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- Charley says something in Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman
- that sums up Willy’s whole life. He asks him, When the hell are you
- going to grow up? Willy’s spends his entire life in an illusion. He
- sees himself as a great man that is popular and successful. Willy
- exhibits many childlike qualities. Many of these qualities have an
- impact on Willy’s family. His two sons Biff and Happy pick up this
- behavior from their father. He is idealistic, stubborn, and he has a
- false sense of his importance in the world.
- Willy is like an impetuous youngster with high ideals and high
- hopes. Children always have high hopes for their future. They all
- want to be astronauts or millionaires. Willy always believes he can
- achieve that kind of success. He never lets go of his wasted life.
- He dreams of being the man who does all of his business out of his
- house and dying a rich and successful man. Furthermore, Willy also
- dreams of moving to Alaska where he could work with his hands and be a
- real man. Biff and Happy follow in their father’s footsteps in their
- lofty dreams and unrealistic goals. Biff wastes his life being a
- thief and a loner; furthermore, Biff, along with happy try to conjure
- up a crazy idea of putting on a sporting goods exhibition. The problem
- with Willy is that he never grows up and deals with his obstacles.
- Willy is also a very stubborn man. He is like a little child
- that wants to do something their way even though they know that
- another option would be the wiser choice. Charley practically sets a
- potential job into Willy’s lap and he refuses it. Willy just was
- fired and needed a job. He refuses one. Willy is too stubborn to let
- go of his old job and take a new one. He still believes that he is at
- the top of his profession. When Willy does not get his way he acts
- just as a child would. He has tantrums such as when he basically
- challenged Charley to a fight after he told him to grow up. Biff is
- also stubborn like his father. He never gives up being a child. He
- steals and lies. Biff cannot handle being ignored, so he steals a pen.
- Willy’s childlike stubbornness hampers him throughout his life.
- Willy, like most children thinks that he is more important than he
- actually is. During the whole story, he brags himself up, calling
- himself a great salesman. He says that he is known everywhere. When
- his funeral is to occur, Willy believed that it will be a major event.
- Many will come to pay their respects to New England’s greatest
- salesman. He is just an old broken down man who never was good at his
- job. Willy is not well known. Few attend his funeral. When one is a
- child, they believe that they are more important than they really are.
- As people grow older they realize that they are just one of many in
- the world. Willy Loman never does realize this fact. Biff and Happy
- never realize it either. They continue to believe that the Lomans are
- an extraordinary family above all others. After Willy dies, Happy
- proclaims that he will continue his fathers quest as the great
- salesman. Biff believes that the Lomans are not liked because they
- are rough and tough men who use their hands. Willy goes through his
- entire life believing that is a great, well known, and well-liked
- salesman.
- Willy Loman is a child trapped in a man’s body. He never lets
- go of his dreams. He does not come to grips with his failure as a
- salesman, father, and husband. Willy runs away from responsibility,
- and he asks others for handouts when in need. These traits have a
- negative impact Biff and Happy throughout their lives. At the end of
- his life he lives with delusions of what his life was and is. Willy
- never does grow up.
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- Words: 670
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