How Does Daisy Keep Money In The Great Gatsby

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In the novel, The Great Gatsby, Daisy makes the decision to stay with Tom, instead of running off with the "love of her life" Gatsby.The entire book was centered around Gatsby's dream to be with Daisy, And Gatsby did everything in his power to win her back and make her completely erase Tom out of the picture. Gatsby and Daisy's relationship were a charade and it had a dull ending. What used to be a relationship that people dreamed of having, ended up as a situation a person would never want to be in. Daisy chooses to be with Tom because he has that image of wealth and the extravagant lifestyle she wants, and Gatsby is not a part of that fantasy because he is unrealistic about his expectations of Daisy. Jay Gatsby had been not always …show more content…
All people ever wanted to do was strike it rich and live largely. Money and social class were all that cared about. Thus, creating the New Money vs. Old Money facade. People who have old money grew up with money, they never lived their lives without money. Old Money is the highest class of the social class. People who have "new money" are people who struck it rich from the 1920s boom or are bootleggers. Despite both being filthy rich, Tom, and Gatsby have several fights throughout the book revolving around Daisy and "whether you are old money or new money." Gatsby was just as rich as Tom and Daisy, but Tom still made endless efforts to make Gatsby seem like he is below him and he will never be good enough for Daisy. Money was all that people cared about. Especially Daisy, her whole life was surrounded by money. Even "her voice was full of money". Gatsby and Nick had both realized this about Daisy because Nick states that she has an "indiscreet voice". Daisy's "inexhaustible charm that rose and fell" was what showed her money filled life. She was always the "the golden girl...." (p.g. 120). Gatsby and Nick knew that Daisy was sucked into this world of materialistic views, and Daisy would never be attracted to the real Gatsby. Notice how throughout the entire novel, Gatsby never tells Daisy about his past. Gatsby does not tell Daisy this because he probably assumes that Daisy will no longer be interested in him. Daisy was always …show more content…
Retrospect to Daisy, she too did not know what she genuinely wanted either. With her incapability to make difficult choices she was unsure whether or not she should continue her affair with Gatsby or stay with her husband Tom. Fitzgerald message surrounding Daisy's decision is what truly makes The Great Gatsby a tragedy. Gatsby wants what he can not have, but he always thought that bigger was better. Gatsby's mansion and parties are what made other people think that he was great, but that's all they truly cared about, was his parties and his mansion. Gatsby always wanted to be great but did not know how to be great. Daisy was a big part of his mission to become great. Ever since Gatsby first met Daisy, he knew that she was the ideal woman. She had wealth and beauty. Gatsby was so focused on getting all things that he thought was necessary to have a happy life, that he did not even realize that that is not what he really wanted. Daisy also did not really want to be with Gatsby. She values Tom because he is the father of her child and she would not want to cause a huge scene and divorce her husband. She did not even think about leaving her husband until Gatsby tricked her into thinking that that is what she wanted. Neither of them wanted that to happen. The only thing that Daisy and Gatsby genuinely wanted was happiness. The affair that they