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The Great Gatsby

 

One chapter involves his riches and parties, while another chapter remains incomplete. Throughout the novel, the reader realizes that his true love, Daisy Buchanan, is what's missing. Initially, it seems that Gatsby grasped onto his unattainable dream, because Gatsby and Daisy saw each other on a somewhat regular basis. Later on in the story, however, conflicts arose due to Daisy's husband, Tom. When Tom and Gatsby confronted each other about their love for Daisy, something was said that truly showed how long Gatsby had wanted to complete this chapter of his life. He says to Tom:.
             "She never loved you, do you hear?" [Gatsby] cried. "She only married you because I was poor and she was tired of waiting for me. It was a terrible mistake, but in her heart she never loved any one except me!" (Page 131).
             I believe that Gatsby said this out of denial. He thought that maybe if he said this out loud, that it would actually be true. When Daisy told him that she would always love Tom, Gatsby was astonished. She crushed all hope that he ever had for achieving his dream. Although Gatsby believed that he had Daisy for a while, he really did not attain the unattainable.
             Fitzgerald not only tells a story within The Great Gatsby, but also contradicts the stereotypical perfect life. He shows that everything is not "a house surrounded by a white picket fence where Dick and Jane play with their dog, Spot." In fact, there is no such thing as a perfect life. There are constantly things that one wishes to attain to improve his or her life. Jay Gatsby makes this clear by showing his love for Daisy and his commitment to concluding that missing chapter in the story of his life.
             People who continuously strive for the upper class think that things are better there than where they are. This stereotype is evident in The Great Gatsby as well as in other messages throughout our culture. The lyrics from "Be Like That" by 3 Doors Down read:.


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