as showing her allof his cloths by throwing them on the mattressand started to cry because now she realized allthat she could of had and she willingly gave upif she didn’t marry Tom and instead marringGatsby. Gatsby has a harsh fall to reality throughmany events one following another. “His tragedylies in the impact of reality upon his dreams.”(Elbe 36) When he goes over to Daisy’s houseand meets her Fitzgerald comments about theshock of reality Gatsby has when he firstmeets her daughter and the reality that thebonds between Daisy and Tom will never bebroken completely Gatsby and I in turn leaneddown and took the reluctant hand . Afterward hekept looking at the child with surprise. I donot think he had ever really believe in itsexistence before. Moreover when his mindstarted to clear out from the foggy illusionwhich was his idealism and realized that “Hisillusion of Daisy falling in love with him waswrong.”(Bewley 17). The final bombshell waswhen everyone was at the hotel and Gatsby toldDaisy who she love most and she said “Gatsby’seyes opened and closed ‘you love me to?’ herepeated.” (Gallo 52)Fitzgerald said that Gatsby had a“romantic readiness such as I have neverfound in any other person before and one thatis not likely that ill ever see again.”(Stavola 134) Gatsby’s idealism willeventually lead to his demise. Works Cited Bewley, Marius. F. Scott Fitzgerald. The Great Gatsby. Ed Harold, Bloom. New York: 1986. 13-26.Elbe, Kenneth. “The Great Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerald” Rev. ed. Boston: Twayne. 1978. 25-52.Fitzgerald, F. Scott. The Great Gatsby. New York: Collier Edition, 1986.Gallo, Rose Adrienne. “Gold-hatted Lover: The Great Gatsby.” F. Scott Fitzgerald. First Paperback Edition. New York: New York Publishing Company.1984.Stavola, Thomas J. F. Scott Fitzgerald: Criticism an American Identity. New York: Harper Row. 1979. 130-1...