George Wilson believes that Myrtle was killed by a wealthy man driving a yellow car, as he found a dog leash with a yellow car that matches the description of Tom Buchanan's car in her possession. He is convinced that this man is Myrtle's lover.
after wilson killed him for hitting Myrtle with his car, when really daisy was the one driving
Myrtle was accidentally killed by Gatsby's car, when Daisy was behind the wheel but Gatsby was driving. Daisy was under the influence of her emotions and did not stop after hitting Myrtle.
Wilson assumed that who ever was driving the yellow car was Myrtle's affair and the one who killed her. He believed Gatsby was the one who did it because Tom told him that Gatsby was the owner of the yellow car.
In Chapter 7 of "The Great Gatsby," Myrtle is killed in a hit-and-run accident by Daisy Buchanan, driving Gatsby's car. Daisy was driving recklessly while trying to escape a confrontation with Tom Buchanan. Myrtle runs onto the road, and Daisy accidentally hits her without stopping.
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."
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.
Daisy hits Myrtle Wilson with a car in The Great Gatsby. Daisy is driving Gatsby's car when the accident occurs.
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.
Wilson firmly believes that Myrtle was killed in a hit-and-run accident. He believes this because Myrtle was hit by a car near his garage, and the only car that stopped by his garage was Gatsby's yellow car. Wilson connects these events and comes to the conclusion that Gatsby's car hit and killed Myrtle.
George Wilson believes that Jay Gatsby killed his wife, Myrtle Wilson, because he recognized Gatsby's car at the scene of the accident and because Tom Buchanan revealed Gatsby and Myrtle were having an affair.
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.