2. Vocabulary:
- pompous (adj.) : Affectedly and irritatingly grand, solemn, or self-important
- simonizing (v.): Polish (a motor vehicle).
- immersed (v.): Involve oneself deeply in a particular interest
- chamois (n.): a small goatlike bovid
- primps (v.): to dress, adorn, or arrange in a careful or finicky manner
- incarnate (adj.): invested with bodily and especially human nature and form
- laconic (adj.): using or involving the use of a minimum of words
- valises (n.): old-fashioned : a small suitcase
- caliber (n.): degree of mental capacity or moral quality
- saccharine (adj.): of, relating to, or resembling that of sugar
4. Rhetorical Strategies:
- Idiom: "Knocked 'em cold in Providence, slaughtered 'em in Boston" (33).
- Analogy: "Biff a man is not a bird, to come and go with the springtime" (54).
- Rhetorical Questions: "Why shouldn't he talk to himself? Why? When he has to go to Charley and borrow fifty dollars a week and pretend to me that it's his pay?" (57).
- Anecdote: "Well, it seems she was walking down the road and saw his car. She says that he wasn't driving fast at all, and that he didn't skid. She says he came to that little bridge, and then deliberately smashed into the railing, and it was only the shallowness of the water that saved him" (59).
- Similes:
- "Like when you worked for Harrison's. Bob Harrison said you were tops, and then you go and do some damn fool think like whistling whole songs in the elevator like a comedian" (60).
- "I slept like a dead one" (71).
- Personification: "Once in my life I would like to own something outright before it's broken! I'm always in a race with the junkyard! I just finished paying for the car and it's on its last legs" (73).
- Metaphor: "...And be sweet to him tonight, dear. Be loving to him. Because he's only a little boat looking for a harbor" (76).
- What role does the fear of being alone play in Willy's life?
- What explanation does Biff have for his failure to succeed and what is Willy's?
- How does the flashbacks of Ben affect Willy?
"The only thing you got in this world is what you can sell" (97).
Hello Jessica :)
ReplyDelete1. The fear of being along takes a vital role in shaping Willy's life because it reminds him daily of all the goals he did not accomplish throughout his life.
2. The explanation that Biff has for his failure to succeed is similar to that of Willy's. It seems that both of them were affected by Willy's affair. Biff's explanation for his lack of success is finding out that Willy Loman was a "fake" ,therefore his rancor gets in the way of his future goals. Willy on the other hand was too much of a dreamer, he ignored reality a little too much, thus success was hard for him. His affair also affected him because it served as a daily torment of guilt.
3. Ben's flashbacks affect Willy because they reminds him of how successful his brother became in Alaska where all the "diamonds were in the jungle" and how Willy himself could have been successful if he had followed his brother's footsteps.