In chapter one, Steinbeck introduces us to George and Lennie. They are migrant workers who travel to work on a ranch in Soledad, California. The odd duo are trying to survive and save up some money during the 1930’s Great Depression.…
Often in literature there are lots of characters that have lots of connections. They have times where they become closer and where things happen that takes them apart. Just how in “Of mice and men” they are two characters George and lennie that practically grow up together. George and Lennie relationship is strong where they look out for each other. Sometimes lennie can get out of hand do things that causes them to move or relocate. George and Lennie relationships stands strong until Lennie gets out of hand and has to be dealt with for the better of their friendship.…
John Steinbeck’s novel called “Of Mice and Men”. The theme takes place in California during the Great Depression Era in the 1930’s in America. There are two main characters in this story are called George and Lennie. These two men struggled from the Great Depression Era by an economic failure and stock marketing failures which lead to unemployment and poverty in North America that began in 1929 and lasted until about 1939. It was the longest and most severe depression ever experienced by the industrialized Western world.…
George and Lennie have a strong relationship because they both continue to stay with each other. George shows that he is willing to continue to stay with Lennie when he tells him a future plan. George tells Lennie that they…
At the end of the book Of Mice And Men we all have so many questions. Why did George kill Lennie? Was it the best option? Was George a true friend to Lennie? In the end you may come to the conclusion that George may not have been a friend but more of a guardian. George didn’t treat Lennie alike Slim or Candy instead as a child. He shelters Lennie from reality. He wants the best for Lennie overall. And now Lennie relies on George for survival and now George relies on Lennie for companionship. It’s obvious George and Lennie have a bond, and through the book it becomes more obvious the bond is more guardian/guardee or parent/child than friendship. Still, George is a true companion to Lennie because George guards Lennie. George and Lennie are companions…
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.…
George truly never betrayed his friendship with Lennie, although their many shared experiences offered chances for George to do so. ““George, you want I should go away and leave you alone?”” this quote from Lennie shows his shallow understanding of how he can’t live on his own as he offers George to leave him behind before they take their new jobs (12). ““No-look! I was jus’ foolin’, Lennie. ’Cause I want you to stay with me.”” George’s reply to the offer Lennie makes, and…
The friendship between George and Lennie in Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men is illustrated as one that is strong and enduring which is not expected of men during the time the book sets. By looking at George and Lennie’s friendship, one can see that they both envision a future that includes both of them and fail to see one without the other. By opposing the themes of friendship and loneliness, Steinbeck creates an example of a friendship that will carry on even in the final stages past death.…
In the novel Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, George and Lennie have a very close relationship and their companionship is quite deep. During the 1930s, which was during The Great Depression, George and Lennie escape from Weed because they get into trouble. George has to look after Lennie because Lennie’s Aunt, Clara, is dead and no one takes care of Lennie. Then, they go to the Salinas Valley where they are going to work on a ranch. In the novel, George is morally right to kill Lennie because George wants to protect Lennie from the painful death and save other people from Lennie’s uncontrolled strength.…
Working to achieve what you want in life is always an honorable task. Doing it while homeless is even more of an accomplishment. George and Lennie in the novella, “Of Mice and Men” are being used by the author to show this. They were homeless men traveling from one workplace to another along this journey. The ranch hands in this story were all homeless men looking for their way to a better way of living.…
A journey is a physical movement from one place to another and the emotional outcome that comes with it. Obstacles and challenges are faced by both George and Lennie in “of Mice and Men” and the persona of “I was only 19”…
George, the Everyman, is pierced by companionship’s double-edged sword because of Lennie’s infamous actions that have led to the pair’s constant look for work and vulnerability to plights that wouldn’t affect the average man. Steinbeck illustrates the trouble Lennie has caused numerous times throughout the novel, but George’s true feelings about the situation are most accurately portrayed in the beginning of the novel. George tells Lennie, “ ‘God a’mighty, if I was alone I could live so easy… You can’t keep a job and you lose me ever’ job I get’ ” (Steinbeck 11). While George fixes up beans for dinner, he explodes and grieves about all the trouble Lennie has caused when Lennie asks for ketchup. This outburst reveals that Lennie is mentally…
George needs Lennie for his physical prowess, also just so George can feel like someone depends on him. Although George might seem like he hates Lennie, he enjoys being around him and he would be devastated if anything bad happened to Lennie. “…He Damn near drowned before we could get him. An’ he was so damn nice to me for pullin’ him out. Clean forgot…
At first glance George and Lennie had a great relationship but as the story progresses, George discovers he must move on to a better life. “ ‘God a’mighty, if I [George] was alone I could live so easy. I could get a job an’ work, an’ no trouble. No mess at all, and when the end of the month come I could take my fifty bucks and go into town and get whatever I want…’ “(11). At the beginning of the story George knew what Lennie had done in their previous town Weed, but he didn’t notice all the events leading up to another mistake that was even worst than the last. Due to the fact that Lennie doesn’t know wrong from right George had to keep fixing his mistakes, which was hurting George and his dreams. It wasn’t until after Lennie killed Curley’s Wife that George realized his dreams were not going anywhere while Lennie was still around. So he knew that it was in the best interest for both of them if they went their separate ways. Although George didn’t have to kill Lennie in order for him to succeed, George felt like that was the only way he could have peace with himself and the death of Lennie. In the end George knew that Lennie needed him in order to succeed in life but Lennie was holding him back so George got…
One type of conflict in Of Mice and Men is George’s conflict with his own conscience. This is because George had a really hard decision to make at the end of the story on whether he should kill Lennie or not. It was a conflict as Lennie was like a brother to George and George cared for Lennie a lot and just wanted to look after him. But because everyone was going to kill Lennie, George was debating whether he should kill Lennie or not. He felt that killing him himself was the right thing as Lennie was his responsibility and if he didn’t, he would get tortured by the other ranch workers. This was similar to Carlson killing candy’s dog, when candy then afterwards realised he should’ve done it himself. Killing Lennie was a hard and distressing thing for George to do as it says, “The hand shook violently”, maybe showing regret or even determination to get it over and done with. George killed Lennie because he had to.…