Chloe Maroo Feuerstahler English 11 Block D 2/14/23 The Great Gatsby Book Analysis Love comes in different ways. Two people can love one person but love that person in different ways. We assume others show love the same way we do, and if they don’t then we worry it’s not there. In the book, The Great Gatsby, it demonstrates that even though Jay Gatsby and Tom Buchanan both claim to love Daisy, the way they treat her and show her love is completely different. In the book, The Great Gatsby, Daisy was loved by more than just her husband. She was also very much loved by her past lover, Jay Gatsby. Although both men claimed to love her, the ways they loved her were completely …show more content…
Gatsby had everything he ever wanted, minus the girl, Daisy. Gatsby would’ve done anything to get Daisy back. One example of this is when in the story it states, “But it wasn’t a coincidence at all… Gatsby bought that house so that Daisy would be just across the bay.” (Fitzgerald 78) This explains how deep Gatsby’s love for Daisy was. Not a lot of guys can say they bought a certain house just because the girl they want lives across the bay. Another thing about Gatsby is that he always has had a type of dream for himself. He had a vision that he would be rich and Daisy would be right next to him the whole time. Gatsby loves the idea of Daisy and what they used to be versus the real her who has changed and grown since they were lovers. He mentions in the book that, “And she doesn’t understand… She used to be able to understand. We’d sit for hours.” (Fitzgerald 109) This quote intertwines the idea that Gatsby loves the memories more than the actual person standing right in front of him. Gatsby never actually took a moment to …show more content…
A lot of people could argue and say that Tom never loved her but that’s not true. People too early on compare Tom’s love for Daisy to Gatsby’s love for Daisy. Everyone automatically assumes that Tom never really loved her. Although Tom was not the best person based off of his abusive behavior and his tendency to cheat, he did indeed love Daisy. Just not the same way Gatsby loved her. Tom believed Daisy was the one he’d always come back to because she was the perfect one for him. He also believed that no matter how many times he cheated on Daisy that he was still being loyal because he keeps coming back to her. In the book, Tom states, “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.” (Fitzgerald 131) This quote represented how Tom saw Daisy as his person and how he perceived
He would do anything for her, including criminal activity. Although Gatsby wanted Daisy apart of his life, he did not realize that the memories of the past influenced the way he saw their future. However, he kept track of where Daisy was and he did everything to make sure that he was close enough to her, yet kept his distance so it was not creepy. Gatsby built his mansion across Daisy’s bay so that he could attempt to impress her and he could also look over whilst reminiscing the past.
Gatsby dedicated himself to winning Daisy back, making her the single goal of all of his dreams. Hence why he bought the house, he wanted to keep tabs on Daisy. Gatsby wanted to be the only man Daisy ever loved because Daisy was the only woman Gatsby had ever loved. Nick stated, “He wanted nothing less of Daisy than that she should go to Tom and say, “I never loved you”.” (Fitzgerald 103).
When Daisy said this, it then that she realized that Gatsby's whole life story had been a lie and that he was lying to her the entire time. She feels disillusioned by this information, and so even though she was feeling closer to Gatsby before, so much so that she was going to leave Tom, she now is closer to Tom and chooses him. Another time when Daisy was unhappy and dissatisfied in the novel was
In chapter five of The Great Gatsby we learn many new details about Daisy’s former feelings for Jay Gatsby. The book clues us in on their love story, “. . . Her mother had found her packing her bag one winter night to go to New York and say good-by to a soldier who was going overseas. She was effectually prevented, but she wasn’t on speaking terms with
It’s not like Daisy never loved Tom. She did. She just loved Gatsby more. But sadly no one had heard from Gatsby for weeks. Because of that she married Tom.
One of the most prominent examples of love in the novel is the love between Jay Gatsby and Daisy Buchanan. Gatsby's obsession with Daisy is both romantic and unrealistic, as he has created an idealized image of her in his mind that does not match reality. He believes that his love for Daisy can transcend time and space, and that he can reclaim their past relationship by becoming wealthy and powerful. However, his love for Daisy is also tragic, as it is based on a lie and ends in disillusionment and death. Daisy, on the other hand, seems to love Gatsby but is also torn between him and Tom, her husband.
“‘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.
Tom was not loving to begin with, but because he treated her badly and forced her into the relationship, Daisy felt the urge to then cheat on him with Gatsby. It is evident within this section of the story, that Tom is basing his behavior towards Daisy, on how his affair ended with Myrtle. During the story, when Myrtle dies, Tom is unfamiliar with how to handle the situation and is unfamiliar with how to treat Daisy. Although sad, yet true, it is present
She was a classy, wealthy woman, and she carried herself as such. Yes, Gatsby was wealthy, but he had to make his wealth, dishonestly at that. Daisy was born with it, so to him, Daisy was wealth and pursuing her was him pursuing his dream. Even after Daisy became married to Tom, Gatsby still wanted her. He knew she was unattainable, but he couldn’t help but fawn over her; she was the object of his hope.
Gatsby mentioned that she“never loved him” to Daisy when he and Tom were arguing over Daisy’s love, “she hesitated” once he said it (132). He wanted Daisy’s love so badly that he wouldn’t believe that she could love someone other than him, just as he never loved anyone else. His love for her drove him to become wealthy so that she may love him. He became obsessed with the idea that Daisy would be his
In The Great Gatsby, buy F. Scott Fitzgerald, Jay Gatsby is irrevocably in love with Daisy Buchanan. When he met her before he left for the war, he wanted nothing more than to stay and be with her and make a life for them. But Daisy's flawed mind made her unable to choose between Gatsby and Tom. Daisy should've picked Gatsby, because everything he did, was for her, to make her happy. His love and loyalty towards her is everlasting.
“Gatsby bought that house so that Daisy would be just across the bay” this shows just the extent Gatsby will go to just to be close to Daisy. In the first chapter, Gatsby’s name was brought up in a conversation, and Daisy all of a sudden perked up, it was like she has been waiting for someone to bring him up just so she can talk about him. But in chapter 5, when Gatsby and Daisy finally reunite, her memories of Gatsby are very cloudy and less abstract, than Gatsby's who's are so vivid. Unlike Gatsby, whose motivations are to win back Daisy, it’s hard to know what Daisy is thinking and how invested she is in the recent relationship, despite how openly emotional she is during their reunion. Maybe she’s just overcome with emotion due to reliving past feelings from when they first met.
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.
Devotion and Misconstructions Love is complicated, messy, and often difficult to understand. Jay Gatsby did love Daisy Buchanan, but never for who she actually was. In The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, during various periods of their lives Gatsby’s love for Daisy was never true. Not the whirlwind romance in the first month they knew each other, not in the years they were apart when everything Gatsby did was for Daisy, and not when they found each other again when Gatsby was stuck in the past.
Two Faced Lovers Throughout the novel of The Great Gatsby, it is shown that Jay Gatsby is in love with Daisy Buchanan, but it is not actually love that he feels. Does Gatsby love Daisy, or does he just love the idea of her? Gatsby is a rich man that always gets what he wants. He lives in a perfect world, but he feels like there was something missing. That thing was Daisy Buchanan.