How Is Nick Carraway Successful In The Great Gatsby

197 Words1 Pages
In F. Scott Fitzgerald’s novel The Great Gatsby, Nick Carraway views Gatsby, a wealthy man who got his money through bootlegging, as a man trying to achieve an unreachable goal by the means of money alone although Gatsby got close to his goal, he ultimately fails. For example, Gatsby is seen “strech[ing] out his arms towards the dark water,” (Fitzgerald 25) and towards the dark water is a “single green light,” (26) and later it’s revealed that the green light belongs to Daisy, a married woman who is reunified with her former love, and sits “at the end of your [Daisy’s] dock,” (98). Therefore, Nick judge Gatsby as a person who wants to buy his dreams of being with Daisy. Gatsby got his money through any means possible without taking Daisy’s