Daisy's Death In The Great Gatsby

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Being in the wrong place at the wrong time can get you killed. In the novel, The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald, the main character Gatsby is determined to win the love of Daisy. Gatsby does everything in his power to impress Daisy by displaying all his new wealth. Daisy only wants to be surrounded by the rich and live an extravagant lavish life. With the hope to attain love with Daisy again, Gatsby changes who he is, and where he lives. Nothing will stop Gatsby from trying to be with Daisy, including her husband, Tom. Although a murderer can be responsible for their victim's death, the events and actions by someone else leading up to the murder can ultimately be accountable for it. An obsession for someone can push a person to do anything …show more content…

Gatsby is madly in love with Daisy and believes that she truly loves him back. Gatsby “wanted nothing less of Daisy than that she should go to Tom and say: "I never loved you."” (125). He wants to be the only one Daisy loves, he does not want to share her love with Tom. Although Tom and Daisy have been together for four years, Gatsby desires Daisy to ignore the past four years and suddenly be with him. His fixation on Daisy causes a series of events leading to his murder. Daisy, Gatsby, Tom, Nick and Jordan all travel to New York City together one hot afternoon. With the heat, tensions are rising between Tom and Gatsby as they argue who Daisy loves. After insistent bickering, Daisy admits that She “Did love him once- but [she] love [Gatsby] too.” (132). Gatsby travels to the city for Daisy and she destroys him by revealing her love for Tom as well. Every action Gatsby takes since first meeting Daisy is to grasp her attention. Now she discloses that her love is not entirely for him, but shared. If Daisy discussed this before, then Gatsby would not have been so attached to her, and would not have been in the city at the time. Daisy simply could have told Gatsby she is not interested in only him. Daisy with “her frightened eyes told that whatever intentions, whatever courage, she had had, were definitely gone” (chapter 7) from a future with Gatsby. Daisy leads him on by spending countless hours with him and even inviting him to her house and to the city. All along Gatsby believes Daisy is honestly in love with him, but she cannot and will not give up what she has with Tom. Gatsby is blamed for hitting and killing Myrtle, when in actuality it is Daisy. To seek revenge, Wilson, Myrtle’s husband murders Gatsby. All this could have been avoided if Daisy was sincere with Gatsby and confessed that she never would leave Tom and her current opulent lifestyle with him. Even after Gatsby’s murder,

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