Gatsby disappeared after meeting Tom Buchanan because he realized that his dream of being with Daisy was unattainable and that she would always choose Tom over him. He also saw that their reunion was causing more harm than good, so he decided to remove himself from the situation.
Jay Gatsby, Nick Carraway, Daisy Buchanan, Tom Buchanan are the main characters
Gatsby meets Daisy Buchanan for the first time in about five years at Nick Carraway's house. He had doubts about ever reuniting with her after their initial relationship.
Daisy Buchanan's husband in "The Great Gatsby" is Tom Buchanan.
They meet on a train to New York as Myrtle was visiting her sister. Myrtle was infatuated by the way Tom looked, and neither of them could stop looking at each other. She was so fixed on him that Myrtle did not even realize that she was getting a taxi with him and not a train car.
The narrator, Nick Carraway, is cousin to Daisy Buchanan and becomes friends with her husband, Tom Buchanan, during the course of the story. Nick also serves as the intermediary between Daisy and Gatsby, who is in love with her.
Nick has a short affair with Jordan Baker in "The Great Gatsby." Jordan is a professional golfer and a friend of Daisy Buchanan.
Attended Yale with Nick Carraway
In F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel "The Great Gatsby", Nick Carraway, Jordan Baker, Jay Gatsby, Tom Buchanan, and Daisy Buchanan stay at the Plaza Hotel in New York City.
After Gatsby's death in "The Great Gatsby," Nick Carraway drives Gatsby's car back to Long Island accompanied by Gatsby's father. Tom Buchanan and Daisy Buchanan take a separate car back home. Daisy is driving Gatsby's death car with Tom and Nick in it, while Gatsby's father follows in a separate car.
Nick meets a variety of people at Gatsby's party, including the host himself, Jay Gatsby, as well as Jordan Baker, Tom Buchanan, Daisy Buchanan, and other guests who are part of New York's upper class society. The party is attended by socialites, businesspeople, and those looking to indulge in the lavish entertainment and atmosphere.
Gatsby's funeral is attended only by Nick Carraway, a few of Gatsby's former business associates, one of Gatsby's party guests, and the minister who had originally officiated the funeral for Gatsby's father. Daisy Buchanan, Tom Buchanan, Jordan Baker, and Meyer Wolfsheim do not attend the funeral.
In "The Great Gatsby," Nick becomes embarrassed during tea when he mistakenly introduces Tom Buchanan's mistress, Myrtle, to Jordan Baker. This faux pas causes tension and awkwardness among the guests, highlighting Nick's discomfort with the superficial and morally ambiguous world of the wealthy elite.