Preview

How Lust Drove the Great Gatsby

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1000 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
How Lust Drove the Great Gatsby
How Lust Drove The Great Gatsby by Garrett Smith
Lust is any intense desire or craving for self gratification and excitement. Lust can mean strictly sexual lust, although it takes on many other forms. In The Great Gatsby, lust captivates the characters of the book. It transfigures into equally dangerous but different poisons; it becomes not only lust for sex but also lust for power and acceptance. Set in the 1920s, The Great Gatsby is a prime example of the new American dream. People begin to seek out pleasure and power, instead of individualism and happiness. Wealth is easy to come by and is used as a tool to obtain other desires.
Lust makes its first appearance at the end of Chapter I, when Nick Carraway sees Jay Gatsby out on his lawn at night. “He was content to be alone he stretched out his arms toward the dark water in a curious way, and far as I was from him I could have sworn he was trembling. Involuntarily I glanced seaward and distinguished nothing except a single green light, minute and far away.” Gatsby was reaching towards something he could never have, but wanted so badly. He was reaching for Daisy, his first and only love, who married a rich and influential man by the name of Tom Buchanan, when Gatsby was off at war. Tom used his power and social standing to coerce Daisy into marrying him. Later on, Gatsby tries to do the same.
Gatsby does everything in his power to get Daisy back. He acts heroically in times of war. He goes to Oxford and later, amasses a fortune to be used as a bargaining tool for Daisy‘s love. Then, he buys a magnificent mansion across the bay from Daisy, and throws eloquent parties, for the sole purpose of catching Daisy’s attention, and proving his social status. Eventually, he uses Nick to act as match-maker and set up a meeting between the two of them. After an awkward reunion, their love is re-kindled, and they begin a short affair. Both Daisy and Gatsby seek out this pleasure, with no regard for others. However, they are

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Better Essays

    He tries seeing her through other people, hoping to make it seem like a coincidence when they meet up. That is why he denied the idea that Jordan Baker gave him about inviting Daisy to lunch. Instead, he incorporates Nick into his scheme. He asks Nick to invite Daisy to tea at his house. While she is there, Gatsby would go over to Nick’s house to see her, acting as if he had no idea of her whereabouts. He wanted Nick to have her over at his house so that he could show her his house. In Gatsby’s mind, he believes that he needs to show off in order to impress Daisy and to win her back. He shows off his car, his house, his butler, and every other detail inside and outside his house. It seems to work for Daisy. As she looks at his shirts, though, she begins to cry. “’They’re such beautiful shirts,’ she sobbed, her voice muffled in the thick folds. ‘It makes me sad because I’ve never seen-such beautiful shirts before’” (Gatsby 92). Daisy isn’t crying because the shirts are beautiful, though. She is crying because she realizes everything that she could have had, she cannot have anymore. Gatsby, on the other hand, still has not come to realizations that he and Daisy being together is…

    • 962 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Through the book the “Great Gatsby” there is a lot of love and with the love its affairs. During the entire story there was an affair going on. The main character is Gatsby and he gets caught in the middle of the whole situation. Between Tom and Daisy.…

    • 226 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Gatsby used his wealth to throw parties so he could try to get Daisy’s attention and impress her. He did end up impressing her. However, because Daisy was married to her husband Tom she could not be with Gatsby. Tom found out about Daisy’s affair and confronted Gatsby. Gatsby insisted that Daisy never loved Tom but Daisy could not deny her love for her husband. It showed that Gatsby was extremely naive to believe that Daisy would love him to a certain extent as to say that she never loved her own husband. Gatsby believed that he could easily win her back simply by showing up with his wealth, but he was wrong.…

    • 461 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Nick admires his motivation and drive to get Daisy back. Nick also likes Gatsby’s unwavering devotion towards Daisy, including taking the blame for Myrtle's death. Nick believes in Gatsby and wants him to get Daisy back. Even when Nick first gets invited to his party, Nick respects Gatsby unlike most of the other partygoers. Nick found out that the only reason Gatsby kept having these parties was for him to be able to meet Daisy. Nick realized the amount of work Gatsby was going through to win Daisy back. Nick is the only character that realizes Gatsby’s actual…

    • 541 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    He found out that his next door neighbor Nick Carraway had connection with Daisy. Gatsby invites Nick to lunch so that they could get to know one another. He informs Nick on his past about being in love with Daisy the woman of his dreams and then getting called to fight in World War I.…

    • 901 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    The Great Gatsby is a novel of hopelessly romantic love. The story presents to us the troubling effects of love and affection. It portrayed the corruption in the 1920’s through its relationships and business. The Great Gatsby had grabbed the attention of millions of readers, eventually leading it to be converted to a movie script. Although, the novel was converted into a film, there were some conflicting, along with resembling, actions of characters, plots, and events throughout the story.…

    • 673 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    He throws lots of big parties to attract Daisy’s attention. Additionally, after five years being separated from Daisy, what Gatsby worries about when he meets her is not whether she misses him but whether his mansion looks well and the first place he wants her to visit is his splendid house (2). He keeps showing off his belongings and asking Daisy to check whether she is impressed. When “he [revalues] everything in his house according to the measure of response it [draws] from her well-loved eyes” (Fitzgerald 98), it is clear that Daisy’s recognition of his achievements concerns him the most and Gatsby overestimates the importance of material passion in his relationship with Daisy. In the end of the story, when Gatsby is willing to scarify his life-work and fame to save Daisy from being a murderer, this event is argued to be an evidence of love. However, as he desires her in the same way he is in pursuit of the glory of success and Daisy is only a supreme object helping him to strengthen his achievements, the act of protecting her is merely to protect the thing he longs for in his whole…

