In a few weeks, I will get time
To realize it's right before my eyes
And I can take it, if it's what I want to do
I am leaving, this is starting
To feel like it's right before my eyes
And I can taste it, it's my sweet beginning
And I can tell just what you want
You don't want to be alone
You don't want to be alone
And I can't say it's what you know
But you've known it the whole time
Yeah, you've known it the whole time
Maybe next year I'll have no time
To think about the questions to address
Am I the one to try to stop the fire?
I wouldn't test you
I'm not the best you could have attained
Why try anything?
I will get there, just remember I know
And I can tell just what you want
You don't want to be alone
You don't want to be alone
And I can't say it's what you know
But you've known it the whole time
Yeah, you've known it the whole time
And I can tell just what you want
You don't want to be alone
You don't want to be alone
And I can't say it's what you know
But you've known it the whole time
Yeah, you've known it the whole time
In the story “The Great Gatsby” by F. Scott Fitzgerald and the song “What you know” by Two Door Cinema Club expresses that Daisy was aware that her husband Tom was cheating on her and that he has another woman in his life. Daisy’s marriage with Tom was coming to an end but for some reason she never made it a huge spectacle. As Daisy becomes fed up with Tom during the story she says, “That’s what I get for marrying a brute of a man, a great, big, hulking physical specimen of a----- (12).” This use of imagery to describe her attitude towards her husband. Everyone is aware that Tom is no good and that he is cheating on Daisy, but it is up to Daisy whether she wants to stay with him or