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Irresponsibile Biff in Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman

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Irresponsibile Biff in Arthur Miller’s Death of a Salesman

Have you ever felt as if you do not know what to do with your life?

Everyone does sometimes, but certain people are like that their whole life.

These people are irresponsible and depend on others to survive. In "Death of a

Salesman", Biff is one of these people. He is irresponsible because he depends

on Happy, depends on Willy, and does not know what to do for a living.

Biff looks up on Happy as an example of good life. It seems to him that

Happy's life is stable and successful. Even though this is not true, Biff lets

it bother him. He wants Happy to get him a job in New York so they could work

together. This shows some of his dependency and irresponsibility. Biff does

not seem as if he could live on his own successfully. This disappoints both

Happy and Willy. But this is not the only problem Biff has.

Biff also depends on Willy to get him through life. Willy's low morals

cause Biff to think it's all right to concentrate on football when he was in

high school. Biff does not think he has to work in school. When he flunks math,

he does not know what to do and once again turns to Willy. Now Biff cannot go

to college and since he has been concentrating on football, he has little or no

skills at anything else. He depends on Willy's support to help him. But since

Willy's expectations of Biff are not met, Biff does not receive the help he

needs and moves off on his own. This leaves Biff to find a goal in life

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