Nothing Gold Can Stay and The Great Gatsby are very similar to one another. Nothing Gold Can Stay and The Great Gatsby both relate to an amazing item or person that can only be had for a short amount of time. In both The Great Gatsby and Nothing Gold Can Stay, the amazing item or person doesn't last forever. In the story The Great Gatsby; Daisy is the person that can't stay golden. No matter how hard Gatsby tries to make Daisy stay golden; he can’t. Daisy was ‘the gold’ in The Great Gatsby; to Gatsby. He compares the sound of her voice to money. “Her voice was full of money” said Jay Gatsby.(Fitzgerald, 120) This shows us, the reader, how highly Gatsby views and thinks of daisy. Gatsby thinks that Daisy is an “angel” and believes that all …show more content…
This brief perfection can be compared to Gatsby and Daisy before Gatsby went off to war. “He talked a lot about the past, and I gathered that he wanted to recover something, some idea of himself perhaps, that he had gone into loving Daisy.” (Fitzgerald, 110) This quote shows the reader that Gatsby is trying to repeat the brief perfection that he had in the past. He spends every minute until his death trying to recreate his brief perfection that he had with Daisy. Perfection is very rare and is extremely hard to repeat over a long time. If a person is expected to be perfect they aren't going to meet expectations. Gatsby expects Daisy to be perfect because he remembers how much he loved Daisy before he went to war. “Well, there I was, ‘way off my ambitions getting deeper in love every minute.” (Fitzgerald, 150) Daisy falls from perfection in Gatsby’s eyes because his expectations are super high. The Great Gatsby and Nothing Gold Can Stay both relate to one another because they both talk about an amazing person or item. The person or item can't be had for a certain amount of time; it’s limited to a very small amount. In The Great Gatsby Daisy is the amazing person that Gatsby tries to recreate the past with; but he fails. In Nothing Gold Can Stay the amazing item is nature’s first green; but it’s also the hardest to hold and only last