man that is also cheating on his wife. He buys Myrtle things, like a puppy, and lets her buy things, like the furniture in their apartment that they meet in. When Myrtle is with Tom, she acts like she thinks a rich person would act. She doesn’t really know how the rich act. The furniture in the apartment is that she bought is oversized and tacky. The dresses she wears are overly flashy and brightly colored. Those are definitely not things old money wealthy people, like Tom’s wife, would buy. Myrtle thinks that just because she is spending time with someone with money, she is rich too. She changes her behavior to make herself be what she thinks is appropriate for a wealthy person to act. At one time, Myrtle buys gossip magazines at the train station, begs Tom to buy her a puppy, and even makes Nick and Tom wait for a lavender taxi. Fitzgerald uses these things to symbolize, or represent how shallow she really is. The money is obviously going to her head and it’s making her change who she is. Another example is Tom Buchanan at the time of Myrtle’s death. Myrtle is Tom’s lover. She was struck and killed by a car outside her home. Someone who saw the accident said a big yellow car (Gatsby’s car) hit her. Tom had driven the car on the way to New York City. When he sees the commotion at the garage, he has to make sure that Myrtle’s husband George knows it wasn’t him driving the car. He doesn’t care that the girl he “loved” enough to cheat on his wife with is dead. He just wants to make sure nothing bad happens to his reputation and that he gets no trouble from it. Fitzgerald characterizes Tom in a really good way. You learn through the course of the story that Tom is a violent, self-centered man who only cares for himself and things concerning him and believes he is better than most of the people in the world. A normal person with a conscience would have been more concerned with the accident and about Myrtle’s death. They wouldn’t have worried if they looked good to other people. Just because Tom has money, he believes he is instantly better than everyone else who isn’t wealthy or anyone who didn’t inherit their money. He believes that the money he has puts him above the other people. A normal person wouldn’t think that way. They would be grieving, not scheming like Tom. His money changes his behavior and makes him like a child - careless. Jeff Benzos, from amazon.com, said “I don’t think wealth actually changes people”. To me, this means that when someone owns or acquires a large some of money, they would be the same as a person who isn’t wealthy or stay the same way they were before they got the money. I disagree with his statement. I think that wealth almost always changes people and there are many examples of this in life and literature that prove this in true. This can be seen in The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald in the characters Tom Buchanan and Myrtle Wilson.
man that is also cheating on his wife. He buys Myrtle things, like a puppy, and lets her buy things, like the furniture in their apartment that they meet in. When Myrtle is with Tom, she acts like she thinks a rich person would act. She doesn’t really know how the rich act. The furniture in the apartment is that she bought is oversized and tacky. The dresses she wears are overly flashy and brightly colored. Those are definitely not things old money wealthy people, like Tom’s wife, would buy. Myrtle thinks that just because she is spending time with someone with money, she is rich too. She changes her behavior to make herself be what she thinks is appropriate for a wealthy person to act. At one time, Myrtle buys gossip magazines at the train station, begs Tom to buy her a puppy, and even makes Nick and Tom wait for a lavender taxi. Fitzgerald uses these things to symbolize, or represent how shallow she really is. The money is obviously going to her head and it’s making her change who she is. Another example is Tom Buchanan at the time of Myrtle’s death. Myrtle is Tom’s lover. She was struck and killed by a car outside her home. Someone who saw the accident said a big yellow car (Gatsby’s car) hit her. Tom had driven the car on the way to New York City. When he sees the commotion at the garage, he has to make sure that Myrtle’s husband George knows it wasn’t him driving the car. He doesn’t care that the girl he “loved” enough to cheat on his wife with is dead. He just wants to make sure nothing bad happens to his reputation and that he gets no trouble from it. Fitzgerald characterizes Tom in a really good way. You learn through the course of the story that Tom is a violent, self-centered man who only cares for himself and things concerning him and believes he is better than most of the people in the world. A normal person with a conscience would have been more concerned with the accident and about Myrtle’s death. They wouldn’t have worried if they looked good to other people. Just because Tom has money, he believes he is instantly better than everyone else who isn’t wealthy or anyone who didn’t inherit their money. He believes that the money he has puts him above the other people. A normal person wouldn’t think that way. They would be grieving, not scheming like Tom. His money changes his behavior and makes him like a child - careless. Jeff Benzos, from amazon.com, said “I don’t think wealth actually changes people”. To me, this means that when someone owns or acquires a large some of money, they would be the same as a person who isn’t wealthy or stay the same way they were before they got the money. I disagree with his statement. I think that wealth almost always changes people and there are many examples of this in life and literature that prove this in true. This can be seen in The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald in the characters Tom Buchanan and Myrtle Wilson.