Jay Gatsby Personality

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Francis Scott Fitzgerald, author of The Great Gatsby, portrayed Jay Gatsby as a mysterious man that played a pivotal role in the novel. Gatsby was very unique, making orange the best color to represent his personality and actions. Gatsby displays orange qualities through being charming, impulsive, and optimistic. Jay Gatsby was well-liked, respected, and popular due to his charismatic charm and extravagant parties that captured people of East and West Egg, creating a well-known reputation. When Gatsby first met Nick Carraway, he politely introduced himself and, “smiled understandingly- much more than understandingly. It was one of those rare smiles with a quality of eternal reassurance in it, that you may come across four or five times in your life” (48). Nevertheless, Gatsby had a way of mesmerizing people, making them feel comfortable and at home. Everyone that had the pleasure of meeting him thought he was “simply amazing.” Wolfsheim, Gatsby’s business partner, said, “‘I made the pleasure of his acquaintance just after the war. But I knew I had discovered a man of fine breeding after I talked with him for an hour’” (72). Although they …show more content…

His spontaneity was conveyed during his reunion with Daisy Buchanan when he bought hundreds of flowers, mowed the grass, and then invited her over to his house. In this instance, Gatsby didn’t realize it was not necessary to go to those extremes in order to impress Daisy Buchanan. Before meeting Daisy Buchanan, he also spent so much time planning the decorations, he didn’t strategize what he was going to say when they reconnected, therefore he had to be spontaneous. Another example, when Gatsby acted out of impulse occurred when he requested Daisy Buchanan to tell her husband the truth so they could run away together. Obviously, Gatsby didn’t consider how Daisy truly about leaving behind her family, friends, and

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