Pammy is Daisy and Tom's daughter.
Gatsby was surprised by the fact that Daisy has a child as he saw her as a daydream rather than a woman. The main character was deeply in love with a dream girl who barely had flesh. So, she could not possibly be associated with such earthly aspects as childbearing.
Daisy assumes that he is only pretending, and that he is actually talking to Myrtle. While Tom is out of the room, Daisy kisses Gatsby on the mouth. The nanny brings Tom and Daisy's daughter into the room and Gatsby is shocked to realize that the child actually exists and is real.
She is indifferent even to her own infant daughter, never discussing her and treating her as an afterthought when she is introduced in Chapter 7. In Fitzgerald's conception of America in the 1920s, Daisy represents the amoral values of the aristocratic East Egg set.
The narrative switches back to Nick. Tom realises that it was Gatsby's car that struck and killed Myrtle. Back at Daisy and Tom's home, Gatsby tells Nick that Daisy was driving the car that killed Myrtle but he will take the blame.
Daisy uses Pammy as a materialistic object, that can be used whenever she wants. Her selfishness blinds the love she should have for her and turns it the opposite direction. She does not love Pammy as a daughter, her obsession for money comes over her, making Daisy use Pammy to get her cloer with rich people.
Representation. Pammy most likely represents a younger version of Daisy. Daisy wishes that her baby girl will be a fool like her so she ends up married and well off with a rich man. She also wants her daughter to be a fool so she is protected.
Jordan tells Nick that she found Daisy, on the day before her wedding, drunk and clutching a letter sent by Gatsby. Soon after the wedding, Daisy became pregnant, and Tom started to have affairs with other women. Jordan tells Nick that Gatsby has asked to be invited to his house at a time when Daisy is also present.
Chapter 1: "A beautiful little fool"
I hope she'll be a fool—that's the best thing a girl can be in this world, a beautiful little fool. Daisy speaks these words in Chapter 1 as she describes to Nick and Jordan her hopes for her infant daughter.
Gatsby reveals details of his and Daisy's long ago courtship. He was enthralled by her wealth, her big house, and the idea of men loving her. To be with Daisy, he pretended to be of the same social standing as her. One night, they slept together, and he felt like they were married.
Society used to limit the woman's value to being physically attractive. That is why Daisy also hopes that her daughter will grow up to be a “beautiful little fool.” It is the only way she will have a chance for respect. The same goes for intelligence – society considered women intellectually inferior.
Daisy, in fact, is more victim than victimizer: she is victim first of Tom Buchanan's "cruel" power, but then of Gatsby's increasingly depersonalized vision of her.
Although Daisy may have loved Gatsby once, she does not love him more than the wealth, status, and freedom that she has with Tom.
There is only one child among them, Daisy's daughter, and while the child is well looked after by a nurse and affectionately treated by her mother, Daisy's life does not revolve exclusively around her maternal role.
Daisy, who is in her early twenties, has a three-year-old daughter, named Pammy. The child is looked after by a nanny, and during the one scene where we see mother and daughter together Daisy's response to Pammy seems shallow and inadequate.
As Cantor tells it, Miss Daisy Fay of Louisville is pretty but not beautiful, fun-loving but provincial, a striving romantic already marked by private sorrows, and not a virgin (she and Jay Gatsby are lovers before the Great War).
Daisy, like her husband, has an affair but, she cheats on Tom with Gatsby. She slowly starts to lose faith in humanity and starts to see the world as a very bad place. She wishes for her daughter to not see the world for what it is.
Why does Daisy cry when her daughter is born? When she found out that she had given birth to a daughter, Daisy's first reaction was to cry. She hopes her daughter will grow up to be a “beautiful fool” (1.118).
That poor bruised little finger is like a symbol of Tom and Daisy's marriage: he hurts it unintentionally, and Daisy just cannot stop talking about it.
White occurs many times in the novel, and it is closely associated with Daisy. White represents the immaculate and pure beauty. It symbolizes nobleness and purity. It is Daisy's color in the novel.
What was Gatsby's reaction to Daisy's child? Gatsby can't believe that Daisy's daughter is real, because that means Tom and Daisy's marriage is real.
However, Gatsby forces them to confront their feelings in the Plaza Hotel when he demands Daisy say she never loved Tom. Although she gets the words out, she immediately rescinds them—"I did love [Tom] once but I loved you too!"—after Tom questions her.
Tom Buchanan
Since the early days of his marriage to Daisy, Tom has had affairs with other women. Throughout the novel he commits adultery with Myrtle Wilson, a working-class woman married to a garage mechanic.
Their love affair makes Gatsby optimistic that Daisy is his true love, but he really only sees and loves an idealized version of her that he has carried for years. In the end, Daisy chooses to stay with her husband even when knowing he had also had an affair.