Jacob Serrano Ms. Baker CP English 6 March 2023 Not Everyone Gets What They Deserve: The Great Gatsby F. Scott Fitzgerald being such a profound author, taught us many different lessons in the novel The Great Gatsby. One important lesson is people don’t always get what they deserve, it teaches us how life isn’t fair and some things in life happen that we can’t control. Some examples of this are how Tom cheated on Daisy, how Gatsby got played by Daisy, and finally when Gatsby gets murdered by George because of Tom. These are the ways F. Scott Fitzgerald shows us that not everyone gets what they deserve. With the lesson of not everything in life is fair, Fitzgerald shows us how Toms has an affair and is cheating on Daisy. Daisy didn’t deserve to get cheated on and it's unfair how she gets treated when she didn’t do anything to cause Tom to do this. Jordan Baker tells Nick, “A week after I left in Santa Barbara Tom ran into a wagon on the Ventura road one night and ripped a front wheel off his car. The girl who was with him got into the papers too because her arms was broken ." (77) Jordan Baker is talking about Tom getting caught cheating which was just the start of him cheating more and more on Daisy. Daisy didn’t deserve to get cheated on and only had good intentions, even after Daisy found out she …show more content…
Gatsby is shot by George because George was told by Tom that Gatsby killed Myrtle. This isn’t true and was ultimately Tom's fault. Myrtle thought it was Tom in the car and since they were having an affair she thought he would stop. "The God damned coward! He didn't even stop his car." (141) said Tom, blaming Myrtle's death on Gatsby. George goes on to kill Gatsby thinking he is the reason that Myrtle is dead but it’s really Tom’s. This proves most importantly how Gatsby didn’t deserve to get murdered and it was an unfair
Jordan says, “She might have the decency not to telephone him a dinner time. Don’t you think?" (Fitzgerald 20). Throughout the novel, it is clear to see that their relationship is not a happy one. Tom seems to be abusive towards Daisy and evidently does not care much for her.
Not only is Daisy unfaithful to Tom, but Tom is just as unfaithful to Daisy in return. Early in the novel, it is brought to the attention of readers that “Tom’s got some woman in New York” (Fitzgerald 16). In one of the first conversations between Nick and Daisy since Nick has moved to West Egg, Daisy further proves Tom to be an unfaithful man. Daisy informs Nick that when she gave birth, her child was “... less than an hour old and Tom was God knows where” (Fitzgerald 17). Tom and Daisy have an unstable relationship throughout the novel; a relationship filled with deceit, lying, and cheating.
“‘Even that’s a lie,’ said Tom savagely. She didn’t know you were alive. Why- there’re things between Daisy and me that you’ll never know, things that neither of us can ever forget.” (Fitzgerald 132). Even when Tom knows that Daisy is cheating on him with Jay Gatsby, he contends his marriage and fights for her.
Also when Myrtle is hit by the car that he thinks is Tom’s, he shows up to Tom’s house with a gun. When Tom points George in the direction of Gatsby, George kills Gatsby and then himself. “It was after we started with Gatsby toward the house that the gardener saw Wilson’s body a little way off in the grass, and the holocaust was complete” (Fitzgerald
“They were careless people, Tom and Daisy—they smashed up things and . . . then retreated back into their money . . . and let other people clean up the mess they had made”(Fitzgerald 179). Towards the end of the story Nicks informs us about Tom and Daisy's blatant disregard for others. Throughout the book, we learn more and more about Daisy’s flawed personality.
In the Great Gatsby Tom’s excessive pride was a key factor in Myrtle's death. His Arrogance and disregard for others is shown in his affair with Myrtle, in which he flaunts in front of his wife and others.
Tom cheats on Daisy multiple times in the novel, even when he tries to hide it from her. Daisy, as a woman, is unable to express her true feelings to Tom; instead, she must keep them to herself. When Daisy failed to keep Tom from interacting with his mistress she tries to forget about it. According to Daisy, “It couldn’t be helped! …cried Daisy with a tense gayety” (15). Daisy is unable to pursue her desired actions because she must comply with her husband.
