The Great Gatsby Foreshadowing Analysis

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At the end of the novel The Great Gatsby, Daisy chooses to remain with Tom. This decision is foreshadowed in the first paragraph of page seventeen as she explains the common, accepted human immorality of that time and her own superiority and boredom as she has seen and done it all. For example, Daisy states, “You see I think everything’s terrible anyhow…Everybody thinks so—the most advanced people.” This quote foreshadows Daisy’s decision to stay with Tom by it revealing the justification and excuses she will apply for Tom and her own unpardonable immorality towards others, including Gatsby and herself as Tom cheats on her. Tom and Daisy’s actions are justified as she describes that even the most advanced people, including herself, believe the world is corrupt. Additionally, Daisy states, “And I know, I’ve been everywhere and seen everything and done …show more content…

For example, after Daisy speaks to Nick, the man in which she gave a look that there was no one else in the world that she wanted to see, he realizes her insincerity in all she had claims the paragraph before; he feels as if he is part of a trick. This scene foreshadows her practically tricking Gatsby into believing she will leave Tom to be with him, in which this desertion of Tom does not occur. Furthermore, Daisy’s smirk to Nick seemed to him “as if she had asserted her membership in a rather distinguished secret society to which she and Tom belonged”. This explanation reveals that Daisy and Tom are joined by their ample wealth as a result of them having an esteemed and respectable place in society (old money); therefore they look down on others below themselves, such as Gatsby, who have to earn their money. Consequentially, for this reason, Daisy chooses to remain with Tom

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