So in the book Of Mice and Men it follows two men named George and Lennie. George and Lennie are best friends and they dream of owning a small farm together. Lennie wants to take care of the rabbits if they get get any. Lennie always asks “Will I be able to tend the rabbits?” (Steinbeck,56).They end up working on a ranch and they both stick out. That’s when most of their troubles started.…
The dream of George and Lenny, they want to collect money together also, they want to have a house ,a farm and vegetable cages of rabbits ,chickens and cows and other animals…
In John Stienbeck’s “Of Mice and Men” he tells the story of a dream gone horribly wrong. The story focuses on two friends George and Lennie. Lennie is a mentally handicapped man which George takes care of. They travel from farm to farm, working to raise money to buy their own place. At their last fateful stop they meet a variety of interesting, but very lonely people.…
In the book “Of Mice and Men” by John Steinbeck. George travels everywhere with Lennie. After aunt Clara asked George to take care of him. George is small but an intelligent men and Lennie is a guy with a tremendous size but a mind of a young child. George and Lennie get a job at a ranch, their goal is to earn enough money to buy their own ranch and have many rabbits but not everything comes out as they had imagined it.…
Steinbeck shows the importance of character’s dreams through contrasting George’s and Lennie's dream with Curley’s wife’s dream. The two main characters of the novella are George Milton and Lennie Small ,who travel together and are linked by a dream of a future. Lennie, who is innocent and mentally handicapped, makes George's dream of owning his own ranch worthwhile, and becomes the obstacle to achieving that dream. They dream to “have a little house and a couple acres an’ a cow and some pig and. “An’ live off the fatta the lan’,” Lennie shouted “An’ have rabbits”(Steinbeck 15).This reveals that the idea of having their own farm and taking care of rabbits is important to them both. Lennie is excited to tend rabbits and George hopes this dream…
They have a dream of owning their own little house and lots of land with a farm filled with animals and gardens. A place where they could go and do whatever they want without anyone having to boss them around. George and Lennie await the freedom and independence they deserve after working long and hard. They constantly remind each other of their dreams and goals and take the steps to make it come true.…
Many people aspire for greatness in life; whether it’s being famous, or living the American dream, there is always more out there that people want. In the novel “Of Mice and Men” by John Steinbeck, an unlikely pair of working men, Lennie Small and George Milton, go out in search of work and end up on a ranch. Some of the people that they meet at the ranch are Curley, Slim, Candy, Crooks, and Curley’s wife. The ranch is owned by Curley’s father, which causes trouble for the men because of Curley’s aggressive behavior towards them. Curley’s wife is unfulfilled and is always slinking around the barn and attempts to talk to the men working, which usually ends in failure. Curley’s wife has one similarity to Lennie and George. The three of them are missing out, or missed out on the chance for a better life and end up in a cycle of disappointment. Lennie and George share a dream of owning a house and raising animals on a ranch, while Curley’s wife fantasizes of the life that could have been. Unfortunately, all of their dreams fall short of coming true. 3 characters in the novel with bold ambitions that never come to fruition are George, Curley’s wife, and Lennie.…
The common dream between George and Lennie of an independant rabbit-filled farm life diverges once Lennie’s rabbit-filled mind wanders. Each and every one of Lennie’s requests for George to talk about the rabbits on their dream farm is met with bitterness from George: “The hell with the rabbits. That’s all you ever can remember is them rabbits.” (Steinbeck, 3). George could not care less about the rabbits which is evidently Lennie’s only desire from their dream farm. Unlike Lennie’s rabbit-obsessed mindset , George has the mindset of the American working class in which being independent, owning a farm, and being financially secure is utopia. George’s dream is realistic while Lennie’s lacks any thought outside the realms of soft furry things. As well as distinct dreams, George and Lennie’s individual obstacles are nothing alike. In George’s case pleasure is the greatest adversary: “. . . I could take my fifty bucks and go into town and get whatever I want. Why, I could stay in a cat house all night. I could eat any place I want, hotel or any place, and order any damn thing I could think of. An’ I could do all that every damn month. Get a gallon of whisky, or set in a pool room and play cards or shoot pool” (6). George’s pleasure thieves from him and ensures his perpetual spiral away from his dream. Meanwhile Lennie’s childish lack of in depth thought and awareness is his greatest adversary. This lack causes Lennie to habitually break or kill things unintentionally, or take self-detrimental actions without forethought such as getting him and George chased out of Weed for holding a girl’s soft dress. Lennie’s unusual strength and childish thinking partnered with the forethought and realistic mindset of George does no favours for either…
