A while after the funeral, Nick saw Tom. Tom said that he told Wilson, the man who killed Gatsby, that it was Gatsby's car that hit Wilson's wife, Myrtle. Nick did not like living in the East anymore, and he decided to leave the city and move back west.
Sick of the East and its empty values, Nick decides to move back to the Midwest. He breaks off his relationship with Jordan, who suddenly claims that she has become engaged to another man. Just before he leaves, Nick encounters Tom on Fifth Avenue in New York City.
Nick realizes that the story he is telling is one about the West, since Daisy, Tom, Nick, Jordan, and Gatsby were not from the East. He adds that after Gatsby's passing, the East became unpleasant for him.
After Gatsby's death, Nick now loathes New York City and decides that Gatsby, Daisy, Tom, and he were all Midwesterners unsuited to Eastern life.
Daisy and Tom have already left with no forwarding address by the time Nick tries to call them about Gatsby's death. Nick tries to find Wolfshiem, but can't get in touch with him.
Daisy is unable to confront the reality of her part in Gatsby's passing due to her feelings of guilt and shame; as a result, she is prevented from attending the funeral of Gatsby. In addition, Daisy is still married to Tom, so she may be concerned about what the aftermath of her attendance at Gatsby's funeral will be.
“Life and death were much different for Gatsby, only a few genuinely cared for him.” There were only a few people who attended Gatsby's funeral. Nick was there along with Gatsby's father (Henry Gatz), Owl Eyes, the minister, and a few of the house servants.
In a queer reading of Gatsby, Nick doesn't just love Gatsby, he's in love with him. In some readings, the tragedy is that Gatsby doesn't love him back. In others, Gatsby is as repressed as Nick, each chasing an unavailable woman to avoid admitting what he truly desires.
Gatsby's funeral is ironic because only three people attend, while enormous crowds attended his parties. Despite being a popular figure in the social scene, once Gatsby passes, neither Daisy, his business partner Henry Wolfsheim, nor any of his partygoers seem to remember him or care.
But here's what we think is going on: Nick realizes that chasing a future dream just ends up miring us in the past. All of our dreams are based on visions of our past self, like Gatsby who in the past believed that he would end up with Daisy and who believed in the American myth of the self-made man.
Nick took care of Gatsby's funeral because he was one of the few people left who cared about Gatsby. Most of his acquaintances abandoned him after his death. So who was at Gatsby's funeral? At the funeral, only a few people attended, including Nick, Gatsby's father, and a handful of servants.
If Nick had told anyone that Daisy was driving the car, George would not have shot Gatsby. Nick Carraway's wrong decision that was not to tell anyone Daisy ran over Myrtle has led the Gatsby's death. Moreover, Carraway's wide tolerance has not prevented the death, but caused it.
Meyer Wolfsheim, who was very close to Gatsby, uses this as an excuse not to attend Gatsby's funeral. He says that, now that he's old, he can't "get mixed up in all that"—by which he means he doesn't want to be affiliated with Gatsby's death because Gatsby's illegal dealings could unveil his own.
Nick hurries back to West Egg and finds Gatsby floating dead in his pool.
Nick now describes The Great Gatsby as a story of the West since many of the key characters (Daisy, Tom, Nick, Jordan, Gatsby) involved were not from the East. He says that after Gatsby's death, the East became haunted for him. The American Dream had long involved people moving west, to find work and opportunity.
Nicks Final message to the reader is that society is composed of Boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past."
Gatsby's tragic flaw is his inability to wake up from his dream of the past and accept reality. His obsession with recapturing his past relationship with Daisy compels him to a life of crime and deceit.
Water has been a transformative medium throughout Gatsby's life and some people believe his death within the pool symbolizes a sort of baptism, cleansing Gatsby's soul and the renewal of his life after death.
Gatsby's death is inescapable in order for him to achieve his own salvation and is presented as a sacrifice paralleling the death of Christ.
Relationship 1: Daisy Buchanan and Jay Gatsby. The relationship at the very heart of The Great Gatsby is, of course, Gatsby and Daisy, or more specifically, Gatsby's tragic love of (or obsession with) Daisy, a love that drives the novel's plot.
Also, it should be noted that though Nick was in a sanitarium, he wasn't "crazy." He was diagnosed with things such as anxiety and depression.
Nick is interested in getting to know and date Jordan. However, his feelings towards her are superficial, and this infatuation comes to an end when he discovers who Jordan really is - she's 'incurably dishonest' and incapable of commitment.
Nick is left to organise Gatsby's funeral. Daisy and Tom have left town. Wolfshiem refuses to come. Hundreds of people attended Gatsby's parties but no-one comes to his funeral apart from Nick, Gatsby's father, and some servants.
The only people who came to pay their respects were Nick, Gatsby's father, Owl Eyes, and a few servants. Even Daisy, Gatsby's beloved, did not attend the funeral, which shows the superficial nature of their relationship.
To Gatsby, Daisy represents the paragon of perfection—she has the aura of charm, wealth, sophistication, grace, and aristocracy that he longed for as a child in North Dakota and that first attracted him to her.