Daisy is Dead. Gatsby is Dead. They are Both Breathing. As Charlie Brown was fond of saying, “Happiness is anyone and anything at all, that's loved by you” (Charlie Brown). The great Charlie Brown makes a wonderful point that Gatsby would think that he would surely agree with regarding his love for Daisy. Gatsby loves Daisy dearly and thinks that, just as Charlie Brown sang, she will be his happiness. There is, however, one problem. Gatsby does not love the real Daisy, he only loves his perfect image of daisy...the Daisy that does not exist. Gatsby loves the Daisy that he created. He loves a Daisy that he has made up in his mind to be the exact person that will fit all his needs and desires. Gatsby is trying to love something that …show more content…
His perfect Daisy is brutally killed right in front of his eyes and all that is left is a living, breathing, Daisy. A Daisy that Gatsby did not really know. A Daisy that was far different from the one Gatsby created in his mind. The real Daisy. The true Daisy. The rotten Daisy. Daisy was not the perfect Jewel that Gatsby had imagined. In fact, Daisy was in love with two very different men. She could not make up her mind. She could not set straight her loyalties. She had always sensed that her husband was cheating, but did nothing about it. She herself was cheating on Tom, yet seemed to feel no guilt. She loved Gatsby, but turned him away for a material object...money. Infact, when she speaks, her voice is described as “full of money” (128). She chose money over love...over happiness. Furthermore, she wasn’t driving carefully, and due to this she killed Myrtle. This woman, this Daisy, is far from perfect. Far from the woman that Gatsby had imagined. Far from the Daisy that Gatsby loved. When all is said and done, Nick describes Daisy, Tom, and Jordan as a “rotten crowd” (164). This is only proved further when Daisy does not even show up at Gatsby’s funeral. Daisy is not the Daisy Gatsby had in mind. Daisy is …show more content…
In shallow terms, “blue” has historically been used to describe emotions of sadness and depression. In the song “Blue Christmas” by the King of Rock and Roll, the great Elvis Presley sings, “I’ll have a Blue Christmas without you” (Presley). When he sings this phrase he is basically saying that he will be depressed, without a certain girl that he cares about on Christmas. This carries a very similar connotation as the uses of “blue” in The Great Gatsby. Towards the end of the story, things are no longer described by their magnificence or by their beauty. Rather, they are described by their calamitous and darker side. “Blue” is one of the terms used to bring on all of these negative connotations. When Nick and Gatsby are at Gatsby’s house on a morning after the horrid dinner, the surroundings are no longer described as nice. rather than the birds being described as perky or lively, they are described as “ghostly” (162). This, however, is not all. There are so many words and phrases that could have described the leaves. They could have been called by their nice autumn color, or by their texture, or by their placement on the ground, but they were not. The leaves were described as “blue” (162). The same color that describes depression. Additionally, when Michaelis was describing the outside and how it was bright enough to turn off the lights, he does not describe it as
The novel The Great Gatsby by Scott Fitz Gerald embodies many themes. A major in the story is the pursuit of can be labelled the American Dream. The American Dream is defined as someone starting low on the economic or social level, and working hard towards prosperity and or wealth and fame. By having money, a car, a big house, nice clothes and a happy family symbolizes the American dream. The Great Gatsby shows what happened to the American Dream in the 1920’s, which is a time period when the dreams became corrupted for many reasons.
This really does show how selfish Daisy was and she led Gatsby on. She never would be able to bring herself to let one man or the other go, even though she was hurting many people during the process of her manipulation. Gatsby should've known he was reaching for the wrong dream but don't we all sometimes geet trapped in our own illusion of having
He “wouldn’t consider” leaving his house to protect himself from any possible consequence because of his “hope” that Daisy would give up her reality to live with him in his fantasy. He “clutched” on to this little bit of hope like a life line, as it was the only thing he had left to connect him to his one true desire (148). Gatsby is unable to separate what in his life is real and what in his life is not real. He seems to be perfect, but his only “flaw was naive idealism” making it even harder for him to accept the truth of the situation between himself and Daisy. There was no real love between them , just the vision that Gatsby had in his mind.
