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  2. Quick answer: In The Great Gatsby, Gatsby definitely thinks that he loves Daisy. This love that he feels drives his relentless pursuit of her attention and his desperate schemes to...

  3. Quick answer: In The Great Gatsby, Gatsby loves Daisy because he's an idealist, one of life's genuine romantics. He's fallen in love, not so much with Daisy,...

  4. Gatsby fell in love with Daisy and the wealth she represents, and she with him (though apparently not to the same excessive extent), but he had to leave for the war and by the time he returned to the US in 1919, Daisy has married Tom Buchanan.

    • Is Gatsby in love with Daisy?1
    • Is Gatsby in love with Daisy?2
    • Is Gatsby in love with Daisy?3
    • Is Gatsby in love with Daisy?4
    • Is Gatsby in love with Daisy?5
  5. In The Great Gatsby the relationship between Gatsby and Daisy could be love or it could be a one-sided obsession. Is Daisy in love with Gatsby, or is it because of their past? Gatsby and Daisy had a past together.

    • Fictional character biography
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    Partially based on Fitzgeralds wife, Zelda, Daisy is a beautiful young woman from Louisville, Kentucky. She is Nicks cousin and the object of Gatsbys love. As a young debutante in Louisville, Daisy was extremely popular among the military officers stationed near her home, including Jay Gatsby. Gatsby lied about his background to Daisy, claiming to ...

    After 1919, Gatsby dedicated himself to winning Daisy back, making her the single goal of all of his dreams and the main motivation behind his acquisition of immense wealth through criminal activity. To Gatsby, Daisy represents the paragon of perfectionshe has the aura of charm, wealth, sophistication, grace, and aristocracy that he longed for as a...

    Like Zelda Fitzgerald, Daisy is in love with money, ease, and material luxury. She is capable of affection (she seems genuinely fond of Nick and occasionally seems to love Gatsby sincerely), but not of sustained loyalty or care. She is indifferent even to her own infant daughter, never discussing her and treating her as an afterthought when she is ...

  6. Daisy fell in love with Lieutenant Jay Gatsby, who was stationed at the base near her home. Though she chose to marry Tom after Gatsby left for the war, Daisy drank herself into numbness the night before her wedding, after she received a letter from Gatsby.

  7. Gatsby is in love with Daisy, but he loves her more for her status and what she represents to him (old money, wealth, the American Dream). In fact, Gatsby is willfully ignorant of Daisy's emotions later in the novel: he lurks outside the Buchanans' house at the end of Chapter 7, convinced that Daisy still intends to run away with him, while ...

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