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Great Gatsby Confidant Analysis

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Nick Carraway: Confidant The Great Gatsby, written by F. Scott Fitzgerald, is a story of love and deceit. With deceit, there comes secrets, and with secrets, there comes confidants. A confidant is someone that one shares secrets or confides, trusting that they will not tell anyone else. In The Great Gatsby, the narrator, Nick Carraway, is the only true confidant who shows a variety of unique, strong, relationships between each major character. Nick used every power of his being to be there and support each of his friends in the story, whether for good or bad. Nick’s relationships with his cousin Daisy, his best friend Tom, and his newfound friend Jay Gatsby, make him the only genuinely true confidant in The Great Gatsby.
Daisy’s …show more content…

Nick and Tom were best friends in college, but hadn’t really talked much since then. When Nick visits Tom and Daisy one afternoon, he learns from Jordan Baker, Daisy’s friend, that Tom has a mistress. “‘Why-’ she said hesitantly, ‘Tom’s got some woman in New York.’ ” (Fitzgerald 15) This gives Nick reason to not like Tom and give him reason to tell Daisy, but he doesn’t. The next morning, Tom invites Nick to go to lunch with him in the city and Tom takes him to see his mistress-Nick does not want to, but he humors Tom. Tom’s mistress’ name is Myrtle Wilson. Nick does not agree with this, although he does keep it a secret. Nick listens to Tom and keeps his secret from Daisy, even though she already knows. Even though Nick develops a negative impression of Tom, he plays a role as a major confidant towards him.
Lastly, Nick most important confidant role is toward Jay Gatsby. Nick meets Gatsby after he moves next door to him. They formally meet when Nick is invited to a party of Gatsby. It was not a coincidence that Gatsby lived next door to the love of his life’s cousin, Daisy Buchanan. Gatsby and Daisy dated when he was James Gatz. They were in love, but when Gatsby left for the war they drifted apart. Although, Gatsby had an elaborate plan to win back Daisy, and it worked, almost. Gatsby moved directly across the bay from Daisy. He also arranged for them to reunite. It almost worked because by the end of the day that they spent together at

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