Myrtle's Carelessness In The Great Gatsby

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In F. Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby, Myrtle Wilson’s desperation and Daisy Buchanan’s carelessness reveals that people that are not born in great wealth are more vulnerable to tragedy and conflict. Myrtle describes her meeting with Tom Buchanan as romantic: “his white shirt-front pressed against my arm, and so I told him I’d have to call a policeman, but he knew I lied. I was so excited...I got into a taxi with him” (36). Despite meeting Tom for the first time, Myrtle is so infatuated with his physical appearance of wealth -in describing his “white shirt front” -that she abandons her task at hand and takes off with a stranger. Myrtle is a part of the lower working class and is willing to do anything to gain social mobility, regardless …show more content…

After running over Myrtle, Daisy promptly flees the scene. Without admitting and atoning to her crimes, Daisy does not confess to the police but instead retreats home to her world of high status and wealth with Tom. Despite the deaths and affairs of their lovers, Tom and Daisy are seen even closer together, “conspiring” more schemes. Their marriage, though without love, seems to hold the two together because of their exclusive position in society and as a result, their consequences are cushioned. Perhaps as a part of their scheme, Daisy is able to evade the responsibility of carelessly taking Myrtle’s life by passing the blame to Gatsby. As a part of the working class, Myrtle is unable to escape her poverty as her efforts to achieve materialistic pleasure were in vain. In contrast, Daisy, who has always lived a luxurious life of the elite Old Money, was able to escape a crime of murder unscathed. As Daisy’s interaction with Tom is described as a “picture”, Fitzgerald is demonstrating how they are a representation of how the upper class is able to live comfortably in the midst of problems and chaos by passing on the consequences to those less

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