How Is Daisy Deceiving In The Great Gatsby

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“So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past.” In one sense this sums up a significant portion of The Great Gatsby. A reaching for the past, to capture what was lost, yet this is fruitless as seen through the lives of these characters. Consequently, they all searched for that American dream and came up empty. Three characters, Nick Carraway, Daisy Buchanan, and Jay Gatz, illustrate that appearances can be deceiving. Nick Caraway stood out from the rest of the characters as if he was always inside and yet outside all at the same time. He merely drifted where life took him and sometimes it brought him in the oddest of circumstances. Nick is the only person who seems to have any sense of right and wrong, …show more content…

Even the name brings sunshine, warmth, and innocence to the reader’s ears, yet destruction followed her, and she was full of nothing. With her lilting voice and charm, Daisy captured the attention of all who met her. She had an ease and carelessness about her that people were drawn to like moths to a flame. Daisy’s white clothing and fanciful nature gave her the appearance of purity she did not possess. But Daisy was thoroughly unhappy inside for “that’s the best thing a girl can be in this world, a beautiful little fool,” and Daisy most certainly was that. She possessed a shallowness and selfishness that were brought to full fruition at the end of the story. For Daisy allowed her “lover” to take the blame, die for her, and then never attends his funeral; she was revealed for who she was. “They were careless people, Tom and Daisy- they smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back inter their money or their vast carelessness or whatever it was that kept them together, and let other people clean up the mess they had …show more content…

He did not know that it was already behind him.” Jay Gatsby, even the name provoked mystery into people’s minds as vague opinions and legends were formed. He was a character that few, if any, truly knew what was fact or fiction about him. But Gatsby was a man filled with a deep passion and blinding obsession with a dream of Daisy that directed every choice he made. On the surface, Gatsby was a gentleman, sophisticated, warm and elusive, but a fraud; a man whose riches were built on an illusion and illegal gain. “He had thrown himself into it with a creative passion….no amount of fire or freshness can challenge what a man will store up in his ghostly heart.” Gatsby lived in a dream world he had created-everything revolving around Daisy. All of the speculations and stories that followed in his wake left nothing but a young man, vigorously fighting for Daisy, living for Daisy, and finally dying for Daisy. The elusive murderer people had imaged him to be was, in reality, a man that “believed in the green light” across the bay and was convinced he could recreate the

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