Their friend Two-Bit comes along and then they offer to get the two girls home. On the way to Two-Bit’s house to get his car they talk about how they aren’t so different. While talking a Blue Mustang pulls up with Cherry’s boyfriend Bob. They threaten Pony, Two-Bit and Johnny. Cherry doesn’t like fighting and tells them she will get in the car with them if they stop. When Pony gets home it is really late and Darry is really mad at him, he slaps Pony. Pony tells him he is running away and leaves the house. He goes back to the Park where Johnny is and hangs out. He realizes how cold he is and decides he wants to go back home.…
Both Willie and Cyrus started their careers with a clear and focused goal in mind in order to fulfill their interests while benefiting the people. Throughout both of their careers, we see the change of character from both Cyrus and Willie. Due to the abandonment of their integrity and virtues, neither man was capable of leaving their legacy intact after passing away. Both Cyrus and Willies regime became subjectable to the corruption and softness such as they did towards the end of their careers. During the majority of their rule, both men managed to benefit and fight for the people. Because of this, they will always be respected and admired for their achievements despite the means they used to accomplish them. Although neither men can be determined…
Arty and Jay have received another letter from their father who tells them that he has been treated for exhaustion. The boys are settling in to their new environment and a new intrigue, a black Studebaker with two men inside who have been looking for the boys ' Uncle Louie. Not sure of their uncle 's occupation, the boys let their imaginations work overtime.…
Candy’s Dog-foreshadowing for George and Lennie and Candy, old/out of use so it is killed, brings out the brutality/carelessness in human nature (Carlson)…
When he lost his dog and that dog is the only one he can talk with for 10 more years. Candy’s dog is very old, “at his heels there walked a dragfooted sheepdog, grey of muzzle, and with pale, blind old eyes. The dog struggled lamely to the side of the room and lay down, grunting softly to himself and licking his grizzled, moth-eaten coat.”(24), his old can do nothing for that ranch anymore. Carlson is the person who killed Candy’s dog for Candy, he thought this way is good for Candy. “Look, Candy, this ol’ dog jus’ suffers himself all the time If you was to take him out and shoot him right in the back of the head— ” (45). After we heard the bang of a gun, the old finally died. That dog was with candy so many years, there is nobody knows how’s feeling to Candy, Candy doesn’t want his dog die, “Candy looked for help from face to face.” (45) It's just like candy’s only friend in that little ranch, it was only “friend” he could talk. Candy felt loneliness so that he wants to know that happiness place where George and Lennie talking about“You know where’s a place like that?”(59) and he wants to go“S’pose I went in with you guys. Tha’s three hundred an’ fifty bucks I’d put in.”(59) Because If felt happiness He will not leave that ranch.…
Gornick was a teacher in graduate writing programs that were mostly far from home, and this new job took her two hundred miles away from New York to the “exact middle of nowhere” (Gornick 110). As most New Yorkers, she didn’t have a car, and getting there by plane or a train would prove to be a tedious and expensive task. A bus was the more realistic choice for her, so on Monday she boarded the Greyhound bus that would depart at 5:00 in the afternoon and drop her off at 9:30 in the evening at a truck stop fifteen miles from the school. On Thursday nights she would return to the truck stop at 8:30 in the evening and be back in New York by 1:00 in the morning.…
In Of Mice and Men Steinbeck mainly presents Curley as a mean person who wants authority on the ranch. Although this makes Curley a more hated character, Steinbeck makes it clear to the reader that Curley is only mean as a result of being lonely. This loneliness of Curley was typical of men on ranches in 1930s America.…
Soon after they arrive at the ranch, George and Lennie meet some new and delightful people that they will be living with, until they earn enough money to buy a place of their own. One of the new people that Lennie and George meet was Candy and his old dog. Candy was an old…
An aging ranch handyman, Candy lost his hand in an accident and worries about his future on the ranch. Fearing that his age is making him useless, he seizes on George’s description of the farm he and Lennie will have, offering his life’s savings if he can join George and Lennie in owning the land. The fate of Candy’s ancient dog, which Carlson shoots in the back of the head in an alleged act of mercy, foreshadows the manner of Lennie’s death. He is an old man that is missing a hand. He is an outcast and is discriminated against. He offers his life savings to George and Lennie to help finance their dream. He wants to be…
[Candy] said miserably, "You seen what they done to my dog tonight? They says he wasn't no good to himself nor nobody else”(Steinbeck 60). Candy is introduced in the start of chapter two, he is described indirectly by the narrator as a “Stoop shouldered old man”(Steinbeck 18). He is said to have a round stump on his right arm, but no hand. His dog enters later in chapter two, whom is described as a “dragfooted sheepdog, gray of a muzzle, and with pale, old eyes”(Steinbeck 26). Through these characters, Steinbeck helps the reader understand the stereotype of the uselessness of the elderly and disabled. Along with this, Candy and his dog create a parallel with George and Lennie.…
After the death of his dog, Candy experiences a deep sense of loss and he feels empty inside. When Candy overhears Lennie and George talking about owning a piece of land his emptiness begins to fill with the dream Lennie and George share. Candy tells George, “Tell you what-... Spose I went in with you guys. Tha’s three hundred an’ fifty bucks I put in” (p.33). George’s reaction to what Candy said prompts Candy to bare his soul to him and tell George that he will “´make a will an’ leave [his] share to [Lennie and George]” (p.34). But more importantly, Candy develops a friendship with George which is seen later in the story when Candy divulges to George his inner feelings regarding his dog, showing the beginnings of a friendship, “I ought to of shot that dog myself. . .I shouldn’t ought to of let no stranger shoot my dog” (p.39). Candy’s actions portray the theme in Of Mice and Men that having a dream creates hope, friendship, and determination.…
Explore the ways Steinbeck presents and develops relationships between Crooks and the other characters in the novel ‘Of Mice and Men’…
Chapter 3 – Later that evening, George tells Slim about why he and Lennie travel together and more about what happened in Weed. The men talk about Candy’s ancient dog, which is tired and ill. Carlson shoots it, as an act of kindness. George tells Candy about their dream of getting a piece of land and Candy eagerly offers to join them – he has money, so they could make it happen almost immediately. Curley provokes Lennie into a fight, which ends up with Lennie severely injuring Curley’s hand.…
The main character train of Charlie Marry Karr (who will now be referred to as ‘Mother’) is that she doesn’t fit in to the environment of a small industrial town in Southern Texas. In many ways, it seems Karr sees her mother as a mysteriously glamorous creature trapped in the metaphorical prison that is Leechfield. This point is best illustrated in a passage where Mother takes both Marry and her sister Leica to the zoo. In the passage Karr makes a point of saying that with the “distance” (55) time has given her, she see’s her mother as if she were “trapped… [as if she could see a] panther pace back and forth behind the bars on the surface of her sunglasses”(55).…
Candy is old and handicapped so he isn’t included in the activities the guys plan to do. Crooks isn’t allowed out the barn, unless he is playing horseshoes with the guys. He can’t go drink with the guys or go out and pick weed in the field with them because he is black. Curley’s wife is desperate for attention. She doesn’t get any attention from Curley so she goes and try to find it from other men. She really isn’t suppose to be doing that but she does it anyway behind Curley’s back. She goes around batting her eyes and curling her hair in her fingers and men stare at her. She does that because she is lonely she wants the attention from Curley but he is too busy and doesn’t pay attention to…