Initially Tom is 'a sturdy straw haired man of thirty, with a rather hard mouth...a supercilious manner...arrogant eyes...[and] a cruel body'. Tom is described to be 'one of those men who reach such an acute limit of excellence at twenty-one that everything afterwards savours anti-climax'.
Daisy is initially described to have a face that is 'sad and lovely with bright things in it, bright eyes and a bright passionate mouth'
But towards the end of the novel a shift in perception can be seen . Although Tom and Daisy's outward appearance has not change, Nick views then as 'careless people Tom and Daisy, they smashed up things and creatures and then retreated back into their vast carelessness, or whatever it was that kept them together, and let other people clean up the mess they made...'
Nick describes Tom and Daisy as "careless" in F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel "The Great Gatsby." This term reflects their lack of consideration for the consequences of their actions on others and their own lives.
Nick Carraway was renting a cottage across the bay from Tom and Daisy Buchanan. Daisy and he were second cousins once removed. Tom and he were Yale graduates.
In the end, Nick finds people like Daisy and Tom careless, and they can hide their consquences with their huge wealth.
Nick is Daisy's cousin, and he and Tom went to college together.
They're cousins.
Nick knows Daisy and Tom Buchanan in "The Great Gatsby" because Daisy is Nick's cousin. He meets Tom through Daisy, as Tom is her husband.
Nick knows Daisy from her and his cousin's childhood. They are cousins. Nick first becomes acquainted with Tom when he is invited to their home for dinner. Tom is Daisy's husband.
Jordan Baker plays the piano when Gatsby, Nick, and Daisy are in Tom and Daisy's house.
Tom's having an affair and Daisy knows it, while Daisy is seeing Gatsby.
Nick observes a tense conversation between Tom and Daisy in the kitchen, where Tom is openly flirting with another woman in front of Daisy. Daisy seems uncomfortable and unhappy, but doesn't confront Tom about his behavior. This scene highlights the strained relationship between Tom and Daisy, and hints at Tom's disrespect for Daisy.
The narrator, Nick Carraway, knows Tom Buchanan because they were at Yale together, and he knows Daisy Buchanan because she is Tom's wife and they are cousins.
Tom's having an affair and Daisy knows it.
Gatsby tells Tom that Daisy never loved him and that she has always loved Gatsby instead. He confronts Tom about his mistreatment of Daisy and insists that Daisy will leave Tom for Gatsby.
Nick asks Daisy not to bring her husband, Tom Buchanan, to tea with Jay Gatsby because he knows Gatsby still has feelings for Daisy and having Tom there might make the reunion awkward.
She tells him that Tom is cheating on Daisy with another woman.
In "The Great Gatsby," Tom Buchanan is married to Daisy Buchanan, who is the cousin of Nick Carraway (the narrator). Jay Gatsby is a former lover of Daisy's and his pursuit of her drives much of the plot. Tom and Daisy have a daughter together named Pammy.
Tom and Daisy come from old money and are both motivated by self-preservation and maintaining their social status. They are wealthy and occupy a high social position, with Tom being an aristocrat and Daisy coming from a wealthy southern family. On the other hand, Nick comes from a middle-class background in the midwest and is motivated by a desire for self-improvement and a search for honesty and authenticity. Nick works in the bond business and holds moral values that differ from those of Tom and Daisy.