Lennie is a grown man with a mental disability.”Give it here”(Steinbeck,6). He acts like he is 6 or 7 years old. But he isn’t weak.”No,he ain’t,but he sure is one hell of a good worker.Strong as a bull” (Steinbeck,22). Lennie represents death/bad guy in this book even though he doesn’t know what it is. He always accidently kills animals like mice and pups.…
Furthermore, Lennie has killed many things before. What was to stop him from killing anyone or anything else? He used to kill mice back when he was little because they would bite his fingers because he loved to pet soft things, and he would attempt to pet them. So he would pinch their heads in return. On page 10 it says “I’d pet ‘em and pretty soon they bit my fingers and I pinched their heads a little and then they was dead because they was so little.” He also killed a young puppy. On page 87 it says “I was just playin’ with him…an’ he made like he’s gonna bite me…an’ I made like I was gonna smack him…an’ I done it. An’ then he was dead. Lennie also surprisingly killed a human being too! He killed Curley’s wife with no instrument at all. He just used his own two hands and broke her neck, just by shaking her. On page 91 it says “…for Lennie had broken her neck.”…
Lennie characteristics are childlike and a massive guy that does not know how to restrain his strength. The reason behind Lennie's naive behavior is because he is mentally challenged. He cannot think on his own and also understand what is happening around him. Therefore, causing Lennie to get into trouble even though he does not mean to. Besides being naive, Lennie enjoys petting soft velvet-like objects. Petting those…
In John Steinbeck's novel Of Mice and Men, George and Lennie are two friends who leave to work on a ranch where Lennie gets in trouble. Lennie gets in trouble when he kills an innocent lady and runs off. George and the other men set off to find Lennie, but george leaves them to find Lennie himself. After George finds Lennie, he makes him feel happy and excited for what they will have in the future. George should not have killed Lennie because Lennie was slow and did not know how strong he really was, and George was Lennie’s best friend, but Lennie still had killed a innocent woman.…
The reader can also see that Lennie does not know his own strength: ‘I pinched they’re heads a little and they was dead.’The reader can see that Lennie cannot judge his own strength. It empathises his animal instincts and how he is strong, but he does not know it. He will do whatever he thinks is best when he is in trouble, completely discarding the fact that he is in the civilised world. The reader gets an image of a bear trying to live with humans. This also foreshadows that Lennie will kill the pup and Curly’swife.…
There are times in people’s lives when they have to decide if the situation has to be condemned or justified. In this novel Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, alot of the controversial incidents happened at the peak of ones emotion. This is referring to when George shot Lennie, but this is not the only time in this novel where this had happened.…
After the men find Curley's wife Curley says, “... I’ll shoot ‘im in the guts…”(Steinbeck 96). Later after they get the guns Curley tells the other men, “... Shoot for his guts. That’ll double ‘im over” (Steinbeck 97). Curley says this because he wants Lennie to suffer and have a painful death since Lennie broke his hand and killed his wife. After Curley says these two lines George knows what he has to do because he doesn’t want Lennie to have a painful death. So George made sure Lennie didn’t suffer or have any pain at the end by shooting him in the head. Showing that George didn’t want Lennie to suffer or be in any…
Throughout the novel, Lennie already kills several creatures such as mice, puppies, and eventually a human being like Curley’s wife. When Lennie uses his strength to kill other people, he does not even notice what he is doing. Lennie cannot restrain himself when Steinbeck states that, “She struggled violently under his hands. Her feet battered on the hay and she writhed to be free; and from under Lennie’s hand came a muffled screaming… He shook her then with anger. ‘Don’t you go yelling,’ he said, and he shook her; and her body flopped like a fish. And then she was still, for Lennie had broken her neck.”