The Great Gatsby Chapter 6 Analysis

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In chapter 6 of the novel The Great Gatsby by F.Scott fitzgerald, Jay Gatsby a man with newly acquired wealth longs for the love of Daisy Buchanan a wealthy and married women. Gatsby is a very mysterious man, many rumors circulate about him and of his wealth. Gatsby does not address these rumors, he continues to throw extravagant parties for anyone who chooses to attend them. Fitzgerald uses imagery and allusions to portray Gatsby’s vulnerable, tender , and optimistic views of Daisy of their future together. Gatsby has had much time away from Daisy, he has grown as a men and has reached wealth that not even he knows what to do with. Even with all of Gatsby's great achievements he doesn't feel whole. Gatsby life has been “confused and disordered since then” he feels that “some idea of himself had gone into loving Daisy”. After all the time gatsby has has to move one meet new people and maybe fall in love again, he chooses to focus his time of Daisy. Gatsby has dreamed of Daisy for so long and had loved her like he never loved anyone else that he feal that he has left part of himself with her. Everything Gatsby did was for Daisy, to impress Daisy, to help guide her back to him. Gatsby has never been trying to please himself or anyone else, all along he was …show more content…

In the eyes of Gatsby, Daisy is the purest and most beautiful thing he has ever seen. Gatsby remembers the autumn night he spends with Daisy “when the leaves were falling” and “the sidewalk was white with moonlight” and Gatsby felt a “mysterious excitement”. He had a perfect image of Daisy that everything around her seemed perfect. Gatsby’s tenderness and ability to overlook the death of nature that surrounded him displays a side of Gatsby that only Daisy knows. Gatsby is capable of love and compassion he turned an imperfect moment into a perfect one, he was able to keep all imperfection of that night away from the memory of

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