Jay Gatsby's Downfall

124 Words1 Page

Due to his habitual meddling nature, Nick Caraway indulges himself in gaping attention in both his eccentric surroundings and the unpublicized behavior of Jay Gatsby. In The Great Gatsby, a novel by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Nick Caraway remarks that “No amount of fire or freshness can challenge what a man will store up in his ghostly heart.” More precisely, Nick claims that actuality never seems to fulfill our dream’s expectancies. With my understanding, I qualify Nick, on account that his assertion attests Gatsby’s distressing failure to redeem the love of Daisy; albeit, Gatsby was indisputably conscious of the illusion he had sculpted of Daisy. Moreover, in my approach on Nick’s assertion, there are also possibilities when dreams can be brought

Open Document