    • 501 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Gatsby ends up confirming Tom’s suspicions of Daisy and Him having an affair saying that Daisy loved Gatsby and not Tom. This shows that men’s love for someone can blind them from recognizing that they are showing ignorance. Gatsby thought that by having Daisy in his life again and saw that he was rich that he was automatically the only one Daisy loved. His ego gets in the way because he thinks he is victorious by assuming that Daisy only loves him. When in reality she loves both Gatsby and Tom, and Gatsby can’t accept that. He wants to be the only wants Daisy to spend the rest of his life…

    • 1909 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    He fell in love with her as a young man and spends several years trying to make in to high society. Daisy comes from a wealthy family and she could never marry anyone below her. Gatsby knows this and has dedicated his entire life to becoming a successful and wealthy man to gain Daisy's acceptance. He throws lavish and expensive parties to see if Daisy will come to one of them. He buys an extravagant mansion across the river from Daisy's house just to be near her. When he finally is reunited with Daisy, it's as if they had never been separated and their love is still alive. Gatsby sees Daisy as he wants to see her: beautiful, innocent, and perfect. But in reality, Daisy has changed. She is now a wife and mother. At the end of the story Gatsby finally sees the true Daisy. He realizes that "her voice is full of money." Daisy is materialistic, fake, and not the kind of woman he wants her to be. Daisy was driving Gatsby's car when she hits and kills Myrtle. To protect Daisy and his dream, Gatsby does not turn Daisy in. Myrtle's husband kills Gatsby because he assumed it was Gatsby who hit his wife. Gatsby's demise comes from his destructive dream for Daisy's…

    • 1014 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    He believes she is obligated to him and only him. Gatsby also believes there is no conflict between himself and Daisy that could arise. This however is very untrue. Gatsby doesn’t realize in a way that Daisy is married or at least thinks she married to save herself. She admits however that she loves both of the men she is deeply involved with, Gatsby and Tom. She states, “I did love him once- but I loved you too”(140). Gatsby has to prove himself to Daisy with material possessions because that is all he has now. He doesn’t really have a respectable position in society although it is upbeat all the time. Nick says, “While we admired he brought more and the soft rich heap mounted higher- shirts with stripes and scrolls and plaids in coral and apple green and lavender and faint orange with monograms of Indian blue” (98). Gatsby doesn’t realize none of these things will change the way she feels for her husband. Gatsby’s love doesn’t seem to be enough for her. Daisy wants more then what he can offer her. Gatsby might have the feeling of proving himself to her but this won’t change what has already happened. Daisy loves Tom now and no real material can change that sadly for…

    • 954 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    At the beginning of the novel Gatsby’s main problem is trying to be able to find the chance to meet with Daisy so that he can win her back. Gatsby reveals to Nick after befriending him that he had been in a relationship with Daisy and had even moved to West Egg to his mansion so that he would be able to be closer to her. The parties he threw were done in hope that they would attract Daisy to come over and give him the chance to see her after so many years but it never occurred. Gatsby also could not go over and try to see Daisy in person because of his own hesitance to do so and because she was a married woman now with a child. There was no way for him to get in contact with the woman he had been waiting for up until the moment that Nick arrived…

    • 363 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    It takes a great man to have that kind of love for one person. Even though Daisy didn't deserve Gatsby's love, he was loyal to her to the end. Daisy was both the main cause of Gatsby's greatness, and also the only cause of foolishness in his life. His absolute love and devotion for her is what destroyed him, even before his death. Gatsby and Nick both served as officers in the war and he told Nick "Then the war came ... it was a great relief, and I tried very hard to die ... " (66) Gatsby knew he wasn't good enough for Daisy and death would've been an easy way out. However, Gatsby survived the war, and with honors as well. Even during war times Gatsby demonstrated his greatness in being a superb soldier. Upon his return to America, he concentrated on winning Daisy back. Gatsby's life between the war and when he's introduced in the book is quite vague. It is known later that he at some point went into business with a man named Meyer Wolfsheim. Wolfsheim was a man with a shady past and possible connections with the Mafia. Gatsby, however, hides his connections quite well even if the stories do fly. Wolfsheim claims to have made Gatsby the man that he was. Throughout the book Gatsby is a gracious host and yet a mysterious one. He is rarely seen at his extravagant parties but doesn't really seem to mind that he misses them. It is found out later that he only held the parties to see if Daisy would…

    • 1244 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Fitzgerald expresses unrequited love in his novel by using tone in an optimistic way, almost foolishly. Jay Gatsby pursues Daisy Buchanan with a passion and is unrelenting in his advances. He flashes his wealth and affluence any opportunity he can so he can seem worthy of Daisy.…

    • 677 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    What Gatsby is doing is absolutely pathetic, he’s manipulating her by doing all those things when they get reunited with each other. He is confused on what he wants, he is confusing Daisy too. Daisy has a husband, Tom, and a daughter with Tom. Tom, may have cheated on Daisy but that doesn’t give Gatsby an open door to tear apart a family. Gatsby has this extravagant life and can literally have whoever he wants but he wants someone who is already married and has a…

    • 614 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    People sometimes may confuse their desire for love with obsession. In “The Great Gatsby”, Gatsby is really obsessed with Daisy. He bought a house across the bay; he had a lot of clippings of her stored, and changed his whole life to be with her. That shows how much someone is obsessed with another person. Gatsby’s obsession with Daisy causes him lots of misfortune on the long run.…

    • 444 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays