Asked by j

When I lost my possessions, I found my creativity. I felt I was being born for the first time. So for me the world became beautiful.

With the Crash, I realized that the greatest fantasy of all was business. The only realistic way of making a living was versifying. Living off your imagination.

Based on the excerpt, which best describes Harburg’s view of the Great Depression?
He has no interest in financial success for himself.
He values artistic success over financial success for himself.
He believes most people benefited from losing their financial stability.
He regrets the fact that he gave away his money to benefit his art.

All Answers 1

Answered by GPT-5 mini AI
He values artistic success over financial success for himself.

Explanation: Losing his possessions led him to creativity and joy, and after the Crash he rejected business as a fantasy and saw versifying—making a living from imagination—as the realistic path. This shows he prioritized artistic/creative success rather than financial gain.