Willy's Guidance In Death Of A Salesman

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Partly because an illusion of such movement lies within the structure of the play. Miller has actually chosen to show us the scenes which made up the Willy's life. These scenes, from false pride to despair and from a vestige of love to an orgy of hate, pity, and death, spread in front of us as if they exist in Willy's mind. Into his visualization of Willy's final hours, Miller introduces two theatrical skills: "the guidance from Ben and the nurture of Biff." 6 The guidance from Ben presents Willy's inner insecurity, for Willy bows down to the image of Ben's success. Ben "personifies ideal success, the realization of the wildest dreams a man might have. In his quest to make some sense of his failed life, Willy views Ben as a guide — an older brother's role — who appears to him …show more content…

"William, when I walked into the jungle, I was seventeen, when I walked out I was twenty-one. And, by God, I am rich!" 8 From the lines by Ben, we readers come to know what had happened to him and get a clear picture of what Willy was and, at the same time, what had gone wrong with him. However, the nurture of Biff brings us a knowledge that Willy is "not in the eyes of his sons just a man, but a god in decay." 9 To his first son Biff, Willy bends his knees before the idol of success, teaching him the importance of a smiling face and making him believe the key to success is to be 'well liked.' Ironically, Willy's godhood is totally destroyed when Biff comes to Boston at seventeen and catches Willy with a lusty woman. Willy, on the contrary, bends his knees asking Biff for forgiveness and understanding. These two theatrical skills give dimension to the portrait of Willy—what happened to him and why he was necessarily and inevitably forced to take his own life by himself. Without them, the play would be a sentimental piece of

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