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.…
Within Paragraph three there are the fundamentals that Steinbeck has allowed for us to understand Lennie as a character. We can begin to see that Lennie is simple minded. Lennie asks a very important question “why do you got to go get killed” This gives us a brief insight into what he is thinking. Lennie genuinely does not understand how or why he killed the puppy. He doesn’t even consider that he killed the puppy at this point. He is confused because he doesn’t understand his own strength. The rhetorical question Steinbeck weaves into this passage is very effective as it voices Lennies thoughts and concerns. This presents Lennie as unsophisticated and a threat to others because of his unfamiliar strength.…
George does not want Lennie to go to town with them because George doesn’t want Lennie to see how the world really is; similar to a parent doesn’t tell a child what terrible things happen in the world. Also, alike what a parent might do with a child is that George tells Lennie to go hide when he gets in trouble. This shows that Lennie acts like a child because he does not confront the problem. He solely listens to what George told him to. “Well look. Lennie-if you jus’ happen to get in trouble like you always done before, I want you to come right here an’ hide in the brush.” (Steinbeck 15) George says this multiple times to Lennie just so he can remember what to do if he gets in trouble. George believes that if Lennie hides somewhere he will be safer than if he just keeps running away from the problem. George treats Lennie like a child because; also, he doesn’t let him do certain things such as leave the farm. He does not want Lennie to see how the world actually is Lennie does not confront his problems, he hides in the bushes like a child does.…
George and Lennie are two very different characters. George is described as a "slim, small, quick, dark-featured, and restless man with sharp, strong features" (Steinbeck 2). Lennie is the exact opposite, described as a huge man with a shapeless face, with large, pale eyes, and with wide, sloping…
Lennie was a “a huge man, shapeless of face, with large, pale eyes, with wide, sloping shoulders” (2). He worked hard, but was always doing something wrong which caused trouble. One day Lennie’s actions ended up hurting him. This altered his life forever. Through the character of Lennie, John Steinbeck illustrates in Of Mice and Men how a character’s actions can cause shocking outcomes.…
In the book ‘’Of Mice and Men” Lennie seems very different from all of the others. Lennie is a very interesting character. He may be different from George and the other workers, but he sure does make up for that with his incredible strength and his ability to listen and obey directions. It also helps him stay alive, for the most part.…
Steinbeck shows us how Lennie sees the world, perceives events, and how he reflects on something. His mind uses things he cherishes, to comprehend.…
A large, lumbering, childlike migrant worker. Due to his mild mental disability, Lennie completely depends upon George, his friend and traveling companion, for guidance and protection. The two men share a vision of a farm that they will own together, a vision that Lennie believes in wholeheartedly. Gentle and kind, Lennie nevertheless does not understand his own strength. His love of petting soft things, such as small animals, dresses, and people’s hair, leads to disaster. Lennie is unnaturally large and has a shapeless face. He drags his feet when he walks and lets his arms hang. He is mentally retarded and needs George's constant attention and care. (2, Steinbeck)…
To begin with, Steinbeck describes Lennie as an animal. This is because whilst he is drinking from a river and this shows that he has a wild personality as he is drinking from a dirty river. He drank using his ‘big paws’. ‘Paws’ implies that he hasn’t got hands like a human but paws like a bear or a dog. This would link back to the time period as people used dogs to heard sheep. ‘Big’ suggests that he is quite large which contradicts his partner as George of small. George respond to this by saying ‘you’d drink out of a gutter’. ‘Gutter’ suggests that he is quite animalistic as animals don’t have much sense to drink clean water. This also puts a lot of emphasis to his wild personality and simplicity. Therefore, through the use of the theme of animalistic and his disability, Steinbeck shows the importance of animals.…
Lennie has two different visions in the final scene: one of his aunt scolding him, and one of a giant rabbit telling him off. They reveal exactly what Lennie is thinking and feeling at that precise moment. He is in fact feeling great guilt, but also astonishment and frustration. It is also the most important insight we have on how Lennie thinks, feels, and therefore acts. I find it is almost a final insight into Lennie's mind and a further confirmation of his childishness, innocence and simple-mindedness. The two visions are really manifestations of Lennie's conscience reprimanding him.…
Also describing his eyes as ‘pale’ could be indicative of the knowledge behind them, or more accurately the lack thereof. Suggesting that in reality he has a tendency to be absent-minded. Within this description of Lennie, we come across the first piece of animal imagery, where Steinbeck presents Lennie as a bear who ‘drags his paws’. Using the verb ‘drags’ gives connotations to slowness, and could be suggestive of Lennie’s slowness, both physically and mentally. Lennie also has other similarities with bears, they are conceived as dangerous, yet they only become so when they feel threatened, in self-defence. As is true when Lennie attacks Curley, here Steinbeck is subtly foreshadowing this event. After being described as a bear, he is later described as a horse ‘snorting into the water’. This can again tell us a few things about Lennie. It could be suggestive of his relationship with George, and how Lennie, as the horse is able to be controlled by his owner. It also reinforces his strength and power, and how it is only utilized when he feels vulnerable. The use of the verb ‘snorting’ shows hurriedness in his actions, but also could be referring to the way he acts from instincts rather than acting from intelligence. Later in the chapter Steinbeck uses a simile to describe Lennie as a ‘terrier who doesn’t want to bring a ball to his master’ that again talks of George’s control over Lennie, speaking of him as a ‘master’. The phrase also alludes to Lennie’s subservience to George, and indicates the lack of control he has over his own…
B. It is difficult for Lennie to understand and relate to the events occurring around him, resulting in his incapability of living in the society. (Telgen 246)…
Lennie is a social outcast in the ranch of his mental disability but dreams of tending the rabbits. “Course he ain’t mean. But he gets in trouble alla time because he’s so God damn dumb.” (Steinbeck 41). This quote demonstrates that Lennie is an outcast because of his mental disability. Another quote that shows he’s an outsider, “I’m gonna shoot the guts outta that big bastard myself.” (Steinbeck 98). Lennie was considered as an outcast after he accidentally murdered Curley’s wife and nobody defended and went after him with guns. “‘I jus’ tol’ you, jus las’ night. ‘Go on- tell again George.’” (Steinbeck 6). This quote indicates that Lennie is a dreamer because he loves to hear George…
“And then from out of Lennie’s head there came a little fat woman.” (Steinbeck Chapter 6). This quote shows that Lennie had begun to hallucinate about his past which is a sign of a mental struggle. Even before the hallucination had started Lennie had killed one woman and many animals, which no mentally sane person would have done.”I tried Aunt Clara, Ma’am. I tried and tried. I couldn’t help it.” (Steinbeck Chapter 6). Lennie doesn't even consider the fact that he’s talking to his deceased aunt who came from nowhere. This is mostly because of Lennie’s developmental delay which does not let him think like an adult but instead like a young child.…
Steinbeck starts the book with verbal person vs person conflict between George and Lennie during the orientation of the characters. "When I think of all the swell times I could have without you, I go nuts." As this is said, the audience realises George feels that Lennie needs constant attention.…