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Character Development In The Great Gatsby

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The past can mold anyone into who they are today, this can have a good or bad effect on the person. Taking a look on Gatsby’s character in The Great Gatsby, his past creates a whirlwind of issues that he must deal with. In his past, Gatsby went through creating his first father-son relationship with Dan Cody, falling deeply in love with young Daisy, and whilst fighting in the war he finds out Daisy gets married. These deceitful events left him with trust issues and in a pile of dreams that didn’t come true and probably won’t ever. Gatsby’s character development helps deliver the meaning of the book, which is people can’t repeat the past without consequences.
In Gatsby’s younger years, he looked up to an old sailor whom he trusts dearly. …show more content…

This relationship was built on trust and this was the second time he created a relationship with someone. Falling deeply in love also meant Gatsby created memories that he wanted to last an entire lifetime if not more, forgetting things can’t go back to the summer they first met. Gatsby, at the time was in the army and was deployed oversees one winter evening leaving his first love behind. A part of Gatsby wished that Daisy would wait for him after the war. As the time came around for Gatsby to return home, he never showed. Daisy waited all she could, but being a young beautiful girl she was bound to meet someone in the time he was away. Daisy was married that next summer to a man named Tom Buchanan, who swept her off her feet with all of the money he had inherited from his family. “In June she married Tom… with more pomp and circumstance than Louisville ever knew before.” (p 75) In ending their relationship (temporarily) Gatsby blamed this upon himself and for the next 5 years he sought out every mistake he made, trying to fix them before he met Daisy again. Gatsby did all he could to change why Daisy wouldn't wait to marry him instead, buying a house across the bay from her, throwing extravagant parties just to see if she’d show up and earning a fortunate amount of money. This event caused Gatsby’s character to constantly think about what he could have done right and how he can get Daisy back into his life. Gatsby’s character contributes to the overall

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