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Motif Death In The Great Gatsby

Decent Essays

The Destruction of Happy Lives
"he and... Wolfsheim bought up a lot of… drugstores… and sold grain alcohol over the counter… I picked him for a bootlegger and I wasn't far from wrong." said Tom Buchanan (Fitzgerald 133). Jay Gatsby is man who has just become one of the wealthiest men in New York and claimed to have received his money from his "wealthy", but dead relatives. Tom Buchanan is a man who was born into wealth and has always had money and what he has wanted since birth, unlike Gatsby. F. Scott Fitzgerald utilizes the motif death in his novel, The Great Gatsby, to define the American Dream. Throughout the novel the reader is introduced to Jay Gatsby and Tom Buchanan's affairs, conflicts, and struggling relationships. Although in the beginning the two seem content with their wealth, throwing parties and owning mansions, as the novel progresses, Fitzgerald inconspicuously conveys this is not the dream one should live, showing the more malignant perspectives of their rich lives, like unfaithfulness portraying that one should focus more on relationships than wealth.
In the beginning of the novel the wealthy life is depicted as a glorious amazing one yielding many beneficial results. Tom, who has a great life, has whatever he desires even a mansion and horse stables, "I want to take you down to the stables" (Fitzgerald 15). Tom Buchanan can have whatever he desires with his wealth and uses it to acquire exactly whatever he wants. This overindulgent attitude causes Tom to

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