Scott Fitzgerald reinforces the idea that an individual's idealistic world is far from their reality. Gatsby's wealth gave him a fortunate lead to a glamorous life. Although he had everything he could ever want in his right hand, what he did not do was regain his true love, Daisy Buchanan. Gatsby had the ideology that his wealth could re-establish a relationship between him and Daisy, in reality his wealth could never purchase Daisy. Instead, Gatsby's wealth reveals his true colors to Daisy, which forces him to face the harsh reality he's been denying all along. As seen in the following, Nick Carraway notes, "My Finn informed me that Gatsby had dismissed every servant in his house a week ago and replaced them with half a dozen others." The meaning of this infers how Gatsby uses his wealth to protect him from rumors by paying servants, making the reality in his eyes around him vanish as he doesn't want to face it. This example shows how Gatsby refuses to face the reality of his life and would much rather fulfill his ideology. Therefore, it is through Gatsby's wealth that he struggles to give up his idealism, that he believes is his