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The Great Gatsby By F. Scott Fitzgerald

Good Essays

Jordan Baker informs Nick Carraway that Jay Gatsby is still in love with Daisy Buchanan. Gatsby and Daisy were in a relationship before she was married to Tom Buchanan, which eventually had to end when Gatsby went off to war. Half a decade later, Gatsby has situated himself in West Egg to be close to Daisy. Jordan, acting as a messenger, tells Nick that Gatsby would like him to invite Daisy over for tea, where Gatsby would then surprise and join them. Nick is baffled that Gatsby would go to the trouble of throwing extraneous parties for the past five years, holding onto the sliver of hope that Daisy may one day attend one. The major theme in this chapter is love. In this quote, Nick displays how much love Gatsby still has for Daisy. Is fawning over a lost love for so long romantic? Or is it pathetic? Daisy has moved on from Gatsby by marrying a wealthy man and having a child. But is Daisy happy with her life? Earlier in the chapter, Daisy gets drunk and proclaims, “Tell 'em Daisy 's change ' her mine. Say: 'Daisy 's change ' her mine!” (76). Despite confessing what appear to be her true feelings, she becomes Mrs. Buchanan. While Gatsby may not know how miserable Daisy is in her marriage, as well as the fact that Tom is having an affair, he is still optimistic about rekindling their love. In the 1920s, when The Great Gatsby was published, romanticism was an important aspect. The extremes Gatsby goes to, such as buying across the bay from Daisy and Tom, as well as

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