Based on popular belief, George Wilson directly caused Jay Gatsby's death because he shot him due to mistakenly believing Gatsby was responsible for the death of his wife. Nonetheless, it would not have come to this without Tom’s power to manipulate and deliver improper information. The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald illustrates the distinctiveness between the two men: Tom is cunning, rich, and deceitful while George on the other hand is meager, incompetent, and easily controlled. Nevertheless, Tom has Gatsby’s blood on his hands. George Wilson, a struggling garage owner, is trying to find success in his business while Tom is a wealthy, upper class man who is rather arrogant. Tom views George as a lesser entity because of his lack of awareness that his wife Myrtle is cheating on him with Tom, furthermore, referring to him as “so dumb he doesn’t know he’s alive” (Fitzgerald 22). Myrtle and Tom’s affair mocks George, making him appear inadequate and inferior in comparison to Tom. After Myrtle's death George was mostly by himself until his neighbor, Michaelis, came to his home and asked if he could call somebody for him. Before …show more content…
Hence planting the seed for George to seek revenge on Gatsby. George trusts Tom, and as a consequence of Tom’s manipulation, George kills both Gatsby and himself. George goes to Gatsby’s luxurious mansion to find him in his pool, then pulls the trigger on Gatsby and himself, leading to a bitter ending for both of these men. “The touch of a cluster of leaves revolved slowly, tracing, like the leg of a compass, a thin red circle in the water. It was after we started with Gatsby toward the house that the gardener saw Wilson’s body a little way off in the grass” (Fitzgerald 124). Tragically, Gatsby and George both die thanks to Tom’s crooked epitome of the