“ (Fitzgerald 15). This shows how little Tom actually cared about Daisy. He was cheating on Daisy while she was fully aware of what was going on, yet he didn’t care. Tom may have loved the idea of having Daisy as his wife, but he didn’t truly love her if he could cheat on
Although George knows about his wife’s indecencies, it seems as though he had already given up when he says, “I told her she might fool me but she couldn’t fool God... God knows what you’ve been doing, everything you’ve been doing” (159). Since Myrtle has been lying for so long, George has accepted it because deep down he knows he cannot control her. Though Myrtle’s rebellion, George still cares for Myrtle when Fitzgerald explains his suicide, “It was after we started with Gatsby toward the house that the gardener saw Wilson’s body a little way off in the grass, and the holocaust was complete” (162). He killed himself because he could not deal with the pain of losing Myrtle.
In the book The Great Gatsby, Jay Gatsby loses his life to Wilson. Mr. Gatsby is killed because Tom Buchanan told Wilson that Gatsby was the one driving the car when Myrtle his wife was struck by the car. It was Gatsby’s, but he wasn’t the one driving, the one driving was Daisy. Wilson believes that Gatsby is the one who hit his wife with the car. George may have killed Gatsby, but the other characters had their part in his death.
I definitely did not expect Gatsby to be blamed for Myrtle's murder, let alone for the murder itself to occur. What I expected for Gatsby was for him to run off into the sunset with Daisy. But in the end maybe it was for the best that Gatsby was taken out of the situation he was in. If the murder would have gone to trial, Gatsby still would have taken the fall for Daisy. She was an obsession for him, he probably would have never moved on with his life without her.
In F.Scott Fitzgerald’s novel, The Great Gatsby, Jay Gatsby is killed for an act he did not commit. Gatsby’s acts of generosity and hospitality prove that he does not deserve to be killed. Also, Jay’s romantic side shows that he is a great guy and cares about others. Lastly, Gatsby is innocent of the Myrtle Wilson murder. Readers may now easily identity that Jay Gatsby did not deserve to receive such a vulgar fate of
Tom is a prime example of the horror of cheating because of his lack of a moral compass or reasoning behind it. As far as the reader knows, Tom has cheated on Daisy throughout their entire relationship. The narrator, Nick, found out through Miss Baker, who broke the news by whispering to Nick, “Why- Tom’s got some woman in New York” (Fitzgerald 15) when a call came for Tom from Myrtle at the dinner table. Tom goes to answer the call and Daisy acts as if this happens often. Tom doesn't care what Nick, Miss Baker, or Daisy think so he doesn't try to cover what is happening or come up with a lie to cover his tracks.
Through this development, the reader quickly notices that Gatsby is readily willing to risk his own integrity and accept responsibility as the one responsible for the breakup of another person’s marriage. The apex of this sacrifice is reached when Myrtle is struck in a hit-and-run accident involving Gatsby’s car. Gatsby admits to Nick that Daisy was the one driving at the time of the accident, yet fails to come forward about the matter to clear his own name in an effort to protect the love of his life. Tom nonetheless realizes that Gatsby’s car is the one involved and concludes that Gatsby is the one who killed her after investigating the situation, although this is not truly the case. He admits to Nick towards the end of the book that George Wilson, Myrtle’s husband at the time, was on a mission to kill someone, and he was therefore forced to give up Gatsby as the criminal.
Gatsby already made a major lie to Daisy by lying to her about his past just before he left for World War I. Similarly, Daisy promised to wait for Gatsby, but failed to keep that promise. These two loved each other, yet they hurt each other unintentionally. Tom informs George Wilson that Gatsby is the killer of Myrtle; consequently, Wilson shoots Gatsby and commits suicide. I am disgusted with the fact that Gatsby died because