Analysis of Major Characters
Willy Loman
Despite his desperate searching through his past, Willy
does not achieve the self-realization or self-knowledge typical
of the tragic hero. The quasi-resolution that his suicide offers
him represents only a partial discovery of the truth. While he achieves
a professional understanding of himself and the fundamental nature
of the sales profession, Willy fails to realize his personal failure
and betrayal of his soul and family through the meticulously constructed artifice
of his life. He cannot grasp the true personal, emotional, spiritual
understanding of himself as a literal loman or low man. Willy
is too driven by his own willy-ness or perverse willfulness
to recognize the slanted reality that his desperate mind has forged.
Still, many critics, focusing on Willy's entrenchment in a quagmire
of lies, delusions, and self-deceptions, ignore the significant
accomplishment of his partial self-realization. Willy's failure
to recognize the anguished love offered to him by his family is
crucial to the climax of his torturous day, and the play presents
this incapacity as the real tragedy. Despite this failure, Willy
makes the most extreme sacrifice in his attempt to leave an inheritance
that will allow Biff to fulfill the American Dream.
Ben's final mantraThe jungle is dark, but full of diamondsturns
Willy's suicide into a metaphorical moral struggle, a final skewed
ambition to realize his full commercial and material capacity. His
final act, according to Ben, is not like an appointment at all
but like a diamond . . . rough and hard to the touch. In the absence
of any real degree of self-knowledge or truth, Willy is able to
achieve a tangible result. In some respect, Willy does experience
a sort of revelation, as he finally comes to understand that the
product he sells is himself. Through the imaginary advice of Ben,
Willy ends up fully believing his earlier assertion to Charley that
after all the highways, and the trains, and the appointments, and
the years, you end up worth more dead than alive.
Biff Loman
Unlike Willy and Happy, Biff feels compelled to seek the
truth about himself. While his father and brother are unable to
accept the miserable reality of their respective lives, Biff acknowledges
his failure and eventually manages to confront it. Even the difference
between his name and theirs reflects this polarity: whereas Willy
and Happy willfully and happily delude themselves, Biff bristles
stiffly at self-deception. Biff's discovery that Willy has a mistress
strips him of his faith in Willy and Willy's ambitions for him.
Consequently, Willy sees Biff as an underachiever, while Biff sees
himself as trapped in Willy's grandiose fantasies. After his epiphany
in Bill Oliver's office, Biff determines to break through the lies
surrounding the Loman family in order to come to realistic terms
with his own life. Intent on revealing the simple and humble truth
behind Willy's fantasy, Biff longs for the territory (the symbolically
free West) obscured by his father's blind faith in a skewed, materialist
version of the American Dream. Biff's identity crisis is a function
of his and his father's disillusionment, which, in order to reclaim
his identity, he must expose.
Happy Loman
Happy shares none of the poetry that erupts from Biff
and that is buried in Willyhe is the stunted incarnation of Willy's
worst traits and the embodiment of the lie of the happy American
Dream. As such, Happy is a difficult character with whom to empathize.
He is one-dimensional and static throughout the play. His empty
vow to avenge Willy's death by finally beat[ing] this racket provides
evidence of his critical condition: for Happy, who has lived in
the shadow of the inflated expectations of his brother, there is
no escape from the Dream's indoctrinated lies. Happy's diseased
condition is irreparablehe lacks even the tiniest spark of self-knowledge
or capacity for self-analysis. He does share Willy's
capacity for self-delusion, trumpeting himself as the assistant
buyer at his store, when, in reality, he is only an assistant to
the assistant buyer. He does not possess a hint of the latent thirst
for knowledge that proves Biff's salvation. Happy is a doomed, utterly
duped figure, destined to be swallowed up by the force of blind
ambition that fuels his insatiable sex drive.
Linda Loman and Charley
Linda and Charley serve as forces of reason throughout
the play. Linda is probably the most enigmatic and complex character
in Death of a Salesman, or even in all of Miller's
work. Linda views freedom as an escape from debt, the reward of
total ownership of the material goods that symbolize success and
stability. Willy's prolonged obsession with the American Dream seems,
over the long years of his marriage, to have left Linda internally
conflicted. Nevertheless, Linda, by far the toughest, most realistic,
and most levelheaded character in the play, appears to have kept
her emotional life intact. As such, she represents the emotional
core of the drama.
If Linda is a sort of emotional prophet, overcome by the
inevitable end that she foresees with startling clarity, then Charley
functions as a sort of poetic prophet or sage. Miller portrays Charley
as ambiguously gendered or effeminate, much like Tiresias, the mythological
seer in Sophocles' Oedipus plays. Whereas Linda's
lucid diagnosis of Willy's rapid decline is made possible by her
emotional sanity, Charley's prognosis of the situation is logical,
grounded firmly in practical reasoned analysis. He recognizes Willy's
financial failure, and the job offer that he extends to Willy constitutes
a commonsense solution. Though he is not terribly fond of Willy,
Charley understands his plight and shields him from blame.