(TS) In the book Of Mice and Men written by John Steinbeck, it shows how Lennie tries to be caring, but his strength overpowers his mind which leads George to kill Lennie to protect others. (C1) Furthermore, Lennie tries to be normal and copy George but hurts people along the way which puts everyone including George in danger. (E1) In Chapter three, George and Candy were talking about the farm and how they will have enough money at the end of the month to get the land. Then Curley comes into the bunkhouse to look for his wife, when he sees Slim he thinks Slim was with his wife. When Slim confronted him everyone got in Curly's face, then Curley started to get in Lennie's face when George gave the okay to Lennie he finally stood up for himself.…
Other than trust, accepting each other is a key role in their friendship. George accepts Lennie with his mental disability which is why they have a strong friendship. Lennie is extremely strong so when fighting Curley, George sticks up for Lennie, “‘Get him, Lennie. Don’t let him do it’” (Steinbeck 63). Since Lennie is extremely strong, George knows that he should let Lennie stick up for himself and not allow Curley to make him feel weak and inferior to the rest. George also accepts the fact that Lennie cannot remember tons of information that he has been told, “‘I’ll tell ya again. I ain’t got nothing better to do. Might jus’ as well spen’ all my time tellin’ you things and then you forget ‘em, and I tell you again’” (Steinbeck 4). This shows…
Stereotypes in “Of Mice and Men” by John Steinbeck affect people in different ways. When Curley stereotypes Lennie for being tall and dumb. Lennie stereotypes George as small and extremely knowledgeable. These are some examples of stereotypes in “Of Mice and Men”.Stereotypes can hurt people in many different ways.…
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.…
In John Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men is a story that revolves around George and Lennie life. Since Lennie likes to touch velvet like thing, he had grabbed a girl dress causing her to scream rape. This resulted in George and Lennie get chased out of their town, Weed, and having to find a new job. During their time working on a ranch in Soledad, Lennie had encountered some problems. For example, Lennie had accidently killed his puppy and also on the same day he killed Curley's wife. Lennie is a childlike big guy who cannot control his strength, but at the same time he has an affection of touching anything soft.…
Throughout chapter one George and Lennie discuss the incident that happened in weed, and we begin to see George lose control when he says to Lennie, “Oh, so ya forgot that too, did ya? Well, I ain’t gonna remind ya, fear ya do it again” (Steinbeck 7). When George says this it shows how much he’s concerned with something like it, or something worse happening again. By the end of the book Lennie has killed multiple mice, a puppy, and a woman, George knows Lennie will never overcome his disability which will result in him killing again. Therefore, George had to end Lennie’s life to protect himself, and other people from his destructive…
What George did to his friend Lennie was all that he could do and George had no other choice. In the story Of Mice and Men, written by John Steinbeck, George has to kill his friend Lennie because there a mod coming after Lennie trying to kill him. George sees no other option but to kill him before the mob gets to him. Lennie has also hurt too many helpless things, he killed mice, a puppy, and now a human. Lennie has never been punished for his actions and unfortunately it had to come to this. What George did to Lennie was completely justified…
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.…
The two men shared the same dream that one day they would earn enough money to buy their own farm and be able to live off of the fat of the land. Lennie's biggest hope was to be able to tend to the rabbit's that one day they would own. Lennie loved when George would tell him a story about how their lives will be someday. Unfortunately, Lennie's strength always gets the best of him. He likes to pet soft things, but everything that he touches he kills accidentally. The two men are going to work on a ranch near the Salinas river close to a town called Soledad. George tells Lennie that if he ever gets himself into troubl at the ranch to go and hide in the brush next to the river, and he will come for him. While at the ranch Lennie is in the barn talking to the boss' son's wife and she tells him to feel her hair since he like soft things. Lennie starts to feel her hair and he likes how soft it is, so he starts petting and petting it harder and harder until she becomes scared. She asked him to stop but he didn't. Lennie kept on and she let out a scream, he got scared and covered her mouth and nose and told her to be quite that George was going to get mad at him. He kept petting some more and she lets out…
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.…
From the initial beginning, readers can tell through Lennie’s actions that he was not a smart man, rather a mentally challenged individual. Lennie “dropped his blankets and …..drank from the surface of the green pool; drank with long gulps” (3). Lennie’s actions showed that he was thirsty and worked hard, but not intelligent. George and Lennie must leave from their job at Weed because of Lennie’s remorseful actions.…
The strong always overpower the weak. Throughout John Steinbeck’s famous novel, “Of Mice and Men,” He tries to express in many ways as possible that the strong will always overrule the weak no matter what. And Lennie’s puppy is a great representation of that one theme. Lennie is the type of guy who isn’t always the best to be around, especially is your small and soft as fur. Because of the fact that Lennie isn’t able to recognize his physical prowess, he tends to kill a lot of animals and objects throughout nature. As George and Lennie are in the bunkhouse, George states; “You not to pet that pup so much or ya might kill em.” (pg. 55) This quote is very significant because just as Lennie is dependent…
Lennie's death and how he dies is very sad. Leading up to Lennie's death, and even before they went to the ranch, George told Lennie that if he ever does something bad he should go to the pond and George will find him. This is how George knew where Lennie had went to. The second reason how Steinbeck references Lennie's death is by writing about Carlson killing Candy's dog. Carlson stated that if you shoot them right where the spine connects to the head, they will not even feel it. This was exactly where George had shot Lennie in the head. Steinbeck also writes about how Candy said he should have shot his dog himself. This is just like how George stood up and went to find Lennie and kill him. George had taken the responsibility for Lennie's…
Did you know that in the 1930’s if somebody did something another person disapproved of they could hang the person from a tree and torture them as a social gathering? This was called lynching, they also would experiment on mentally ill people in hopes to “cure their crazies.” These are only a few of America’s dirty little secrets that are revealed about the 1930’s. In the book, Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, the main characters George and Lennie strived to have their own farm, but everywhere they go Lennie gets in trouble forcing them out. This causes George to have to decide on whether or not to leave Lennie and go on his own. George did the right thing by killing Lennie because otherwise Lennie would have suffered, he didn’t want to have the guilt of letting Lennie die stay with him forever, and he knew that Lennie would just get in trouble again.…
First, Lennie is a very stupid man, so stupid that he could be mistaken for the mentally retarded. He walks aimlessly with George for miles and miles before knowing where he is going. "Where we goin', George?"(Pg 4) asks Lennie after they have walked for nearly a day. Also lennie feels the need to pet a dead mouse while they are walking, which can only be described as childish and primitive. "Uh-uh jus' a dead mouse, George I didn't kill it. Honest! I found it. I found it dead."(Pg. 5) pleads Lennie.…