(Should be the first or second page of dialogue in Act 1)
WILLY, after a pause: I suddenly couldn't drive anymore. The car kept going off onto the shoulder, y'know?
LINDA, helpfully: Oh. maybe it was the steering again. I don't think Angelo knows the Studebaker.
WILLY: no, it's me, it's me. Suddenly I realize I'm goin' sixty miles an hour and I don't remember the last five minutes. I'm - I can't seem to - keep my mind to it.
LINDA: Maybe it's your glasses. You never went for your new glasses.
WILLY: No, I see everything. I came back ten miles an hour. It took me nearly four hours from Yonkers.
Biff Loman is the son of Willy Loman in the play "Death of a Salesman" by Arthur Miller .
Biff Loman
Yo botty! (:
If you are talking about Death of a Salesman, which I assume you are, Willy Loman comes home because he is too "tired" and simply "couldn't drive anymore". This signifies Willy's exhaustion and also eludes to the beginnings of Willy's mental illness. He states that he was "unable to drive anymore" and Linda is alarmed by this. She acts this way because she idolizes him. She sees him as a man with little imperfections and does her best to make excuses for his flaws. This is what makes Willy the perfect tragic antihero. He was never a great man, but he was idolized by at least one person, and that happened to be his wife.
Willy becomes angry with Linda when she's mending stocking because, he's reminded of when he gave stockings to the "Other Woman" and Biff asked why he was giving away mom's stockings. Willy wants to start new and not have stuff mended. He wants to give Linda new stockings, so he's not reminded of the past
In Death of a Salesman, Willy only gets a little above Yonkers but then becomes delirious and keeps swerving onto the shoulder of the road. He has to drive home slowly and returns home driving slowly.
After Willy Loman got a little above Yonkers, he experienced a series of failures and disillusionments in both his professional and personal life. Struggling with his mental health, Willy became increasingly detached from reality, culminating in a tragic decision to take his own life in hopes that his insurance policy would provide a better future for his family. His dreams of success and the American Dream ultimately led to his downfall, highlighting the play's themes of illusion versus reality and the pressures of societal expectations.
Willy Loman Willy Loman I think Willy is the nameof the salesman-the playwright is Arthur Miller
willy loman
Biff Loman is the son of Willy Loman in the play "Death of a Salesman" by Arthur Miller .
Willy Loman is no part of "Atlas Shrugged". He is the main character in "Death of a Salesman", by Arthur Miller.
Willy Loman's wife. She acts more like a mother. She does not know what's going on in Willy's mind.
Willy Loman.
Decide if willy Loman is a tragic hero....... or ....... when writing a claim that can be argued
The protagonist is Willy Loman.
Willy (William) Loman
1949 studebaker