Daisy Buchanan In The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald

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In the novel The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Daisy Buchanan is the wife of the very wealthy Thomas Buchanan. They are Old Money and live in East Egg on Long Island. Daisy’s best friend, Jordan Baker, stays with them for a little while in East Egg during the summer of 1922 and her cousin, Nicholas Carraway, moves into West Egg, right across the bay from her. Daisy, despite her luxurious life, is not content because her husband is cheating on her. She uses this knowledge as a justification of her actions because she is a self-absorbed, vacuous socialite whose decisions lead to the destruction of both Jay Gatsby, her ex-boyfriend, and Myrtle Wilson, a perfect stranger to her. Daisy and Gatsby dated before Daisy met Tom. Daisy was under …show more content…

One day when Nick, Jordan, Tom, Gatsby and her were bored at home, she suggested that they go to New York. They ended up going and getting a hotel suite to have a small party. There, Tom and Gatsby confronted each other, much to Daisy’s discomfort. “They talk about the possibility of her [Daisy] leaving her brutish beau Tom” (Baker) and Daisy burst into tears and claimed she loved them both, at least at one point in her life. She ran out of the room and got back in the car, Gatsby joining her. Gatsby later told Nick that “she [Daisy] was very nervous and she thought it would steady her to drive” (Fitzgerald, 143). At this point, Daisy committed manslaughter. Myrtle Wilson, thinking Tom was driving the car and was going to rescue her from her husband, jumps out in front of the car. Instead of stopping, “Daisy stepped on it [the gas]” (Fitzgerald, 144). Myrtle is killed on impact, which destroys Tom once he found out his lover was murdered. Tom, believing that Gatsby was the one driving the vehicle, informs George Wilson, Myrtle’s now-widowed husband, that it was Gatsby who killed her. George then goes and shoots Gatsby before killing himself, making Daisy responsible for three physical

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