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Jay Gatsby Analysis

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While Jay Gatsby was a man of mystery he was also one consumed with superficiality. We do not know much about him until we delve deeper into his background and how it affected him his whole life. Growing up in poverty inclined him to view a wealthy lifestyle with hungry eyes, willing to do anything to achieve it, not thinking twice about the consequences. Wealth was one of many goals Jay Gatsby set in his lifetime, but it was not the most important one. Daisy Buchanan was his last goal and his longest one at that. For Jay Gatsby, Daisy served as nothing more than a trophy, a chase, and a means to an end for his American Dream.

Daisy Buchanan: the woman of every man's dreams, loved by many, but not for the reason any woman should want to be loved. Daisy was loved for her status, serving as a desired trophy wife not just by Gatsby but by many other men as the narrator, Nick, explains:
"'Her voice is full of money,' he said suddenly. That was it. I'd never understood before. It was full of money--that was the inexhaustible charm that rose and fell in it, the jingle of it, the cymbals' song of it...high in a white palace the king's daughter, the golden girl..." (Fitzgerald 120). Right off the bat, Gatsby knew her voice sounded like the thing he had wanted since he was young boy: money. To Gatsby, Daisy was just another form of money. She was something for him to show off and something to say that he had what was coveted by many other men as Nick tells us when he writes:

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