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Does Fitzgerald Present Myrtle's Relationship In The Great Gatsby

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In The Great Gatsby, the author, F. Scott Fitzgerald, portrays the characters in relationships wanting relationships with others that they can’t socially have. Gatsby is in love with the idea of Daisy. Gatsby’s love for Daisy is definitely more intense than Daisy’s love for Gatsby. His love for Daisy seems tied up in an obsession with her wealth and the status she represents. Daisy has promised to wait for Gatsby, but is in love with the idea of Tom. She is in love with the concept of money that Tom can provide her. Tom and Myrtle are in a relationship, but they both are having an affair. Myrtle has an affair with Tom. She saw the affair as a way out of her marriage, but Geogre, her husband, finds out about it. The only relationship with no affair was Nick and Jordan. Although Nick was in love with Gatsby, he stayed with Jordan. Gatsby would use Nick to get through to Daisy since Nick was her cousin. …show more content…

“Keep your hands off the lever… I was standing besides his bed and he was sitting up between his sheets, clad in his underwear...”, Nick goes from being inside an elevator to in this guys bedroom. It doesn’t say what exactly they did in the bedroom or what they did after they were at the elevator, but the author makes it obvious to the readers what had happened. Knowing that Nick is in love with Gatsby, his love is forbidden and he is not allowed to act upon it in public like everyone else that had an affair. His love is socially

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