In Death of a Salesman, Arthur Miller describes Willy Loman as a salesman and a father whose only goal in life was to have a little bit of success. Well, Willy really wanted the whole nine yards. Being a salesman in the 1940’s meant life of prosperity and success and that is precisely what Willy was. Willy was a salesman; however, Willy wasn’t quite as successful as he hoped to be. He was constantly having to borrow “fifty dollars” (Miller 74) a week and pretending it was his pay. Then on top of the debt, the repairs, and his oldest son fighting with him, Willy loses his job because his boss thinks Willy needs a “good long rest” (Miller 63) as he put it. The truth, at this point, was right on Willy’s heels and he was having a hard time believing all that was happening. After Willy had his mobile concurrence, he went to see Charley to yet again, ask for more money. As a result of being asked for more money than usual, Charley offers Willy a job (74); however, Willy refuses, saying he doesn’t want the job because he is a salesman. When the truth really catches up with Willy is during his argument with Biff. Biff lays everything out on the table, wanting to find solutions to fix them; but Willy has such a difficult time accepting the fact that these problems are real and that everyone seems to know about them. The struggle of the truth coming down on him is what had sent Willy over the edge. He tried to hide …show more content…
Most of us would like to just brush it under the rug and act like our problems don’t exist, but they’re still there. Oedipus and Willy Loman have so graciously shown their audience that no one really escapes the truth. Of course, they had avoided their problems for a while, for years to be more exact. Though, they could never quite escape the truth. The truth had always caught up to them in one way or another, and only if they had faced the truth head on they may have been able to fix the problem before everything had come crashing down on