The Emotional, Mental, and Physical Journey in The Great Gatsby

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In The Great Gatsby, Gatsby goes from rags to riches and while on his rise, he brings some people up with him such as Nick and Daisy. This leads Nick, Daisy, and Gatsby to go through an emotional, mental, and physical journey.
Fitzgerald’s character Daisy was created as a girl who is sweet with the intent to help Nick out from the world and a traitor because she goes against the romantic side that Fitzgerald created for her (Washington). Daisy loves being surrounded by masculine men, who escorts away from a low class life to a bigger status in society, which puts her in a position where she is unable to control who she is around or what she looks like physically (Washington). She soon meets a man, Jay Gatsby, who also finds interest in her. Gatsby thinks that Daisy is one of the best things he has ever heard (Fitzgerald 128). Gatsby became very interested in her ever since he laid eyes on her.
Daisy is the wife to Tom Buchanan, a man who has a similar class status as her (Roulston). Daisy was with Tom until she met Jay Gatsby and started catching feelings for him. James Gatz who was once poverty-stricken, transforms himself into Jay Gatsby, joins the army and becomes an officer, and later meets the love of his live, Daisy Fay (Roulston). Jay chases Daisy while being aware that the only way to please her is by having money so that she can buy herself anything she wants (Callahan). Gatsby was poor and unhappy with what he had. Gatsby wanted more money and eventually he managed to get it. Dedicated in trying to get Daisy, Gatsby becomes a wealthy man, purchases a large house on Long Island over the bay, and almost gets her to divorce Tom (Rouldston). Ironically, Gatsby’s image that he portrays gets him close enough to Daisy to decei...

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