The Immigrant and the Car Salesman There was once a boy named Petros who immigrated to the United States from Greece. His family was very poor, so they came on a ship, and took a train to Chicago, where they thought they could find work. When Petros turned eighteen, he decided to move to Lynn, where he settled in the Greek community. He began to work hard and saved all of the money he earned. He married, and, together with his wife, opened a small produce store. The business prospered, and Petros soon became a wealthy man.
He was a very simple man and dressed humbly, always wearing his old hat when he went out. After a few years, Petros decided that he wanted a car, and he went to a Cadillac dealership. The owner of this dealership was aware that Petros was a rich man and knew about his successful business. He asked Petros what he wanted to buy, and Petros left the dealership with a new Cadillac.
Over the years, Petros came to buy many different cars from the dealership. Many years later, when Petros was an old man, and his daughter had taken over the produce store, he put on his old hat and decided to go back to the Cadillac dealership. When he arrived at the dealership, a new salesman came out to help him. Petros asked him the price of one of the new models in the showroom. The salesman looked at the old man, with his foreign accent, and wearing his old, beat-up hat, and told him that it was very expensive and that he would show him a different one that was much more affordable. Petros told him that he still wanted it.
The Essay on The Man Behind The Hat
The Man Behind the Hat "More and more tension as if over inflating a balloon until the readers can not stand waiting for the "pop!" and then there is no pop, just deflation of the balloon (Hurst 2)." A perfect example of a writer named Theodor Seuss Geisel, also known as "Dr. Seuss." A man who some think created, "the world of imagination" as we know it in children's literature. Theodor Seuss ...
The salesman insisted that the car was much too expensive and that it was not the right car for Petros. At that moment, the owner of the dealership came out of his office to go to lunch and, recognizing Petros, greeted him warmly. He asked him what he wanted to buy. Petros told him that he wanted the new Cadillac in the showroom, but that the salesman had tried to show him a different one because he didn’t think he could afford the new one. The owner angrily fired the salesman, and Petros drove away in his new car. So we see that “Las apariencias eng a an.’ In English, appearances are deceiving..