They are different because they are more similar.
No, Tom Buchanan did not kill George Wilson. George Wilson kills Gatsby in The Great Gatsby, believing that Gatsby was driving the car that killed his wife. Tom Buchanan reveals Gatsby's involvement to Wilson, but he is not directly responsible for George Wilson taking this action.
Myrtle Wilson is a character in The Great Gatsby who is married to George Wilson, the owner of a garage. She has an affair with Tom Buchanan, a wealthy man from East Egg. Myrtle represents the lower class and the destructive influence of wealth and materialism on people's lives in the novel.
Tom Buchanan's mistress in F. Scott Fitzgerald's "The Great Gatsby" is Myrtle Wilson. Myrtle is married to George Wilson, who owns a garage in the Valley of Ashes. George is depicted as a struggling mechanic who is unaware of his wife's affair with Tom.
No, George and Myrtle Wilson do not have children in F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel "The Great Gatsby." Myrtle is having an affair with Tom Buchanan, who is married to Daisy Buchanan. George suspects that he may not be the father of Myrtle's child but remains married to her.
George Wilson dies by suicide, shooting himself with a gun after learning about his wife Myrtle's affair with Tom Buchanan. He is devastated by Myrtle's death in a hit-and-run accident, which was caused by Daisy Buchanan driving Gatsby's car.
George Wilson believes that Jay Gatsby killed his wife, Myrtle Wilson, because he recognized Gatsby's car at the scene of the accident and because Tom Buchanan revealed Gatsby and Myrtle were having an affair.
The purpose of George Wilson is to reveal the vast gap between the rich and poor within society. He is the polar opposite of Tom Buchanan in that one is extremely wealthy and the other is living in poverty. Wilson is also a manipulation to make the reader dislike Tom further as his wife chooses to have an affair for money and status and views Wilson as a failure because he was never able to give her this. The famous quote 'the world and his mistress' epitomizes the corruption in society, exposed by George Wilson, Myrtle Wilson and Tom Buchanan.
Myrtle Wilson believes that she is of higher social status that what she really is. She seeks to leave George Wilson for Tom Buchanan and live a pampered and glamorous lifestyle.
Tom's mistress in "The Great Gatsby" is Myrtle Wilson, the wife of George Wilson. She carries on an adulterous relationship with Tom Buchanan, one of the main characters in the novel.
They are both overprotective with their wifes because Daisy is fooling around with Gatsby and Myrtle is with Tom. Tom and George both love their wifes no matter what and they don't like the fact that they are talking to another guy.
Gatsby's fate in The Great Gatsby was influenced by a variety of characters, including Tom Buchanan, Daisy Buchanan, and even Jay Gatsby himself. Ultimately, Gatsby's fate can be attributed to the moral emptiness of the society he lived in, where wealth and status were prioritized over personal integrity and genuine connections.
Myrtle Wilson was killed by Jay Gatsby's car, driven by Daisy Buchanan, but it was George Wilson who pulled the trigger, believing Gatsby to be the driver. This event occurs in F. Scott Fitzgerald's novel, "The Great Gatsby."