developed as arrogant and tasteless. Gatsby's love interest, Daisy Buchanan, was a subdued socialite who was married to the dim witted Tom Buchanan. She is the perfect example of how women of her level of society were supposed to act in her day. The circumstances surrounding Gatsby and Daisy's relationship kept them eternally apart. For Daisy to have been with Gatsby would have been forbidden, due to the fact that she was married. That very concept of their love being forbidden, also made it all the more intense, for the idea of having a prohibited love, like William Shakespeare's Romeo and Juliet, made it all the more desirable. Gatsby was remembering back five years to when Daisy was not married and they were together:
Even though at first when they finally got together after all those years and everything seem great and romantic but good things always come to an end. The affair effected Gatsby in his life by having him back the old love he first had for Daisy even hoping for a lifetime future together. His dream is very much vivid about his romantic hopes about Daisy in his mind, “There must have been moments even that afternoon when Daisy tumbled short of his dreams, not through her own fault, but because of the colossal vitality of his illusion” (95). He seems to be falling deeper in love with her even maybe more than the love she really had for him even though through the end of the chapters her love that she claims to have for him seemed not truly. In New York, the truth comes out more about she feels about Gatsby by being questioned and feeling guilty when Tom gets to the fact that she loves him and not Gatsby but Gatsby rejects his sayings and tells Daisy to say how she truly feel about him. Over all the excitement, Daisy tells how she truly feel about the whole love affair, “I did love him once but I loved you too” (132). It is possible that the leading of Gatsby’s death was caused from Tom’s jealousy of his wife’s confessed love for Gatsby. Tom would had told Wilson that Gatsby was the driver of the car that killed Myrtle and her secret
Nothing is more important, to most people, than friendships and family, thus, by breaking those bonds, it draws an emotional response from the readers. Gatsby and Daisy Buchanan had a relationship before he went off to fight in the war. When he returned home, he finds her with Tom Buchanan, which seems to make him jealous since he still has feelings for Daisy. He wanted Daisy “to go to Tom and say: ‘I never loved you” (Fitzgerald 118) Gatsby eventually tells Tom that his “wife doesn’t love [him]” and that she only loves Gatsby (Fitzgerald 121). But the unpleasant truth is that Daisy never loved anyone, but she loved something: money. Daisy “wanted her life shaped and the decision made by some force of of money, of unquestionable practicality” (Fitzgerald 161). The Roaring Twenties were a time where economic growth swept the nation and Daisy was looking to capitalize on that opportunity. Her greed for material goods put her in a bind between two wealthy men, yet they are still foolish enough to believe that she loved them. Jay Gatsby is a man who has no relationships other than one with Nick Caraway, so he is trying to use his wealth to lure in a greedy individual to have love mend his
The real question of the story is who is the one to blame for Gatsby’s death?
The novel The Great Gatsby displays deceitfulness in many of its characters. The deceit brings many of the characters to their downfall. Gatsby had the greatest downfall of them all due to the fact it took his life. In The Great Gatsby , “ Gatsby goes to spectacular lengths to try to achieve what Nick calls ‘his incorruptible dream’ to recapture the past by getting Daisy Buchannan love” (Sutton). Gatsby always had an infatuation with Daisy, Jordan Baker said,”Gatsby bought that house so that Daisy would be just across the bay” (Fitzgerald 83). Gatsby and Daisy did have a past together. While Jordan was golfing, “The Officer looked at Daisy while she was speaking in a way that every young girl wants to be looked at sometime[…]His name was Jay Gatsby and I didn’t lay eyes on him for over four years-even after I’d met him in long island I didn’t realize it was the same man” (Fitzgerald 80). Daisy is now in an abusive relationship with Tom Buchannan, “Nick Carraway attends a small publicly blames Tom for the bruise on her knuckle” (Sutton). When they meet again Gatsby showers Daisy with love and affection, wanting her to leave her husband Tom, but she does not want to in their society. Tom and Gatsby get into an argument and tom tells Daisy about Gatsby’s bootlegging that brought him to his riches. Tom yelled, “He a...
