- Indignantly: Characterized by or filled with indignation.
- Simonizing: to shine or polish to a high sheen, especially with wax.
- evasively: Inclined or intended to evade.
- resentment: Indignation or ill will felt as a result of a real or imagined grievance.
- Saccharine: of the nature of or resembling that of sugar.
Tone: Sincere, Brutally honest, Parodying.
Strategies:
- Preposition: "I wish you'd have a good talk with him." (15)
- Allusion: "I think the fact that you're not settled, that you're still kind of up in the air..."(10)
- Simile: "Maybe I oughta get stuck into something. Maybe that's my trouble. I'm like a boy. I'm not married. I'm not in business, I just-I'm just like a boy."(11)
- Dialogue: "You're a poet, you know that Biff? You're an idealist!"(11)
- Personification: "But you didn't rest your mind. Your mind is overactive, and the mind is what counts, dear."(3)
Questions:
- Compare the way Biff treats his father with the way Happy does. Why is it hard for Biff to tell Willy the truth? Why doesn’t Happy want him to?
- Discuss the symbolism of the two heavy sample cases and the stockings. How does Miller use the characters’ names as symbols? What do they mean? What is the significance of Loman? Why Willy instead of Bill? What other symbols does Miller use and to convey his purpose in the play?
- Can the American Dream to its civilians cause tragedy or prosperity?Explain?
Memorable Quote: "In the greatest country in the world a young man with such-personal attractiveness, gets lost. And such a hard worker."(6)