Tom Buchanan and Jay Gatsby are two main characters in the novel “The Great Gatsby” by F. Scott Fitzgerald. Gatsby and Tom are similar in many ways but Gatsby is a better character because he cares for people and their feelings. Throughout the novel you can see how alike these two are and What is the difference between Gatsby and Tom Bouchernon.
Tom and Gatsby have many things in common, one being their love for Daisy. Tom and Gatsby both showed their love for Daisy in different ways. One way Gatsby showed his love for her was by throwing huge parties in hopes that she would attend. Another way Gatsby shows his love is by being persistent and keeping hope that maybe one day this girl will come back to him. Tom loves Daisy but it is very hard to see throughout the story. We start to realize that Tom really loves her when Daisy says “I did love him once-but I love you too”(Fitzgerald 132). Daisy loved Gatsby once but now that she has a kid with Tom and a nice life she knows that she cannot leave
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Tom and Gatsby are both insecure because they care way too much about what other people think. We can see Gatsby's insecurity by the way he responds to Daisy's reaction to his party. Gatsby got all worried that she hated it and then he was upset and didn't know what to do about it. We see Tom's insecurities when he says “I’d rather not be the polo player”(Fitzgerald 105) and this shows he’s insecure because he would rather be seen as a rich man and not just a polo player. Another example of Gatsby's insecurities is that he is afraid to be abandoned and alone and that's why he likes Nick so much because he doesn't want to have no one. This is the same reason that Gatsby hangs on to a string of hope that Daisy might come back to him. While Gatsbys is afraid of being alone, Tom's insecure about his status and how people see his wealth. Tom and Gatsby are both insecure. Although, it is shown in dramatically different
Gatsby is mainly focused on Daisy every not much one himself but one finding her love is his goal. “He talked a lot about the past, and I gathered that he wanted to recover something, some idea of himself perhaps, that had gone into loving Daisy” (pg 111)- Nick Carroway. Tom on the other hand care about himself and his status even though he claims to love her he cares about himself and what he wants. "And what's more, I love Daisy too. Once in awhile 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."
Nick portrays this trait in Tom as controlling and dreadful, opposite of what it is in Gatsby despite both men having the same
He is a bigger man, decently built, and smarter than your average person. He doesn’t respect women and this bothers Gatsby. When Gatsby found out that Daisy wasn’t happy with Tom he took his chance to try and sweep her off her feet. “His speaking voice, a gruff husky tenor, added to the impression of fractiousness he conveyed” Pg 11.
He is deeply invested in maintaining the social hierarchy of the society in which he lives, believing that his wealth and status entitle him to certain privileges. Tom is also possessive and jealous, particularly when it comes to his wife, Daisy. He becomes threatened by Gatsby's attempts to win Daisy's love, and his jealousy ultimately leads to tragedy. Tom's motivations are ultimately revealed to be selfish and self-serving, as he seeks to maintain his own power and control at the expense of
Insecure people can make themselves happy by making others unhappy. Their insecurity serves as a defense mechanism that protects their ego and by bringing others down, they can achieve psychological relief and it raises their self-esteem. In the Great Gatsby, F. Scott Fitzgerald implies that insecurity can lead to people controlling and manipulating others to feel better about themselves, through Tom Buchanan’s treatment and manipulation of Daisy and Myrtle both physically and emotionally, and Tom’s way of degrading George Wilson and Gatsby based on their intelligence and wealth status. Tom’s insecurity is most apparent with his relationship with Daisy because Tom allows himself to do anything he wants, but if Daisy does the same thing he gets upset and undermines her intelligence because she is a woman.
He acts as if he is a father and is entitled to tell others how they should act. Tom only thinks about himself and how his wealth allows him to feel superior to those around him. Gatsby is a mysterious man who is blindly in love with Daisy. The only thing he cares about is for Daisy to come to him. He spent the past 5 years making money to show that he worthy of her and that he can be a wealthy man as well.
