THE WONDER OF WORDS: BOOK 2
ONE-HUNDRED MORE WORDS AND PHRASES SHAPING HOW CHRISTIANS THINK AND LIVE
In Arthur Miller's play Death of a Salesman, the central character is Willy Loman, a traveling salesman. Willy had chosen two superficial goals for his life: popularity and material success. He was intent on being a supersalesman. He wanted to be well liked. But his chosen goals were not fixed stars that gave his life stability; they were falling stars that disappeared and left him unsteady. His business began to slip. His fair-weather friends dropped away. The son, on whom he doted, caught him in a sordid affair in a cheap hotel, and despised him.