Saturday, March 16, 2019
Tom and Daisy Buchanan of The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald :: The Great Gatsby
During The Great Gatsby it was app arnt that tom turkey and Daisy had an unstable relationship. piece reading the novel, I questioned the sympathy behind the continuation of their relationship. Tom and Daisy are from the same world and are united by a background knowledge of bills, and in a bizarre way I think they readiness have bopd one another. Tom and Daisy both came from the upper cheek of society. Daisy married Tom because his house was covered with ivy. Tom was from the old money his family had been wealthy for many years. Daisy claims that she was in have intercourse with Gatsby, but he did not have the money she was expected to join. Therefore, when Tom was introduced to Daisy, she saw an opportunity to marry a person she could love and who was wealthy enough to provide the life sentence she was accustomed to. At the beginning, when Daisy is talking to Nick on the porch, Nicks wording was interesting. Nick talks about(predicate) the restless way her look fla shed, resembling Toms habit, and her whole performance pleased her because it represented their social rank in a rather secret society to which she and Tom belonged. Tom and Daisy play their roles in a rich, bored society, and the drama of it all is the reason that they do it. Daisy plays the air-headed, pretty wife, while Tom plays the hulking, brute of a man. They archetype they were a perfect combination of the ideal wealthy couple. Daisy has been brought up creation a pretty object. She was an object to Tom however, he did truly love her. When Toms mistress, Myrtle, called out Daisys name, Tom became outraged and strickle her. He felt it was permissible to have a mistress, yet he still honored Daisy by not allowing Myrtle to talk about her. Throughout the novel Tom manages to speak sensitively to Daisy. For example, when Tom and Daisy are in the kitchen eating chicken, he takes time to remind her of all the advert moments they have had together. I think that this scene shows that Tom really does love Daisy in his own way. Nick speaks of Tom and Daisy at the end of the novel. He talks about how they smashed people up and then pull back back into their money or their vast carelessness, or whatever it was that unploughed them together Nick points out the similarity between Tom and Daisys characters and attitudes about money.
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