In Chapter 4 of The Great Gatsby Jordan reveals Daisy’s whole life from age eighteen to her day of marriage with Tom. Nick learns that Gatsby and Daisy met during the war and had promised to wait for each other. Instead, Daisy met Tom and decided to marry the next year. The day before the wedding she gets highly intoxicated and tells Jordan to call off the wedding because she was making a mistake. She had gotten a letter from Gatsby and fell in love all over again. “She wouldn’t let go of the letter. She took it into the tub with her and squeezed it up into a wet ball and only let me leave it in the soap dish when she saw that it was coming to pieces like snow,” (Fitzgerald 81). Unfortunately, Jordan allows the wedding to go on. Gatsby’s love letter meant so much because he has waited for Daisy like he promised he would. Jordan disregards that, so the phrase “She’s just waiting for that one to take her hand and shake her up,” from the song relates because she believed Daisy would not get far with Gatsby since they did not know each other anymore and his infatuation with her is not enough to keep her happy. This concludes what Jordan has to say about Gatsby’s feelings for …show more content…
The Great Gatsby is a classic novel that represents the “American Dream” from the 1920’s. Everything from that time period in the book has a symbol. The main character, Gatsby, symbolizes the typical American and his love for Daisy is the obsession with reaching a nearly impossible goal. The “American Dream” is seen when Gatsby breaks down and finally tells everyone about his affair with Daisy and how long he has been chasing her. Additionally, it is also recognized when Jay Gatsby waits outside of Daisy’s house for reassurance that she is alright after the death of Myrtle Wilson but is turned down for the last, and final, time. Finally, it is represented in the scene where Jordan tells Nick about Daisy’s past and how Gatsby’s love for her was not right because they did not know each other like they did years ago. Meaning, you can not chase a dream if you do not know what it is. “So we beat on, boats against the current, borne back ceaselessly into the past,” (Fitzgerald