So in the book Of Mice and Men it follows two men named George and Lennie. George and Lennie are best friends and they dream of owning a small farm together. Lennie wants to take care of the rabbits if they get get any. Lennie always asks “Will I be able to tend the rabbits?” (Steinbeck,56).They end up working on a ranch and they both stick out. That’s when most of their troubles started.…
Although by the end of the book he couldn’t accomplish his dream, George’s dream is to live in a small, secluded barn where he doesn’t have to worry himself about anything. In the short novel written by John Steinbeck, “Of Mice And Men”, a small migrant worker by the name of George Milton travels with Lennie Small, a large migrant worker who struggles with a mental disability. Both characters share their dream of owning their own place to live (Like the symbol shown on bottom of the page), but they don’t have the money to purchase such a fantasy. While Lennie is more interested in tending to the rabbits on the farm, George just wants to get away from everything and not have to concern himself with all of Lennie's mishaps time after time again.…
“If you ever just happen to get in trouble like you have always done before, I want you to come right here and hide in the brush.”(doc B) In the story Of Mice and Men there are two main characters, George and Lennie. George is average sized and intelligent, and Lennie is tall, very muscular, and below average. George and Lennie have a farm dream that they will own land, so they go to work on a ranch to earn money. A worker there, Candy, offers to go in with 300 dollars. Everything is looking good until Lennie accidentally kills Curley’s wife, and Curley is a hothead. He wants to kill Lennie very painfully, but George gets there first. He has to shoot him in the back of the head. Steinbeck uses foreshadowing to indicate the deaths of the farm dream, Curley’s wife, and Lennie.…
In the book “Of Mice and Men” by John Steinbeck. George travels everywhere with Lennie. After aunt Clara asked George to take care of him. George is small but an intelligent men and Lennie is a guy with a tremendous size but a mind of a young child. George and Lennie get a job at a ranch, their goal is to earn enough money to buy their own ranch and have many rabbits but not everything comes out as they had imagined it.…
In the novel Of Mice and Men, John Steinbeck tells the story of two best friends living life on the run, struggling to keep a steady job working as ranch hands. George and Lennie are faced with many obstacles throughout the course of this book, beginning with Lennie and his slow mindedness, George is always side by side with Lennie, practically holding his hand to coach him through life. The story begins with the two men running away from Weed, the ranch they were previously employed at; we later find that George and Lennie had to flee after Lennie had touched a ladies dress and made her feel uncomfortable. Upon arrival at the new ranch, George had told Lennie to stay away from Curley’s wife, Lennie disobeyed George and similar trouble has followed them.…
The rabbits are Georges way of keeping Lennie from getting into any trouble. George often reminds Lennie that he "…aint gonna get in no trouble, because if you do, I wont let you tend the rabbits" (16). Lennie's devotion to George is very strong; he does everything George tells him to do, simply because George is his friend. In Conclusion, Lennie is a dreamer.…
In Of Mice and Men, the author uses rabbits to symbolize the freedom and happiness George and Lennie hope of gaining. George and Lennie dream of “get[ting] . . . [a] little place an’ live on the fatta the lan’.” (56). This shows their fantasy, and what they are striving to achieve. Although they never achieve their dream, Lennie at his final moments still says, “Le’s do it now. Le’s get that place now.” (106). With George feeding him lies to preserve Lennie's dream saying, “Sure, right now. I gotto. We gotta.” (106). George does this to keep Lennie’s half of their dream alive, even though Lennie killed George’s half of the dream upon killing Curley’s wife.…
Without Lennie, George would be just like the other hands, but with Lennie, George has a strong sense of responsibility. George doesn’t see their dreams in terms of rabbits but in a practical way. Their farm will be one where they can be independent and safe and where he will not have to worry about keeping track of Lennie's mistakes. They can be secure and in charge of their own lives. However, Lennie is the one who adds the enthusiasm because…
“‘I can still tend the rabbits, George?’ ‘Sure. You ain't done nothing wrong.’ ‘I di'n't mean no harm, George.’” (Steinbeck) Throughout John Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men, Lennie childishly obsesses over his and George’s plan to have their own piece of land, on which he could tend the rabbits. However, this never came to pass as Lennie was put down like an animal, by George. By writing about the lives of this unfortunate pair, Steinbeck addresses many thematic ideas such as having power and being powerless, the difference between right and wrong, and dreams and reality that help the reader better understand the human condition.…
Often when struggling with dangers we find hope and we look to the outside world for assurance and escape from our worries or pain. George and Lennie find dangers from the very start of the novel because of they are forced to run from one of many problems Lennie causes. In the novel Steinbeck gives Lennie a purpose of taking care of the "rabbits" and in doing this it shows Lennie that to him his purpose in life is to take care of the "Rabbits." In the novel a quote that show that the dangers they ran from at the very beginning are far behind them, “Guys like us, that work on ranches ,are the loneliest guys in the world. They got no families. They don 't belong no place... We 're gonna have a little house an ' a couple of acres an ' a cow and some pigs and live off the fatta the land... We 'll have a big vegetable patch and a rabbit hutch and chickens…" this quote shows how George and Lennie strive to have a better life. Even though George knows that these dreams will never come true, “let’s have…
In Of Mice and Men, George and Lennie had two different dreams that gave them enough strength to never give up. Lennie’s dream was he wanted a life that was more simple and easy going. Lennie seemed to be more excited about the dream than George was because whenever Lennie would start talking about tending the rabbits on the farm George would sometimes get aggravated and yell at Lennie. For example in the novel Lennie said, “I remember about the rabbits, George.” Then George says, “The hell with the rabbits. That’s all you can ever remember is them rabbits. (Steinbeck, 1993)” This makes it seem as if George understands the reality of how hard it is going to be to accomplish This dream, and Lennie does not. Also in the novel Lennie is the one that likes talking about their dream and George is much quieter about it. "O.K. Someday—we’re gonna get the jack together and we’re gonna have a little house and a couple of acres an’ a cow and some pigs and—" "An’ live off the fatta the lan’," Lennie shouted. "An’ have rabbits. Go on, George! Tell about…
That being said, I understand how Lennie felt, and why he always had that dream of the rabbits in his mind. He talks multiple times of the dream, and it is a very prominent thing in the book. The decisions that Lennie makes are overshadowed by his dream of finally pleasing George and tending to the rabbits. This constant dream of tending to the rabbits that Lennie has is all he ever seems to remember. There are things that he will forget, such as his own aunt, and things that Lennie will tell him to do, yet when they talk about the story of the…
Hopes and dreams are a fundamental part of the human condition. Without them, one can lose a sense of purpose in life. In ‘Of Mice and Men’ George and Lennie attempt to break away from conforming to a malicious society. This central notion of the American Dream is mirrored in George and Lennie’s dream of owning a farm allowing self-reliance, “live off the fatta the lan”, enabling them to be their own masters. Steinbeck’s repetition of the concept of land ownership through the dialogue of George and Lennie, particularly Lennie’s total devotion to “tending the rabbits”, highlights the crippling feeling of dispossession of the itinerant workers and their need to dream to cope with life. Every character at one point also confesses of possessing a dream different from their dull unsatisfactory lives, Candy latches…
George’s fantasies may never become reality, however, his ability to sustain the mundane, shows how important hopes and dreams are to the human condition. In addition to working, George has the added responsibility of babysitting Lennie. This is an ongoing and very real struggle. His semi-effective solution was to share his dream of owning a ranch together. “I can still tend the rabbits George?” By having…
This was Lennies big dream, this was all he ever thought about. Steinbeck mentions the dream through Lennie by constantly bringing up rabbits.…