In John Steinbeck’s novel Of Mice and Men George Milton and Lennie Small are on their way to work on a ranch in Northern California after Lennie’s childlike brain and his odd fetish for petting things like mice, rabbits, puppies, and women get him into trouble. One of the major themes in John Steinbeck’s novel Of Mice and Men is having a dream creates hope, friendship, and determination.…
Each and every one of us has a dream and we all encounter conflicts that stand in the way of our ability to achieve it. Some people can reach their dreams, but many find themselves unable to free themselves from the personal, social and economic chains that bind them. In Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men, Lennie and George had a dream of owning a farm. These characters embarked on a journey to achieve their version of the American dream. “Well,” said George, “we’ll have a big vegetable patch and a rabbit hutch and chickens. And when it rains in the winter, we’ll just say the hell with goin’ to work, and we’ll build up a fire in the stove and set around it an’ listen to the rain comin’ down on the roof—Nuts!” Along the way, their personal, social and economic limitations put insurmountable hardships in their path.…
On their way to the farm in Salinas, California, George described this dream to Lennie. They had stopped to rest in a field when George said, “‘O.K. Someday—we’re gonna get the jack together and we’re gonna have a little house and a couple of acres an’ a cow and some pigs and—‘” (13). George continued to describe their dream when he said, “’We’ll have a big vegetable patch and a rabbit hutch and chickens. And when it rains in the winter, we’ll just say the hell with goin’ to work, and we’ll build up a fire in the stove and set around it an’ listen to the rain comin’ down on the roof—‘” (14). This dream was important to George, because he wanted to be free instead of being controlled by other people. Lennie was excited about this dream also, because he would get to pet rabbits all day and he loved to pet soft things. Although their dream was amazing, they unfortunately could not fulfill it due to many reasons. One reason their dream did not come true was because they got fired from most of their jobs due to Lennie’s mental retardation. For example, during their last job, Lennie saw a girl who was wearing a dress that looked soft, so he touched it without her permission. The woman yelled and two guys were sent out to find Lennie…
Americans want to find a sense of belonging and independence. John Steinbeck shows the reader these ideas throughout the novel Of Mice and Men. This also is a goal that everyone in the world can relate too. In the novel, George and Lennie share this dream through their hopes of owning land and enjoying freedoms that they have not experienced before. Although they share this dream together, both view it very differently. George is the only one who thinks about what owning land could actually mean to him as a man. Zeitler expresses George’s desire when he states: “More than a dream of land or property or riches or even a house of one’s own. George’s vision encompasses a broader range of values – freedom, abundance, fairness, nature, and companionship”…
The novel, Of Mice and Men, by John Steinbeck, tells the story of two migrant workers, George Milton and Lennie Small, who move from place to place in search of new job opportunities during the Great Depression in Soledad, California. George is a small man and Lennie is a mentally handicapped giant. The two men have to move from place to place more than other men because Lennie doesn't understand certain things and causes trouble without knowing what he did. However, they share the dream of owning their own ranch. Many obstacles stand in the way of this dream but one of the biggest obstacles is Lennie and his mental disability. In this novel the theme of friendship emerges. It appears in the novel when George and Lennie are making their way…
ams are what keep us alive and, whether they be in our own or others, affect everyone. They latch and grow into others just as they do in Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck. Dreams play an important role in Of Mice and Men for many reasons, one being that the story is about 2 farmhands, George and Lennie, which the author uses ample amounts of symbolism to the American Dream, and how elusive it is. George is Lennie’s friend, a burly man but has a mental disability making him act like a 6-year-old. They arrive at Curly’s farm looking for work, not trouble. They make many friends, such as Slim, Candy, Crooks, etc. all of which represent a different part of society. They all have different dreams that they each wish to achieve their dreams, which in turn affects their actions. George, Lennie, and the rest of their friends all try to achieve their dreams through means both good and bad.…
George and Lennie, in Of Mice and Men, desire a house on a farm, but when…