Wanting to be with her true love again, she sneaks visits with him without Tom knowing. Just like Myrtle had, Daisy torn into her own marriage. She loved both men, but as soon as it was found out, the men began fighting for her. “I glanced at Daisy who was staring terrified between Gatsby and her husband…” (Fitzgerald 143). This isn’t what Daisy wanted at all. At some point Daisy loved Tom, and it’s very likely that she still does, regardless of all of his cheating. Living a life of riches for so long has affected her with affluenza, blinding her morals as it did to Tom. When someone already has everything they could ever ask for, they’re still going to want more. Something to work for, or else life becomes boring as Daisy points out many times in the novel. When both men she loves are threatening each other and fighting for her fondness she’s realized what she’s done wrong. She’s fallen into the same trap as Myrtle, being stuck between two men, but she still has feelings for Tom.“I saw them in Santa Barbara when they came back and I thought I’d never seen a girl so mad about her husband. If he left the room for a minute she’d look around uneasily and say ‘Where’s Tom gone?’” (Fitzgerald 83). Gatsby tries to convince Daisy that she loves him and only him, yet Daisy actually loves them both. After Daisy was married she could think about anything except Tom, while Gatsby has spent the five
Fitzgerald said “Until long after, there was anyone to give it to if it came. I have an idea Gatsby himself didn’t believe it would come, or perhaps he no longer cared.” He was referring to Gatsby waiting on a call that he wouldn’t be around to answer. He expresses Gatsby’s death in a very general way and doesn’t give the details, but nonetheless gives the idea of Gatsby being dead. All of the events connected in a way that lead to Gatsby dying at the hand of a confused, revenge filled husband. Gatsby did a lot of things to try and get Daisy and continue his american dream, but they turned on him and played out to his disadvantage. If he never went for Daisy, he would be at home living with so much that he had. He would still be alive. In the end, his American dream demanded more and he asked too much, inevitably killing
Tom had money, Daisy knew this. She acknowledged that his money was inherited and that held the love in their relationship. She found that Gatsby grew up underprivileged, and he was supposed to inherit money from a man by the name of Dan Cody, but that opportunity fell through. Gatsby attempts to depict his life as though he inherited his money, but “even Daisy appears unable to cope with the reality of Gatsby’s lower class background”(W) Everyone that attends Gatsby’s lavish parties realize, “Gatsby is never truly one of the elite—his dream is just a facade”(W). As hard as Gatsby tried, everyone could see through his fabrications and lavish parties, most importantly Daisy. She knew his true background and didn’t love him because of it. She wanted a man whose money was inherited, not earned like Gatsby’s. “Both Gatsby and Tom Buchanan, Daisy's husband, possessed wealth. Gatsby at least used his wealth to seek out beauty and claim it for himself. Buchanan the lecher lacked any larger goals. In the end, Daisy chooses to remain with Buchanan, and Gatsby is murdered by the deranged husband of Myrtle Wilson, Buchanan's mistress, who had been accidentally run down and killed by Daisy. Buchanan serves as Gatsby's executioner; he allows George Wilson to believe that Gatsby had killed Myrtle” (Trask). Since his love for Daisy was steadfast, Jay Gatsby took the blame for killing
Tom suspects that Gatsby and Daisy are having a relationship, but has no evidence to prove it. However, whenever Tom would leave the room, Daisy would immediately run into Gatsby’s arms to show her affection. To their dismay, Tom sees this: “She had told him that she loved him, and Tom Buchanan saw” (Fitzgerald 126). This leads to a confrontation between Gatsby and Tom, where Gatsby boldly declares that “Your wife [Daisy] doesn’t love you …She’s never loved you. She loves me” (Fitzgerald 139). Gatsby feels untouchable, and his confidence in Daisy’s love for him allows him to declare this to Tom. However, Tom slowly gains control of Daisy, reminding her of the experiences they shared