The Great Gatsby, a Paragon in Love With Another
Gatsby is in love with the idea of Daisy more than Daisy herself to a great extent. Gatsby is the paragon of someone with an American Dream. While Daisy changed and had a new life with Tom. The idea of the golden girl that was alluring, vain, and unattainable that was represented by Daisy was more sought after than Daisy herself. This intense love for what Daisy represented was the biggest reason for his death, more than his love for the actual person. Gatsby’s ambition for a better, wealthier life caused him to have an intense love for Daisy. Gatsby’s travels with Cody on his yacht made him yearn for wealth and luxury. His pursuit of wealth led him to fall in love with Daisy because she represented
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Gatsby embodied the American Dream, and his dream was to get Daisy. However, he dreamed too far, as he was after someone desirable, conceited, and unattainable. To Gatsby, Daisy embodied the golden girl. The expectations that Gatsby had for Daisy could never deliver. Throughout the novel, Daisy does not reciprocate the intense love that Gatsby gives her. As soon as they broke up while Gatsby was in Europe, Daisy moved on, but Gatsby stayed in the past. To Daisy, Gatsby was a memory that happened to come back, not important. To Gatsby, Daisy was everything, when the two interacted for the first time in five years at Nick’s house, Daisy’s last memory of Gatsby was clouded and abstract, but Gatsby knew they last saw each other “Five years next November,” (Fitzgerald 87). When they talked after a five-year gap, Gatsby transformed into a man radiating with well-being while Daisy only cried. The two may have been lovers once, but Daisy moved on, while the self-absorbed Gatsby stayed in the past thinking she didn’t. Gatsby also proved how he was reaching for his dream by showing off his expensive shirts. It displayed his wealth and how he wanted to share that with his dream girl, who reacted to the sight of the shirts with tears of regret. Daisy saw how she could have obtained immense wealth had she stayed with Gatsby. While Daisy represented Gatsby’s dreams in his view, she was real, and she was human. The real