Daisy is also very materialistic with nice clothes, jewelry, and always choosing wealth over true love. “She never loved you, do you hear? She only married you because I was poor and she was tired of waiting for me.” Jay Gatsby says this to tom when they have an argument about who Daisy really loves. This helps the plot…
She is in a relationship with Gatsby before the war, truly loves him, and promises to wait for him. But as she is part of the upper-class aristocracy, it is more ‘proper’ to marry someone in the same class as her. In the end, she allows herself to believe that having more money would be more important than true love. As a result, she did not wait for Gatsby to come back from the war but marries Tom, a man from a very wealthy family, instead. Daisy faces the consequence of her decision and shows the readers of her regret when she says, “that’s what I get for marrying a brute of a man, a great, big, hulking physical specimen of a [man]” (17). She feels even more remorseful when she sees Gatsby’s “Hotel de Ville” (11) and cries “That huge place there?” (87) because the mansion is even bigger than the house that she is living in at the moment. Daisy further shows her materialistic desire when she sees Gatsby’s shirts and sobs, “it makes me sad because I’ve never seen such – such beautiful shirts before.” (89) This materialistic appetite and thirst for wealth is very evident to the aristocracy and contributes to their corruption as they never seem to have…
Tom and Gatsby’s relationships with Daisy differ. Even though Gatsby has not seen Daisy in five years, he still loved her very much and stayed loyal the whole time. This shows that Gatsby loves Daisy so much that he would stay lonely and hopeful for years just for her. Gatsby never gave up hope during the time that they were apart. Tom has an affair on Daisy with Myrtle. This shows that Tom isn’t loyal to Daisy and he doesn’t put any effort into their relationship. Tom really uses Myrtle to satisfy one of his needs and Daisy to satisfy another. Gatsby was the only one willing to work and put effort towards him and Daisy while Tom took his and Daisy’s relationship for granted.…
As the novel goes on, it is made clear to the reader Daisy's obsession with money. "Her voice is full of money...That was it. I‘d never understood before. It was full of money – that was the inexhaustible charm that rose and fell in it, the jingle of it, the cymbals‘ song of it...High in a white palace the king‘s daughter, the golden girl..."(120) We learn of an affair in Daisy's past that she had with Gatsby, and that the only reason she married Tom rather than Gatsby was because of Tom's wealth. When this is brought up it refuels old feelings between the two of them, leading to an affair between Daisy and Gatsby. Readers go from feeling bad for Daisy to almost having sympathy for Tom. After accusing Tom of objectifying Daisy and not being loyal to her, it is made clear that daisy is not loyal to Tom. She is not in love with him, but rather his money.…
Gatsby used his wealth to throw parties so he could try to get Daisy’s attention and impress her. He did end up impressing her. However, because Daisy was married to her husband Tom she could not be with Gatsby. Tom found out about Daisy’s affair and confronted Gatsby. Gatsby insisted that Daisy never loved Tom but Daisy could not deny her love for her husband. It showed that Gatsby was extremely naive to believe that Daisy would love him to a certain extent as to say that she never loved her own husband. Gatsby believed that he could easily win her back simply by showing up with his wealth, but he was wrong.…
She is mesmerized by his wealth as she enters his dressing room saying, "They're such beautiful shirts," she sobbed, her voice muffled in the think folds. "It makes me sad because I've never seen such--such beautiful shirts before" (Fitzgerald 92; ch.5). Daisy is overcome with two things that she has never experienced at the same time: wealth and love. Tom has the money but he does not treat her like a woman should be treated. Finally, she is in the presence of a man who has the money, but only cares about making her life complete. Person agrees and disagrees with this thought. "She is victim first of Tom Buchanan's "cruel" power, but then of Gatsby's increasingly depersonalized vision of her," he states (250). He agrees that she is very mistreated by Tom, but then later describes the way Gatsby mistreats her by saying "She becomes the unwitting "grail" in Gatsby's adolescent quest to remain ever-faithful to his seven-year-old conception of himself" (250). Person is trying to say that Gatsby does not truly love Daisy and that he is just using her to fuel his growing…
To start with, she thinks Gatsby is wealthy and falls in love with him. But realizing the fact that Gatsby can’t give her a luxurious life, she chooses Tom as her husband without any doubt. However, Gatsby’s appearing with historic fortune and his true love to her seems to make her moved, then she tries to recover the relationship between them. For Daisy, what she really wants is not a romantic lover, but she needs a man who can give her a comfortable life and a respect position.…
He believes she is obligated to him and only him. Gatsby also believes there is no conflict between himself and Daisy that could arise. This however is very untrue. Gatsby doesn’t realize in a way that Daisy is married or at least thinks she married to save herself. She admits however that she loves both of the men she is deeply involved with, Gatsby and Tom. She states, “I did love him once- but I loved you too”(140). Gatsby has to prove himself to Daisy with material possessions because that is all he has now. He doesn’t really have a respectable position in society although it is upbeat all the time. Nick says, “While we admired he brought more and the soft rich heap mounted higher- shirts with stripes and scrolls and plaids in coral and apple green and lavender and faint orange with monograms of Indian blue” (98). Gatsby doesn’t realize none of these things will change the way she feels for her husband. Gatsby’s love doesn’t seem to be enough for her. Daisy wants more then what he can offer her. Gatsby might have the feeling of proving himself to her but this won’t change what has already happened. Daisy loves Tom now and no real material can change that sadly for…