By God, I may be old-fashioned in my ideas, but women run around too much these days to suit me. They meet all kinds of crazy fish.” (Fitzgerald 103). This may seem trivial but the quote proves that Tom didn't like Gatsby from the jump. Some may say Gatsby didn't want to make friends and
He wants Gatsby’s life but doesn’t want to admit it. Tom was jealous of Gatsby because he had Daisy and then Gatsby stole her from him. “ “Your wife doesn’t love you,” said Gatsby. “She’s never loved you. She loves me.”
While Jay Gatsby truly loved Daisy for who she was, Tom Buchanan loved the idea of being able to say that Daisy was his wife. Because of this Daisy was caught in the middle and did not know who to choose. Both Jay Gatsby and Tom Buchanan loved Daisy but in completely different ways. Jay Gatsby loved Daisy for who she was as a person rather than how she made him look to others. Jay wanted Daisy to be happy so he bought her an expensive house to make sure she would always live a life of luxury.
Nick, Tom, and Gatsby are all very similar but also very different. All three of these characters are main, important characters in “The Great Gatsby”. Each of these characters share some type of relationship with Daisy Buchana. Tom Buchanan and Jay Gatsby share a love for Daisy Buchanan while Nick Carraway is Daisy’s cousin. All of these characters live in the wealthy part of New York CIty, and share relationships and experiences in this book.
Junior urbaez MS pallotta Ela 2 Mar 23, 2023 It is a book, some characters have the same similarity, especially between Jay Gatsby and Tom Buchanan, they both only think for themselves first before the other people, they both fell in love with the same woman, they also have a good amount of money, they both lie to the people the they love, the also get whatever they want without caring the consequences they don't care if is legal or illegal they away get away within, they also are cheater. Jay gatsby met daisy when he was young but at the time he were poor and was afraid the daisy didn't love because she was from a very wealthy family and he was very poor, he left to the war and loss the communication with daisy for 5 years, daisy was tired for waiting for gatsby she decide to marry another man named tom buchanan. They have been married for a couple years and now Gatsby returned and brought a big mansion across the river in the exact place the daisy and tom have the house. They are in love with Daisy but Tom Buchanan has the advantage that she is married to him.
In Francis Scott Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby, there are two characters by the names of Tom Buchanan and George Wilson. Throughout the book, these two particular characters seem to be very different from each other in nearly every way. However, it becomes clear as the story continues that they share some ideas and attitudes in common. Specifically, Tom and George were noteworthy in the way they felt about women, the methods by which they conveyed violence, and how they responded to their wives cheating on them.
He made the mistake of making his happiness depend on her and could not accept the fact that she once loved Tom. As wonderful as man as Gatsby is, he is very deceitful to others of who he really is and tries to control everything. Gatsby is a man stuck in the past and with every day that passes, he gets sucked in even deeper into the abyss. Even though Tom and Gatsby had very different upbringings and live their lives completely different, in a way they are the same person. Neither one of them will admit their wrongdoings and are to self-absorbed into themselves to see what is going on around them.
Ever since Gatsby had left Daisy, he has felt content with his life because he knows something is missing. Gatsby feels lonely and will continue to feel lonely without Daisy. Gatsby’s diminishing life is full of loneliness because it is “the promise of a decade of loneliness, a thinning list of single men to know, a thinning brief-case of enthusiasm, thinning hair” (129). Gatsby never does have Daisy all to himself, and dies knowing he never achieved anything more than great wealth. Gatsby is a perfect example of an
They both love Daisy in their own way and do not want to lose her. Gatsby states, “Both of us loved each other all that time” (Fitzgerald 138). Gatsby wants Daisy to tell Tom she never loved him so that they can be together, but she cannot because it would not be true. Daisy says to Gatsby, “I did love him once-but I loved you too”(Fitzgerald 140). Daisy used to love both of them but chooses Tom because she is used to life with Tom and does not change.