Love, with its ambiguous meanings and interpretations, causes people to behave in strange ways. When someone feels the warmth and intense affection for another they will let nothing hinder them from all of the splendors that love possesses. As Jay Gatsby displays throughout the novel, The Great Gatsby, he will do anything and everything to rekindle the love he had with Daisy including changing his social status to please her. "Then wear the gold hat, if that will move her; If you can bounce high, bounce high for her too, Till she cry, "Lover, gold-hatted, high-bouncing lover, I must have you."" Thomas Parke D"Invilliers Jay Gatsby truly lives to the melody of this quote by throwing immaculate parties and owning a huge mansion. Gatsby, a product of nineteen twenties society, his values lied in the easy money brought on by prosperity and material excess. Gatsby, in order to make his dream of loving and being loved by Daisy reality, he resorts to wearing the "gold hat" and "bouncing high" to minimize their difference in social statuses. This difference is the sole thing preventing Daisy and Gatsby from their love.
Throughout the novel, Gatsby waves his gold hat in order to impress Daisy. He tries to show her that he is no longer the poor man that she could not be with in their previous years. Gatsby is motivated to become prosperous in order to be economically acceptable to Daisy. "Gatsby bought that house so that Daisy would be just across the bay (83)," Gatsby's mansion, a sprawling Gothic monstrosity, was bought so he could see the green light of Daisy's dock. Gatsby throws lavish parties for which people long to be invited. Gatsby's parties are almost unbelievably luxurious: guests marvel over his Rolls- Royce, his swimming pool, his beach, crates of fresh oranges and lemons, buffet tents in the gardens overflowing with a feast, and a live orchestra playing under the stars. However, he doesn't throw these parties because he enjoys the social event, as he often doesn't attend his own parties.