One reason why Curley’s wife should be blamed for her death is by talking to Lennie when he pacifically told her, “Well, I ain’t supposed to talk to you or nothing.” (86). Curley’s wife didn’t listen to him and that started to questioning him about why he wasn’t supposed to be talking her. Lennie kept telling the same reason that his best friend George told him not to be talking to her because she was jailbait, and George didn’t want Lennie to go to jail because of her. The tart kept begging Lennie to bring up a conversation with her, but he came rejecting her offer. Finally, Curley’s wife changed the subject and asked Lennie a question about his lifeless puppy, and made Lennie caved into a conversation that lead her dead by the end of it.…
"No, Lennie. I ain't mad. I never been mad, an' I ain't now. That's a thing I want ya to know"(Steinbeck 106) -George…
The novel, Of Mice and Men, written by John Steinbeck, is an extraordinary story of two men who travel together through tough situations and remain loyal to one another. They develop a strong friendship and share many qualities. My best friend, Alla, and I have known each other for over seven years and we have a strong bond. What binds us together are our differences and loyalty, just like Lennie and George, but unlike them, we have different dreams.…
Lennie ends up doing the worst things possible. He ends up killing his puppy by accident. He also kills Curley’s wife in the barn. Lennie’s entire life he’s been killing things without knowing what he’s done. Lennie grab Curley’s wife, “Don’t you go yelling and shook her” (91). Lennie wasn’t sure what he had done. George had no choice but to kill Lennie because of what he had done.…
The thing she does the most will lead to her death. She provokes Lennie which was a terrible thing to do because he is not the brightest person in the world. She taunts him to pet her hair, which Lennie likes soft things. She does not know what he is capable of. So she freaks out and he hold son when she is telling him to let go. This makes Lennie angry, so he eventually shakes her around and breaks her neck. Due to Curley’s wife provakadveness Lennie kills her. Due to her being Curley’s wife and Curley being a cruel person, that when he finds out he would beat and torture Lennie. So this makes George be the one has to give Lennie a quick and swift kill.…
Lennie’s unintentional murder of Curley’s wife results in a mad rampage to find him, and as an end result, kills him. He kills Curley’s wife from attempting to stop her from screaming, shaking her violently and “her body flopped like a fish” (Steinbeck 91). He couldn’t control his strength and accidentally broke her neck. When she is discovered by the men in the barn, Curley immediately frames Lennie and blames him: “‘I know who done it...that big son-of-a-bitch done it...I’ll kill the big son-of-a-bitch myself. I’ll shoot ‘im in the guts’” (Steinbeck 96). Curley saying that he would kill Lennie himself and shoot him “in the guts” implies that he is going to torture him and give him a painful death. The reason Curley is able to say that is because Lennie asserted too much physical strength on Curley’s wife and murders her. Lennie’s uncontrollable strength causes violent incidents; even though he didn’t mean to hurt her, he is still guilty of the despicable crime. Due to his physical power, others view him as a foolish, dangerous monster, especially Curley, who wants the chance to torture Lennie and get revenge for breaking his hand. In the end, Lennie is shot and killed during the search to hunt him down. because of the incident he caused when he couldn’t control his physical strength.…
[Candy] said miserably, "You seen what they done to my dog tonight? They says he wasn't no good to himself nor nobody else”(Steinbeck 60). Candy is introduced in the start of chapter two, he is described indirectly by the narrator as a “Stoop shouldered old man”(Steinbeck 18). He is said to have a round stump on his right arm, but no hand. His dog enters later in chapter two, whom is described as a “dragfooted sheepdog, gray of a muzzle, and with pale, old eyes”(Steinbeck 26). Through these characters, Steinbeck helps the reader understand the stereotype of the uselessness of the elderly and disabled. Along with this, Candy and his dog create a parallel with George and Lennie.…
“Truth is everybody is going to hurt you: you just gotta find the ones worth suffering for” (Bob Marley). The novel Of Mice and Men, by John Steinbeck, was set in the Great depression. In the novel George has to deal with Lenny every single day and it’s not easy, but he loves him and he just has to accept that Lenny is part of his life. In this book, society was frustrating. People were very sexist, and instead of coming together and helping each other everyone kept to themselves this is also known as isolation. Also, during this time people who suffered from mental and physical disabilities were often isolated and faced discrimination. Steinbeck identifies many societal problems during the Great Depression, and brings them to light in his novella Of Mice and Men.…
The past problem lead to him killing a puppy when he was in the barn, before he killed Curley’s wife. “And Lennie said to the puppy, “Why do you got to get killed? You ain’t so little as mice. I didn’t bounce you hard.”’ (Steinbeck 85).…
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…
Lennie had an attention span of a five year old. He wasn’t very bright like everyone else. He was like a little boy trapped in a mans body. He liked the feeling of soft things. So he tried to get ahold of everything that was soft. Well, he would find mice anywhere he could and keep them as pets. But when he would pet the mice, he pets them to hard and it would kill them. He did not do it on purpose. He just loved the feeling of soft things. This all relates to how Curley’s wife died. Well, one day Lennie was with Curley’s wife and she was talking about how soft her hair was. Lennie asked her if he could touch her hair but when he when to touch her hair, he did just like with the mice, he played with her hair to hard and did not let go of it. Curley’s wife tried to get Lennie to let go but he forced her to stay and put he put his hands over her mouth while she was trying to scream for help. And because he did not let go, he broke Curley’s wife’s neck and it killed her. These events foreshadow future events but realizing that just because someone wants to touch something does not mean he or she has to be so rough with…
The author Steinbeck actually uses a lot of irony in the entire novel. One of the major irony appears in the book is the scene when George kills Lennie, because he wants to protect Lennie from other people such as Curley who might treat Lennie in a violent way. Ironically, George takes Carlson’s shotgun to kill Lennie, and this shotgun is actually the one is used for killing Candy’s dog. It is also irony since the ranch hands do not feel sympathy for Lennie’s death and the fact that George loses his best friend, although they felt sorrow for Candy loss of his old dog. Slim is the only one who notices the fact of the shooting, and he tends to comfort George by telling him “you hadda” do it. Moreover, since George and Lennie is best friend to…
How do you think society handle people who are different? I was treated differently when I moved to Connecticut. Everyone talked about me and did not like me because I was born in Texas. Everyone called me dumb because I did not have the same education as everyone else. People use to say “You’ll never be as smart as me because you were born in a dumb state.” They use to make fun of my accent, they would taunt me and say “Howdy y’all!” and act like a cowboy.…
Capturing the curiosity being produced by the reader, George grasps most of the attention starting as soon as his name is mentioned for the first time in the novel. In Of Mice and Men, John Steinbeck, the author of the novel, vividly shows the development in George’s character. Both George’s compassion for the world and people around him and the way in which he controls himself change rapidly as he progresses over the three days in which the novel takes place. From dealing with Lennie’s disability to simply hold himself together on the ranch, George demonstrates how people can change and mature quickly. By tracing George’s journey throughout the novel, readers can better appreciate George as a character and Steinbeck’s overall message.…
When Lennie kills curley’s wife George blames it on that. Lennie really do not know what he has done until it's over. In the book he says “and then he whispered in a fright, I done a bad thing. I done another bad thing” (Steinbeck 91) Lennie was just trying to make Curley's wife be quiet and he did not know his own strength and he pushed to hard and killed her. He did not know what he was doing because he was…