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Nick describes Gatsby as an enigmatic figure, with an air of mystery and glamour surrounding him. He is seen as wealthy, sophisticated, and aloof, yet remains somewhat elusive and unknowable to those around him.
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The guests are uninvited and don't even know who Gatsby is.
Gatsby and Daisy meet again at Nick's house for tea when Gatsby arranges the meeting. This occurs in Chapter 5 of "The Great Gatsby."
Nick's final words to Gatsby were: "They're a rotten crowd...You're worth the whole damn bunch put together."
Nick's neighbor in "The Great Gatsby" is Jay Gatsby. He describes Gatsby's house as a vast Gothic mansion with a marble swimming pool and elaborate gardens, giving off an air of luxurious excess and opulence.
Gatsby redecorates his mansion, fills it with luxurious flowers and other decorations, buys new shirts, and is anxious and nervous as he anticipates Daisy's arrival. He also asks Nick to invite Daisy over for tea, but then cancels the plan at the last minute and invites her to his house instead.
He means that Like the Nazis, Wilson has killed an innocent man. Gatsby is now dead. George killed Gatsby and then killed himself.
Nick wants Gatsby's funeral to be important. He wants valued people there, such as "Owl-eyes".
He thought, in the begining, that Gatsby was just like the other rich elite, but by the end of the book he has come to find he likes Gatsby more because he tells the truth (like when Tom was interogating him about Oxford) and because Gatsby is kind to everybody.
Gatsby first met Daisy when he was a young officer stationed near her home. Their initial encounter was significant because Gatsby fell in love with Daisy, and she became the embodiment of his dreams and aspirations for wealth and social status. This meeting set the foundation for their complicated and tragic relationship in F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel "The Great Gatsby."
Nick's attitude is ambivalent even at the moment he says goodbye to Gatsby as Nick feels disgusted with the lies, deceit and pretense that Gatsby associates himself with, yet at the same time he cannot help but to admire Gatsby's ability to dream (for Daisy) although his path is pursuing the dream is not as honourable.
Nick's perception of Gatsby's stories changes when he sees that Gatsby is genuinely in love with Daisy and willing to sacrifice his own happiness for her. This shows Nick that Gatsby's feelings and intentions are real, even if his past may be embellished. Additionally, Gatsby's tragic fate and the way he handles adversity further convince Nick of the truth in Gatsby's emotions.