together. Realizing this, Gatsby becomes desperate, and attempts to force Daisy into saying things she doesn’t believe, but Daisy tells Gatsby the truth: “’Even alone I can’t say I never loved Tom… It wouldn’t be true’” (Fitzgerald 142). Gatsby is delusional because his only thought is proving to Tom that Daisy doesn’t love him, and fails to realize that he is slowly losing Daisy. He is once again so absorbed by Daisy that he fails to realize what is going on around him. Even after Daisy runs over a woman murdering her in cold blood, Gatsby is willing to take the blame for her, and states “of course I’ll say [to the police] I was [driving]” (Fitzgerard 154). Gatsby still loves Daisy after she commits murder, which is a testament to his obsession and delusion over her. Gatsby is willing to go to prison and lose everything because Gatsby still believes that Daisy loves him despite Tom proving
During the 1920s, the social scene was gradually changing because of the Prohibition Law; with the influence of prohibition, new waves of modern gangsters were created, and they were primarily involved in such crimes as “bootlegging” and “bank robbery.” The author, F. Scott Fitzgerald, wrote the novel of The Great Gatsby, which focuses on the unachievable love affair between Gatsby and Daisy. In this novel, Jay Gatsby confronts death by getting shot on his back by flaming pistol triggered by Mr. Wilson. However, Mr. Wilson is not the only person who is responsible for Gatsby’s death; Nick Carraway, Daisy Buchanan, and Tom Buchanan are also accountable.
To start off, Gatsby was convinced he was in love with Daisy, however that’s not the case. Jay Gatsby was a twisted man who was obsessed not with Daisy but with the idea of having her. Gatsby’s feelings for Daisy were not genuine; he just loved the crazy notion of having her. She played along with it and made him think that she would leave Tom, but lets face it, it was never going to happen. Daisy did not give a crap about Gatsby and everyone knows it, except for him. Daisy used Gatsby to make her husband jealous because she knew that Gatsby would do anything for her.
Jay Gatsby believes that wealth and power can lead to love and happiness. He spends his entire life trying to create himself and change his past so that he can rekindle his love affair with the love of his life Daisy Buchanan. The two were young lovers, unable to be together because of very different social statuses. After Gatsby learns that he cannot be with Daisy because of this, he spends the rest of his life attempting to acquire wealth and power.
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
Daisy Buchanan, in reality, is unable to live up the illusory Daisy that Gatsby has invented in his fantasy. After Daisy and Tom Buchanan leave another one of Gatsby’s splendid parties, Fitzgerald gives the reader a glimpse into what Gatsby’s expectations are. Fitzgerald claims that “he wanted nothing less of Daisy than that she should go to Tom and say: ‘I never loved you.’” (109). Here it is revealed that Gatsby’s one main desire is for Daisy to go willingly...
The Great Gatsby presents the main character Jay Gatsby, as a poor man who is in love with his best friends cousin, Daisy Buchanan. Gatsby was in love with Daisy, his first real love. He was impressed with what she represented, great comfort with extravagant living. Gatsby knew he was not good enough for her, but he was deeply in love. “For a moment a phrase tried to take shape in my mouth and my lips parted like a dumb man’s”(Fitzgerald 107). Gatsby could not think of the right words to say. Daisy was too perfect beyond anything he was able to think of. Soon Gatsby and Daisy went their separate ways. Jay Gatsby went into the war while telling Daisy to find someone better for her, someone that will be able to keep her happy and provide for her. Gatsby and Daisy loved one another, but he had to do what was best for her. Gatsby knew the two might not meet again, but if they did, he wanted things to be the same. “I 'm going to fix everything just the way it was before”(Fitzgerald 106). He wanted Daisy to fall in love with him all over again. Unsure if Daisy would ever see Gatsby again, she got married while he was away. The two were still hugely in love with one another, but had to go separate ways in their