The Great Gatsby opens with our narrator, Nick Carraway, is visiting his cousin Daisy Buchanan in New York. Nick moves to the East Egg and becomes the neighbor of Jay Gatsby, a mysterious man who throws extravagant parties every night and barely anyone has met. Across the river is the East Egg where Daisy and her …show more content…
Scott Fitzgerald uses symbolism in The Great Gatsby is the significance of colors. The colors in the novel are used to show things and people for what they truly are, not what they appear to be. One example of this would be how the East and West Eggs are each compared with the color of the inside of an egg. The East Egg is often used with the color white, while the West Egg is used with the colors yellow or gold. The symbolism of colors also connects with people in the novel, such as Daisy. “Daisy is still the ‘nice’ girl...She remains ‘spotless,’ still immaculately dressed in white and capable of a hundred whimsical, vaporous enthusiasms” (Ornstein 142). This quote suggests that Daisy’s soul is “spotless” meaning her innocent soul, but that is actually the opposite of who she is. Daisy is revealed to be mischievous, selfish girl who’s only concern is to stay as rich and powerful as she is. Daisy possibly loves one more thing than money and what it can buy, and that is attention. Daisy is often compared to the color white which usually represents innocence and purity, but further into the novel she shows her true