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Who Is West Egg In The Great Gatsby

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Tommy Hong Ms. Lieber English Due Date: 2/24/2016 The Sharp Contrast between West Egg and East Egg In The Great Gatsby written by Fitzgerald, the story’s setting takes place at the great wet barnyard Long Island Sound. Where there are two islands with a formation just like a pair of enormous eggs separates in between by a bay call: West Egg and East Egg. These islands have each of their own distinctive remarks and figures according to the way of describing from the author. The East Egg mainly represents by the wealthy group of a long inherited blood line known as Old Money. In the opposite, West Egg represents a new generation of rich, ambitious men that raised from the poor and their destitute backgrounds known the New Money. These islands …show more content…

Particularly at the moment Daisy cruelly decides to leave with “no address” even worse “hadn’t sent a message or flower” over Gatsby’s funeral (Fitzgerald. 164-174). This woman decides to leave Gatsby alone - a guy that had scarified everything to win her love back includes of taking the crime of killing Myrtle and eventually gets persecution for it. But still after all, this shellfish and shallow woman chooses to get back with Tom. Because she believes in Tom’s money and his colossal goods could sustain her desires of being wealthy and materialistic needs rather than really has some true love for him. Likewise with Daisy, Tom is a symbolism of falsehood of the East Egg. Even until the end instead of showing some regrets for his wrongdoing that pushed Gatsby to his death, Tom convinces people what he has done is acceptable by heartlessly saying that Gatsby “had it coming to him (Fitzgerald. 178). The images of carelessness comes from Tom and Daisy embodies all the other corrupt aristocracy East Eggers as a whole bunch of “careless people”, the type of people that tend to “smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their money or their vast carelessness” and in the end “let other people clean up the mess they had made” (Fitzgerald.

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