How Is Daisy Successful In The Great Gatsby

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Success in society would mean a great amount of achievement for a long period of time involved around money, power and fame whereas some would argue that success means finding true happiness and love despite the amount of money you have. In The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, the author portrays Jay Gatsby as a successful man who deeply desires to win back his true love Daisy. While success revolves around finding true happiness and love, Gatsby would argue that success revolves around wealth, fame and fortune. Gatsby's success he craved for ended up affecting him in a negative way because everything he worked so hard for he ends up losing it in an instant, he died an unhappy man. In the beginning, no one really knows who Jay Gatsby …show more content…

More so after Myrtle’s death a lot of speculations came up with who was driving the car that killed Myrtle. In the scene Nick finds Gatsby standing outside of Daisy and Tom’s house, he tells him that “it was Daisy who was driving the car not me..she was pulled on the emergency brake and fell in my lab” (143). Due to how much he loves Daisy, Gatsby takes the blame for the murder of Myrtle. All of this seemed to change when a raged feeling came upon Myrtle's husband Wilson after Tom tells him it was Gatsby's fault. By the end of the book Gatsby's’ lifeless body ends up in the bottom of his pool with a bullet to his chest, all of the raged that was in Wilson was unleashed on Gatsby. This scene portrays how much he loved Daisy to the point that he would take the blame for her, additionally it shows how the low class society believe that the high class society can get away with anything due how privileged they are based on the amount of money they have. In the scene at Gatsby's funeral no one but Nick and and the people who worked for him attended (164). This scene is significant because it proves to show that Jay Gatsby died an unhappy man, his reputation still remained unknown due to the fact that he did not develop special relationships with anyone, his love for Daisy was never completed and the success he yearned for was never