The relationship between george and lennie had their ups and downs, Lennie’s problems would always seem to get them in trouble. Lennie wasn’t the smartest in the world so he often needed help with his…
George gets impatient with Lennie and it can sometimes come off as mean behavior. George doesn't want to be that way but when Lennie forgets things or acts childish he gets frustrated. “I could get along so easy and so nice if I hadn’t have you on my tail”(7) Ever since Lennie’s Aunt Clara died George had been taking care of him. George always wishes that he was lonely like all the other guys on the ranch but sadly he got stuck with Lennie. It seems like deep down George’s dreams aren't to own a ranch with Lennie but to be alone and away from Lennie. George is nice to the men on the ranch but when it came to Lennie insults came instantly to his brain.…
“Well look Lennie- if you jus’ happen to get in trouble like you’ve always done before, I want you to come right back here and hide in the brush. Can you remember that” George told Lennie. “I sure can George.” Lennie said back to George. Throughout the novel George and Lennie's relationship is put on display as George a role model to Lennie and Lennie is incredibly loyal to George. Lennie looked up to George consequently wanted to be just like George. If we did not have the relationship of George and Lennie shared with us in Of Mice to Men it would be a bland book with a poorly displayed plot. I always wanted to know what hill they’d climb over the following chapter.…
George killed his best friend, how could someone do that? This is the case in Of Mice and Men, Lennie was killed, but it was for the better. George did a terrible thing, but what George did was the right thing because it saved Lennie from many complications that would happen later.…
George does, in return receive Lennie's unconditional trust and love because of his loyalty, but he must still sacrifice much in order to take care of Lennie. An example of sacrifice on George's part is when they had to flee from a town called Weeds where they were employed because Lennie had gotten himself accused of rape when he had tried to touch a woman's dress. George understands that Lennie is mentally challenged , but unfortunately most other people within do…
Needs. Being a self-sufficient man who is probably seasoned in wilderness hunting or other skills needed to survive in the untamed world back then in 20th century America. Although the outdoors wasn’t exactly safe, it wasn’t exactly dangerous either. You could camp out and live there without much worry, and there were plenty of berries, game, mushrooms, and other sources of food as well. However, George’s safety needs are not even existent; evident by the fact of him possessing three dollars. He does hold a good relationship with Lennie, so there isn’t much trouble there. George is just a run-of-the-mill worker, and the people he meets while at his new source of employment see him as such. He has nothing to be psyched about. With Lennie, as he evidently says constantly in the story, he could do a lot better off without him. Lennie on the hand, lacks tangibility in all categories of this triangle of sorts. He needs George, is often picked on and acknowledges it. Although a very good worker (and proven), he is incapable of making his own decisions truly and does not function well in society. Lennie has no idea what he’d want to be. In the sense of other characters, some vary often. For example, Slim is a very skilled skinner and he is a huge part of the ranch they are working at; nearly irreplaceable. Candy, on the other hand, is very dispensable. He is past his prime wildly, basically handicapped, and is a train wreck after his old dog is put down by Carlson. The other people in the camp are regulars; they are the bulk of the ranch so they wouldn’t necessarily be dismissed quickly, and can take little parts in these sections of the triangle.…
George has a job as a ranch hand out on the ranch. He does a little bit of everything. From making sure that the animals are in good health, and to helping the boss with anything he needs. George even watches over the slaves, to make sure they are doing what they need to be doing and are staying away from the whites. He carries a lot of responsibilities! He is also doing Lennie’s job at the same time. As we found out very quickly, Lennie is not the best at doing the task, due to his mental illness. He doesn’t know his strength, and tends to hurt/kill people and animals. Lennie has a heart of gold, and means absolutely no harm.…
“We got somebody to talk to that gives a damn about us. We don’t have to sit in no bar room blowin’ in our jack jus’ because we go no place else to go. If them other guys gets in jail they can rot for all anybody gives a damn. But not us. ”(14)…
George could be very successful and would be able to have a life if he wasn't so "tied down" with Lennie. George states numerous amounts of times that if he didn't have Lennie "he could live so easily" and "have a regular job and not have any of this mess". Although he does have a tragic role in the book George does say that he doesn't want Lennie to leave. I would also have to make the inference that George is a rather smart person, because he constantly thinks ahead and knows what's best for Lennie and himself. He told Lennie to stay away from Curley's wife and Curley, and Lennie got in trouble when he got around either of them. He might have been able to go to school (college) or teach somewhere. Even if George didn't go to teach or do something with his life, he could still have a bit of fun he says that "If I didn't have you (talking about Lennie) I could go at the end of the month and blow my pay at a cat house". Most of the time he…
