Gatsby is used to show the death of the American dream. The American Dream is one of the pursuit of happiness, success, and wealth. His connection to the bootlegging is seen as the corruption society has obtained while trying to obtain this dream. In this sense the dream is unattainable to all that is corrupt. In other words, Gatsby can't obtain his true goal of getting daisy. Corruption destroys everything that the good or the hopeful who do the right thing, and causes society to hate everyone in it and cause even more problems. One example is the gang wars and the racial problems that exist with us today. So, these problems that exist in the United States today, exist because of the corruption that has hurt the human society since its creation. This is true among all, not just to those who create most of those problems, but also those who are good citizens and rely on the lord and the law to keep them the good side of the tracks, rather than the bad. Hopefully, one day this corruption that has plagued the human race will we eradicated.
Gatsby is in his swimming pool when Wilson comes to murder him. This location is significant because Gatsby built his elaborate parties and persona to be close to Daisy, and the pool represents his dream of being with her. By dying in the pool, Gatsbyβs death symbolizes the tragic end of his pursuit of the American Dream and his unattainable love for Daisy.
It represents the end of his "corrupted" dream.
Myrtle's husband shot him in his pool because he thought Gatsby ran over Myrtle in his car.
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Mr Wilson kills Gatsby and then himself. Daisy kills Myrtle.
No, Tom Buchanan did not kill George Wilson. George Wilson kills Gatsby in The Great Gatsby, believing that Gatsby was driving the car that killed his wife. Tom Buchanan reveals Gatsby's involvement to Wilson, but he is not directly responsible for George Wilson taking this action.
George Wilson killed gatsby while he was at his pool. This was after Wilson went to Daisy's house to try & kill her, but tom told Wilson that gatsby ran myrtle over, cause that was his yellow car.
Wilson kills Gatsby and then himself. He is led to believe that Gatsby is responsible for Myrtle's death since Gatsby's car was involved in the accident. Wilson is devastated by his wife's death and seeks revenge on Gatsby before taking his own life.
Wilson mistakenly believed that Gatsby was having an affair with his wife, Myrtle. In his grief and confusion after Myrtle's death, Wilson sought revenge and shot Gatsby at his mansion before turning the gun on himself. Wilson's actions were motivated by a sense of betrayal and despair, rather than a deliberate intention to kill Gatsby.
He believed Gatsby was the driver that struck his wife, so he makes his may over to his place and kills him
George Wilson kills Nick in The Great Gatsby, mistaking him for the driver of the car that killed his wife, Myrtle. Nick survives the incident in the book.
Myrtle Wilson was killed by Jay Gatsby's car, driven by Daisy Buchanan, but it was George Wilson who pulled the trigger, believing Gatsby to be the driver. This event occurs in F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel, "The Great Gatsby."
Gatsby's fate in The Great Gatsby was influenced by a variety of characters, including Tom Buchanan, Daisy Buchanan, and even Jay Gatsby himself. Ultimately, Gatsby's fate can be attributed to the moral emptiness of the society he lived in, where wealth and status were prioritized over personal integrity and genuine connections.
Gatsby's car accidentally hits and kills Myrtle Wilson, Tom Buchanan's mistress, near Daisy's house. Tom leads George Wilson, Myrtle's husband, to believe it was Gatsby who was driving the car that killed Myrtle, ultimately leading to tragic consequences.
Daisy Buchanan. Jay Gatsby takes the blame, because he loves Daisey. Tom Buchanan (who was having an affair with Myrtle) and does not want to lose Daisy tells Myrtle's husband that Gatsby killed his wife, so her husband shoots Gatsby and then kills himself. Daisy and Tom then go away and forget all about Gatsby.
In F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel "The Great Gatsby," Jay Gatsby is shot and killed by George Wilson, who mistakenly believes Gatsby is responsible for his wife Myrtle's death. Gatsby dies alone, with few mourners at his funeral, highlighting the theme of the fleeting nature of wealth and the emptiness of the American Dream.