Daisy Buchanan In The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald

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From the beginning of the novel, The Great Gatsby, Daisy Buchanan, the wife of Tom Buchanan reveals herself to be a dishonest and selfish character. Daisy is a very innocent and charming woman, but inside she is not as simple as she represents herself around others. Nick says, “Her face was sad with bright things in it”(9), when he first sees her at her house for dinner. Nick discerns that she is not happy with Tom. Her face looks sad despite the “brightness” expressed on her face thus, Nick feels as if something is unclear. After dinner Daisy with Nick, which almost sounds like a desperate call: “Sophisticated, God I’m sophisticated” (17). Daisy is trying to convince herself that she is sophisticated and she has every knowledge there is to …show more content…

Daisy’s words are selfish in the following quote: “We don’t know each other very well… Even if were cousins you didn’t come to my wedding” (16) after this Nick adds how he wasn’t back from war yet. This quote portrays how Daisy is too selfish to realize that Nick was fighting in war and she was implying that her wedding meant more. In the first chapter Daisy is not consistent with her words she continues to add and change topics with Nick quickly for example when she says: “I’m glad it’s a girl. And I hope she’ll be a fool – that’s the best thing a girl can be in this world, a beautiful little fool” (21). A person who is a fool does not always know what is happening. Daisy is trying to say that she wishes her daughter’s a fool so she does not have to think about everything too much like she did. Mothers of young children are very caring and loving but in this case Daisy wishes for her daughter to be a fool instead of being intelligent which seems like the only way her daughter can be happy. Daisy does not want her daughter to face the same obstacles she did in her life, this whole time it always seems to be about Daisy and the way she spent most years with Tom and his affairs. She is trying to indicate that her daughter deserves someone better than a man like Tom; this quote also shows that Daisy’s relationship with Tom is not going well. Nick describes Daisy’s actions like the changing seasons in a year. “Daisy began to move again, with the season; suddenly she was again keeping half a dozen dates with half a dozen men, and drowsing asleep at down with the beads and chiffon…on the floor beside the bed” (151). Daisy does not seem to care about her family “half a dozen dates with half a dozen men”, she and Tom are both having affairs which does not lead them to a healthy relationship at this point she does not even remember she has a little girl. She wants to be in her

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