How Does Daisy End In The Great Gatsby

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In the 1920’s novel The Great Gatsby , F. Scott Fitzgerald describes the economic, and social issues that dominated the roaring twenties, through the telling of a thwarted love triangle between Daisy Buchanan, Tom Buchanan and Jay Gatsby. One of the main ideas throughout the story was whether Daisy would choose Tom with their unfaithful marriage, or Gatsby with their five year long love story. However in the end, Gatsby is unable to win back his long lost love, and Daisy ends up staying with her husband Tom. This confuses many readers, and persistently brings up the question as to why Daisy would makes this choice in the end of the novel. Although Daisy loved Gatsby, in the end she ultimately chooses Tom for security, and the fact that Gatsby …show more content…

For instance Nick Carraway recalls a insincere conversation he had with Daisy to which she gave him an “absolute smirk on her lovely face” upholding her “membership” in a “secret society to which she and Tom belonged” (22). Ultimately Daisy choosing Tom, is what “secured” her a spot in this highly regarded society exclusively for those who came from “old money”. Therefore, Daisy is not willing to leave Tom for Gatsby, as it would result in her not belonging to that superior society and she is unwilling to sacrifice that to be with Gatsby. Of course growing up apart of the upper class society, it is very unlikely that Daisy would leave this renowned society for an “outsider” who lives in west egg filled with “raw vigor” and “too obtrusive fate” who experience “shortcut from nothing to nothing.” Similarly Nick notes that, Tom and Daisy weren’t necessarily “happy...or weren’t unhappy” despite the death of both their lovers, yet there was an “unmistakable natural intimacy” and “anybody would say they are conspiring together” (145). Overall, their marriage is the most important thing to them because it reassures their position in the “old money” aristocracy, and provides them with security in terms of social stability. For the most part, despite being is a marriage full of infidelities and misery, Daisy is unwilling to leave this lavish lifestyle for a shot at