(91) The quote explains that Lennie does not know how strong he is because he is child-like. He cannot control his strength very well and does not even know what problems he might cause by using his strength. In addition, Lennie is not rational; he always does something with emotional like shaking Curley’s wife with his anger until she dies. Fortunately, George kills Lennie. Therefore, the workers on the ranch do not have to concern about risking their lives to work with this uncontrolled guy. Killing Lennie is right because no one gets injured and workers live safely. However, some people argue that George is wrong to kill Lennie because men cannot take other men’s lives easily and Lennie is not willing to kill Curley’s wife, he’s unconscious of doing it until she’s already dead. Nevertheless, the point is not important because Lennie has mental challenges and he does not mean to kill Curley’s wife. All the workers on the ranch are also lonely, so they do not want to help Lennie as well since Lennie is a new guy on the…
Since the very beginning I always thought Lennie was incapable of apprehending what goes on. That doesn’t seem like the case now. Lennie is intelligent enough to see the damage and trouble he has caused. To interpret his thoughts, his mind creates hallucinations of his Aunt Clara and of a Rabbit. The mirage of Aunt Clara speaking in his voice is a way in which he scolds himself; for always causing trouble for George. “And when she spoke, it was in Lennie’s voice. “I tol’ you an’ tol’ you, ‘Min’ George because he’s such a nice fella an’ good to you.’ But you don’t never take no care. You do bad things.”…
Lennie doesn’t have have much mental power but he is very physically powerful. He is very strong and the book tells the readers that in the beginning by saying how he kills his mice by petting them too hard. Lennie is a big guy and he has a lot of strength and that hurts him because it gets him into a lot of trouble like when he shattered curleys hand or when he killed his puppy then killed…
Lennie has physical strength but has no control and understanding over it. When he tries to pet soft things he ends up killing them. Steinbeck never portrays Lennie as a killer as he never tries to kill anything in cold blood. Throughout the novel Lennie kills different things and always feels regret afterwards. In the novel George says ‘Lennie never done it in meanness. All the time he done bad things, but he never done one of em mean”’. This shows How George feels sympathy for Lennie as he always manages to get other people upset at him and always manages to get himself into trouble but Steinbeck is showing the reader though George that he never means to cause trouble and he often held back and get in trouble due to his simplicity and childlike mind.…
Although he was a gentle man, Lennie had previously killed mice, broke Curley’s hand, killed a puppy all before he broke Curley’s wife’s neck. Earlier…
Regardless to the fact Lennie is considered one of the principle characters in ‘Of Mice and Men’, he is arguably the least exciting. Throughout the novel he seems to be the same person as on the first pages, enduring no development, growth or significant changes. His character is very simple, in most scenes he is in, it is reinforced that he is very strong, he enjoys petting soft things and is devoted to George and the American Dream, that he and George will someday own a farm. It is this simplicity and helplessness in everyday life that earns the readers sympathy, and also forms the idea in the reader’s mind that Lennie is doomed. The powerful impact is created by the inevitability of Lennie’s death, so the reader’s sympathy and understanding…
At this point, Lennie is overwhelmingly consumed with pleasing George. On a night where all the men were gone, Lennie was in the barn while the men were out and about when Curley’s wife walks in. Throughout Of Mice and Men, Curley’s wife is portrayed to be an overwhelming amount of provocation. Any man she could take advantage of, she would without any guilt. Lennie was the perfect “target” for Curley’s wife, considering he was easily fooled and taken advantage of. Lennie is known for not letting go of things he finds appealing. Which is why it was no surprise when he didn’t let go of Curley’s wife’s hair. What had started at as an attempted seduction, ended up with death by a snapped neck. All Lennie wanted to do was keep Curley’s wife quiet so he wouldn’t irritate George. The need to please George ended up with not only Curley’s wife's’ death, but George's death…
The reader things that he did the right thing because if not then you would've been hurting people and animals.Lennie did not know his own strength. Everything that Lennie would touch that was soft would end up dying because he would pet ate too hard.Like lennies puppy when the puppy niped at Lennie Lennie hit the dog to hard and made it die.” Why do you got to get killed? you ain't…