George takes care of him on the notion he will be able to teach Lennie the ways of life and in the end he will be fine and they will start a farm. Many times Lennie proves that his personality is unchanging and he has great trouble learning. He forgets constantly what gets him in trouble such as killing animals with his monstrous hands or touching the girl in the red dress. As George realizes the state of mind is in he begins to become upset with Lennie yet sympathetic because he knew ironically Lennie wouldn't completely understand or even remember being lectured. With the realization that Lennie was much dumber than he had known not being able to remember most things George began to see the relationship dissolve to a father-son type of relationship. Georges important quote "Guys like us, that work on ranches, are the loneliest guys in the world. They got no family. They don't belong no place. . . . With us it ain't like that. We got a future. We got somebody to talk to that gives a damn about us. We don't have to sit in no bar room blowin' in our jack jus' because we got no place else to go. If them other guys gets in jail they can rot for all anybody gives a damn. But not us." can be seen as the hope that kept George with Lennie but by the end of the novel it is just a habitually story George tells Lennie to make him feel…
He takes care of Lennie because he promised Lennie’s aunt, Aunt Clara, that he would protect and look after him. So when the Aunt dies, George steps up and keeps his promise to take care of lennie. While venturing through the different cities he is the person who speaks to their employers to help them obtain different jobs. Even though George tries to keep a positive mind, he can still be pressed with future thoughts when he is upset. When Lennie gets caught up in trouble they flee before things get to worse. The most important event like this occurred in Weed, the town they lived in before. In the town of Weed, Lennie was touching a girl's soft dress. After while she began to feel uncomfortable, so when she tried to pull away, Lennie would not let go. Then the girl yelled. So George and Lennie had to run away to save their lives. This began the start of their life on the run. This experience is told by George in chapter 3. "Jus’ wanted to feel that girl's dress—jus' wanted to pet it like it was a mouse—Well, how the hell did she know you jus' wanted to feel her dress? She jerks back and you hold on like it was a mouse. She yells and we got to hide in an irrigation ditch all day with guys lookin' for us, and we got to sneak out in the dark and get outta the…
In the beginning of the story, George escaped with Lennie from Weed to prevent Lennie from getting lynched. George did absolutely nothing, he had nothing to hide from. Also George warned Lennie about Curley, he told him that he has seen people like that before and demanded Lennie to stay away from Curley (Steinbeck 29). In addition, in order to make sure Lennie got the job, George talked for him (Steinbeck 21). George is like a parent to Lennie, from the beginning we see how he told Lennie that the water he was drinking from didn’t seem potable. He told Lennie to throw the mice away, not to be mean but because it was already dead, it wasn’t fresh. Lennie acted acted like a child and George acted like a parent, he said and did stuff similar to what a parent would. He did all that because he cared for…
The two workers being close friends helps them in some way because they would not end up like the rest of the workers, mean, alone, and having nobody to talk to. In George’s conversation with Slim he says, “I seen the guys that go around on the ranches alone. That ain’t no good. They don’t have fun. after a long time they get mean.” (Steinbeck 41). Lennie gets in trouble often and without George would either be killed or locked away in jail. Up in Weed, before traveling south, Lennie was in trouble when a girl claimed he raped her. George’s strong bond gave him the courage to not leave Lennie, knowing if he did, Lennie would most likely be…
It was his decision to take on this "challenge" and take care of a nearly helpless grown man. Although he has positive feelings towards him, he advances the novel with his leadership and frustration over Lennie. Furthermore, George's constant conflicts with Lennie makes George seem as if he feels responsible for all of Lennie's actions. For instance, George is constantly complaining about how Lennie is a burden on him ― "I got you! You can't keep a job and you lose me ever' job I got!" (11). George isn't strong enough to leave Lennie, so he has to put on a happy face and stick with it. However, deep down he is frustrated, and that anger comes out sometimes, as shown here. Lennie's behavior causes George frustration and anger, which causes George to not consider Lennie's side of any situation. Upon George coming back from leaving Lennie home, George says, "Jesus, seems like I can't go away for one minute" (83). George's personality expresses both deep care and frustration with Lennie and his actions. George doesn't necessarily trust him enough to leave him alone, he sees the letdown coming ahead. However, he feels the need to give himself a break from Lennie's constant needy attitude. George is treating Lennie like disciplining a child, however, this may not be the right approach. Even if Lennie's mind is thinking like a child, nothing else about him is childish and everyone else in their environment sees him as nothing but a man. George has a difficulty understanding Lennie's emotions when all he desires is for Lennie to "behave" for him. George is responsible for Lennie's actions because he is like Lennie's parent all of the time, and if George is controlling every aspect of Lennie's life he is ultimately responsible for his…
Throughout the novella George protects Lennie to much. His mental retardation was a problem that couldn’t be solved, however learning experience would have benefitted Lennie and helped him understand situations better, rather than George repeatedly protecting him every step of his life. He was always responsible for Lennie and that shouldn’t have been the case. Humans should fend for themselves, if everyone picks us up everytime we will never learn how to fend on our own. What George did is exactly what someone’s not suppose to do and that’s repeatly pick someone back up. We saw in Of men and mice what happens when one does that. Lennie just keep doing what he was doing because George never punished him for it. Instead George protected Lennie throughout the whole novella. For example, when George shoots Lennie in the back of the head at the end of the novella. “Look down there acrost the river, like you can almost see the place.” (103). George even brings comfort to Lennie in his final moments. Lennie never learned how to fend for himself and that was the demise of…