The Great Gatsby Final Essay: Prompt #6 “It is sadder to find the past again and find it inadequate to the present than it is to have it elude you and remain forever a harmonious conception of memory” (F. Scott Fitzgerald). Almost anyone who has read F. Scott Fitzgerald's The Great Gatsby knows that hopes and dreams, especially those of the protagonist Jay Gatsby, play an integral role in the novel’s plot and overall themes. However, these dreams and desires are usually only connected to how they affect the actions and overall life of the dreamer.…
Daisy loving Tom’s money is a problem, she doesn’t love Tom for who he is, but for what he has. The book supports the fact that Daisy…
The Scarlet Letter by Nathaniel Hawthorne and The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald are two novels, which address similar themes with completely opposite resolves. The authors use their main characters, Hester, Dimmesdale, Gatsby, and Daisy, in their respective works to present these themes. The action in both novels revolves around unfaithfulness, its effects on the characters, and the results of committing adultery, which prove to be antipode from one novel to the other. These antitheses can be found by a look at the different roles of adultery in the novels.…
Daisy’s greed drove her to choose material items and a heightened social status over her own happiness. Daisy married Tom for money and a position in an upper class society. “In June she married Tom Buchanan of Chicago with more pomp and circumstance than Louisville ever knew before. ”(…). Tom and Daisy’s marriage was not based on true love, rather their common love for money and a position in an upper class society. Although Gatsby and Daisy were in love with each other, Gatsby’s social status prevented him from marrying Daisy. Tom’s financial status allowed him to provide Daisy with a prosperous lifestyle she quickly became accustomed to. Daisy’s avarice allowed her to believe that Tom would provide her with happiness because he represented superficial items that she desired. When she married Tom, she based the success of their relationship on the things he gave her rather than the affection he showed towards her. Considering this, it was evident that Daisy was more in love with the idea of what her marriage represented; wealth and success, rather than being truly in love with Tom. Daisy’s…
Gatsby has been in love with daisy for many years. Gatsby uses illegal and unethical ways to acquire wealth that he thinks he needs to have Daisy's heart. Since Tom and Daisy have a large house, a luxurious life, a comforted lifestyle, Gatsby feels he must have this too to win Daisy's heart. In fact, Gatsby tried almost every single thing that money could buy to try to satisfy his love for Daisy. He often threw extravagant parties with hope that she might show up and see him in all his wealth. "I think he half expected her to wander into one of his parties, some night, but she never did." Gatsby never confronted her and told her his true feelings. And in the end the two never got together. Gatsby in reality was a lonely and unhappy person with no true friends. In fact only 3 people…
On the eve of marrying Tom, Daisy has a drunken night with Jordan and demonstrates her true feelings towards Tom while saying “‘Take 'em down-stairs and give 'em back to whoever they belong to. Tell 'em all Daisy's change' her mind. Say: 'Daisy's change' her mine!’”(76). When Daisy is drunk, and not thinking right, she proves that she is only with Tom for the luxuries in life, such as the expensive pearls that he gave her. Her drunken self realizes that she is not in love with him. Waking up the next morning, she returns to the her that society has morphed her into, ready to marry the guy that has the money and can provide her with all the finer things in life, even though she doesn’t love him. During her meeting with Gatsby, he is set on showing Daisy what a lavish life he is living, which moves her to the point of saying, "They're such beautiful shirts," she sobbed, her voice muffled in the think folds. "It makes me sad because I've never seen such – such beautiful shirts before"(92). Daisy is so in love with the materialistic aspect of life that seeing how much there is for her to still acquire moves her to tears. While laying in Gatsby’s closet, she realizes that there is more to life than simply what Tom can offer her with money, and that there are greater opportunities that just…
Tom wasn’t the kind of man who like mixed relations. He was the kind of man who likes to be in control and he likes to be in a high class community. The problems he has faced trying to attain his dream were when Gatsby showed up and was trying to take Daisy away form him. Tom wasn’t concerned at first because he’s a stereotype and he didn’t; think Daisy would do that to him even though he does it to her over and over again with her knowing. Toms American Dream was attained because no matter what, Daisy will always come back to him. Tom loves Daisy to death; even though she knows everything he has done to her she will always end up going back with Tom. Tom says to Gatsby “And what's more, I love Daisy too. Once in a while I go off on a spree and make a fool of myself, but I always come back, and in my heart I love her all the time”. A person can’t love someone and mess around with other women and say that they’re still in love with that other person because that’s; not real love. Tom is blinded by love to see that Daisy doesn’t really love him the way he loves…