There may be many despicable characters in The Great Gatsby, by F. Scott Fitzgerald, but Daisy Buchanan is a main character that causes feuds between not only Jay Gatsby and Tom Buchanan, Tom being her husband and Gatsby being the one she falls in love with, but Myrtle Wilson and George Wilson. Daisy is by far the most disappointing character in the book, because she leaves her child to be raised by nannies, which includes her having an affair, ends up killing someone without taking the blame, and she never shows up to Gatsby’s funeral. Daisy might have loved Tom at one point, but she really never wanted to marry him. When Gatsby comes into the picture, she instantly is overwhelmed with Gatsby’s devotions towards her.
Gatsby’s “Greatness” Greatness is showed by the choices we make in life. From how we see the circumstances and how we react to them. Gatsby is not as great of a man as Nick claims that he is. Gatsby makes foolish, childish and delusional decisions and not at all great.
Fitzgerald provides plenty of scenes in The Great Gatsby supporting the ideas whether Gatsby’s love was affectionate, obsession, or objectification. Fitzgerald shows that throughout the story, Gatsby slowly becomes more obsessed with Daisy as he draws closer and closer to be with her. By the end of the book, Gatsby becomes obsessed with Daisy. He only thinks about her and analyze everything in her life. Even in the beginning when the reader finally meets Gatsby, his obsession shows.
“I believe in looking reality straight in the eye and denying it.” Garrison Keillor, has been called, "One of the most perceptive and witty commentators about Midwestern life" by Randall Balmer in Encyclopedia of Evangelicalism. Throughout The Great Gatsby, Gatsby shows how blind he is when it comes to Daisy. In the novel Gatsby shows the love and compassion that he has for Daisy. Throughout The Great Gatsby, Gatsby reveals the compassion he has for Daisy throughout the choices that he makes.
“Representations of Gatsby: Ninety Years of Retrospective.” Daisy is only ever looking out for herself, even when telling the truth could save lives. Her selfishness corresponds with her lack of responsibility in sense that she lets the man she believes she has fallen in love with take the fall for her actions. Not caring that the repercussions was death. ‘“Here, deares'.
The fact that Gatsby was dedicated enough to work hard and buy a house across from Daisy shows how much he loves her but because Daisy
"The Great Gatsby" is an outstanding piece of classic American literature. F. Scott Fitzgerald discusses the issues on-post-war society, the American dream, love, and wealth. This draws attention to the readers that question if Jay Gatsby is "Great". Despite the uselessness of his beginnings, Gatsby is great due to the intensity of his will. Although, Gatsby is a person whose false love, materialism, and egotism led him to the tragic end.
Jay Gatsby grew up as a child in poverty in North Dakota. After being taken under Dan Cody’s wing, as his personal assistant, Jay realized that he wanted to achieve the american dream, Just like Mr. Cody. Gatsby wanted to become wealthy and successful. When Daisy appears in Gatsby’s life, she reflects perfection and the american dream. Gatsby had planned to marry Daisy but when he returned from the war she had gone and married Tom.
Great Gatsby Argument Paper In the sole darkness, an unknown figure gazes upon the dock and reaches out his arms, grasping at the distant green light, the unattainable dream. Despite the lavish parties he holds, little is known about him. After five years, he is back with a new identity, Jay Gatsby. Now that he belongs to the affluent society, he is ready to gain back the heart of his true love, Daisy, who represents everything he wants – wealth and beauty.
Gatsby falls in love with Daisy the first minute he meets her and never stops loving her even though she has obviously moved on. Gatsby does everything he can to be closer to her like buying “that house so that Daisy would be just across the bay” (78). Gatsby knows that if he can get the girl of his dreams he will not feel lonely anymore. " He talked a lot about the past… he wanted to recover something, some idea of himself perhaps, that had gone into loving Daisy. His life had been confused and disordered since then, but if he could once return to a certain starting place and go over it all slowly, he could find out what that thing was” (87).
Daisy seemed really nice and pretty and was the goal of Gatsby to get, but turns out she's not as great and Gatsby imagined her being, represents the false sense of glory people see in the American Dream. This proved in chapter 5, page 93, "Compared to the great distance that had separated him from Daisy it had seemed very near to her, almost touching her. It had seemed as close as a star to the moon. Now it was again a green light on a dock. His count of enchanted objects had diminished by one.