In chapter 7, Daisy is driving and hits Myrtle and kills her. What is ironic about Daisy killing myrtle is that Daisys husbands mistresses is myrtle and she doesnt realize that she killed her husbnds lover. Daisy doesnt even stop when she kills myrtle
Tom did not buy Myrtle a dog in 'The Great Gatsby.' It was Tom's mistress, Myrtle Wilson, who got the dog as a gift from a character named McKee. This incident occurs in Chapter 2 of the book on page 29.
Tom punches Myrtle in the Great Gatsby in Chapter 2. This occurs during a heated argument at the apartment Tom keeps for his affair with Myrtle.
Daisy hits Myrtle Wilson with a car in The Great Gatsby. Daisy is driving Gatsby's car when the accident occurs.
In Chapter 2 of "The Great Gatsby," we see Tom Buchanan's affair with Myrtle Wilson, a working-class woman. Tom and Nick go to New York City, where they meet Myrtle and have a party in her apartment. The chapter highlights the contrast between the wealthy and the lower class, as well as the theme of infidelity and deception.
Myrtle Wilson was in her early thirties when she was killed in The Great Gatsby.
In the Great Gatsby, Myrtle Wilson's hometown is called The Valley of Ashes. The Great Gatsby was written by Scott Fitzgerald.
In chapter 2 of "The Great Gatsby," Nick attends a party at Tom Buchanan's apartment in New York City. Tom's mistress, Myrtle Wilson, is also present, and the party becomes rowdy and chaotic. Tom and Myrtle argue, and Tom becomes violent. The chapter highlights the moral decay and excess of the wealthy characters in the novel.
No. Myrtle was Nick's wife but Tom fancies her. Myrtle is Tom's lover
Myrtle Wilson is Gatsby's secret mistress and George Wilson is Myrtle's actual wife. George and Myrtle live in the valley of ashes. George Wilson shoots Gatsby because he thinks that Myrtle cheated on him with Gatsby.
Myrtle and George Wilson were married for 12 years in "The Great Gatsby."
Gatsby, and then Nick
In the novel "The Great Gatsby" by F. Scott Fitzgerald, Tom Buchanan tells George Wilson that Gatsby was driving the car that struck and killed Myrtle Wilson in Chapter 7. This revelation occurs on pages 139-140 in the Scribner paperback edition.