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Of Mice And Men Candy's Dream Analysis

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Of Mice And Men Candy's Dream Analysis
Lennie brings joy and hope to those who are lonely by helping them realize their dream. When George and Candy find Curley’s wife in the barn after Lennie killed her, “Candy spoke his greatest fear” (Steinbeck 94), asking George if they were still going to get the farm. By saying this is Candy’s greatest fear, Steinbeck shows that Candy desperately wants to leave the ranch, because he is lonely. Candy does not think he can get a place on his own, so he is filled with joy when George and Lennie say that he can join them. George answers Candy’s question, saying that “[he] kn[e]w from the very first [...they would] never [get the place… Lennie] usta like to hear about it so much” (94), that the idea just stuck. Lennie was the reason George continued

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