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The Underlying Lessons Of The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald

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The story of The Great Gatsby is a well thought out novel that has many underlying lessons. F. Scott Fitzgerald puts a lot of emphasis on the lessons in this book, but a majority of them are hidden between the lines. As you look deeper however, you find that the largest lesson in The Great Gatsby is seen from Gatsbys perspective. Even though you may feel stuck in the past, others do not need to stay with you. This is shown through Gatsby's desire to keep what he had in his past. The irony of this all is that he changed a lot about his life, in order to keep it how it used to be. Nick Carraway is a new resident of New York, coming from Chicago. He is placed as a neighbor, next to a mysterious man named Jay Gatsby. Gatsby held numerous parties …show more content…

Jay Gatsby used to date this lovely girl named Daisy. Nick is cousins with Daisy, and Gatsby thinks it is important to ask Nick to invite Daisy over to see him again. “"It was a strange coincidence," I said. But it wasn't a coincidence at all. Why not? Why not?" Gatsby bought that house so that Daisy would be just across the bay. Then it had not been just the stars to which he had aspired that June night. He came alive to me, delivered suddenly from the womb of his purposeless splendor. "He wants to know," continued Jordan, "if you'll invite Daisy to your house some afternoon and then let him come over.”” This proves that Gatsby wants to stay in the past and bring Daisy with him. If he can get a chance to see Daisy again, he believes that she may fall in love with him again. This is a very selfish act for him to do. Another reason the lesson, even though you may feel stuck in the past, others do not need to stay with you is shown in The Great Gatsby. It is when Gatsby tries his hardest to bring daisy with him into his imaginary fantasy life. This is when Gatsby brought Daisy and Nick to his mansion to show off how amazing life would be for Daisy with …show more content…

“It makes me sad because I've never seen such—such beautiful shirts before.” This was Gatsby's attempt to show Daisy what life would be like if she had never left him when he went away for war. This again is a selfish act for Gatsby to do because he only wants this to happen because he wants to live with her. This seems like it will work out, Daisy starts to buy it and wants to live life with Gatsby. The last reason you can see the lesson, even though you may feel stuck in the past, others do not need to stay with you in The Great Gatsby is when you see the effects of it all. After Gatsby dies due to George Wilson shooting him, Daisy is snapped back into reality and decides she is not even going to go to his funeral. This shows that the love she felt with Gatsby during that time was not real, but instead a fake moment trying to relive the past. “Nobody came.” This is a quote about Nick at Gatsby’s funeral. This proves that his attempt to bring people to the past did not

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