Back in the early …show more content…
Daisy struggles with the clash between her old lover, Jay Gatsby, and her husband, Tom Buchanan, and decides to tell Gatsby, “I did love him once။but I loved you too.” (Fitzgerald 132) She had said this in fear of losing either or even both men, that were too narcissistic to begin with in the first place. Similar to that, Jane had faced a connection-breaking conflict with her father, who had been out of town but had received a letter on the inappropriate behavior that was exemplified from Jane. Although Jane was only doing what she thought was the right thing to do, by helping a poor girl that had fallen in the street when on strike get some comfortable clothes on and food in her stomach, her malicious father, in despise of those who were immigrants, kicks the girl out into the cold and dark streets and sends Jane to her room. “Hiring strikebreakers, hurting people, probably starving them too။” (Haddix 197). This comment from Jane that was directed towards her father settled the conflict with a tense ending of running out the door into the snowy weather and going to the Kensington’s house, without a