Page 102. Read the passage where Crooks talks of black families. Why is this relevant?…
An anonymous person once said, “A friend is someone who understands your past, believes in your future, and accepts you just the way you are.” This statement means that someone who cherishes you and cares for you, understands your background, wants to pursue similar objectives, and accepts your personality. This statement is agreeable, because of this statement is implemented in both the past and present cultures. Motifs, and characterization, used in Of Mice and Men, by John Steinbeck are examples of how this novel proves this statement correct.…
John Steinbeck's novel Of Mice and Men contain an affluence of symbols which work together to produce a deeper meaning. Of Mice and Men have various examples of symbolism such as, the mouse in Lennie’s pocket, Lennie’s puppy, George and Lennie’s farm, Candy’s dog, Lennie’s death, and the rabbits Lennie always dream about . Symbolism plays a very important part in this novel, so therefore I will be discussing what each symbol represents.…
In the novel Of Mice and Men written by John Steinbeck foreshadowing is used a lot. Foreshadowing is the use of hints or clues to suggest what will happen later on in literature. The events that show foreshadowing are Lennie accidentally killing Curley’s wife, the death of Lennie, and George’s decision to shoot Lennie in the head like Carlson did to Candy’s dog.…
Hours passed as George lay next to Lenny’s body, telling him the story of the farm, no prompts or corrections from Lenny just a silent sleeping body. Morning came with haste- the rustling of the trees woke George; he rubbed his tears away and stood up. “George!” a man shouted “Is that you?” He looked towards the bushes; his eyes focused and saw it was Carlson.…
The ending of the novel “Of Mice and Men” by John Steinbeck is very thought provoking and is very controversial, and it also raises many questions like “Did Lennie really deserve to die at the hands of his only friend?”, “Why didn’t George give Lennie up to the authorities to prolong his life?”, “What would have happened if Curley and Carlson found Lennie before George did?”…
George’s best friend, Lennie, accidentally kills Curley’s wife, and he leaves the ranch. When Curley, the boss of the ranch’s son, discovers the death of his wife, he puts together a mob and sets out to find Lennie and shoot him in his guts. George knows that this will be very painful and agonizing, and he is not sure what to do. He ultimately decides to kill Lennie himself by shooting him in the back of the head. George meets Lennie by the pool of the Salinas River, and tells him his favorite story, the story of the farm. As soon as Lennie is calm, George shoots him. He knows that killing him this way will be instant and without pain. George feels that he is doing the right thing by sparing his friend of pain. The theme of loyalty and sacrifice relates to the quote and novel. George’s loyalty to his friend forces him to sacrifice him. This takes a lot of courage, but by doing this he is sparing his friend of extreme…
The boys on the ranch were going to shoot Lennie in the gut because he accidentally killed Curley’s wife. George, who couldn’t watch his companion suffer, mercy shot George in the back of the head. George threw the gun to the ground and stared at his hand that pulled the trigger until the boys found him. “Slim came directly to George and sat down beside him, sat very close to him.” He understood that George’s nightmare of being lonely had become reality. By sitting next to him then helping George to his feet animated a promise to fill the new void in George’s heart. Sim was about to take on the role as George’s companion and friend.…
George takes care of him on the notion he will be able to teach Lennie the ways of life and in the end he will be fine and they will start a farm. Many times Lennie proves that his personality is unchanging and he has great trouble learning. He forgets constantly what gets him in trouble such as killing animals with his monstrous hands or touching the girl in the red dress. As George realizes the state of mind is in he begins to become upset with Lennie yet sympathetic because he knew ironically Lennie wouldn't completely understand or even remember being lectured. With the realization that Lennie was much dumber than he had known not being able to remember most things George began to see the relationship dissolve to a father-son type of relationship. Georges important quote "Guys like us, that work on ranches, are the loneliest guys in the world. They got no family. They don't belong no place. . . . With us it ain't like that. We got a future. We got somebody to talk to that gives a damn about us. We don't have to sit in no bar room blowin' in our jack jus' because we got no place else to go. If them other guys gets in jail they can rot for all anybody gives a damn. But not us." can be seen as the hope that kept George with Lennie but by the end of the novel it is just a habitually story George tells Lennie to make him feel…
Of Mice and Men, by Steinbeck. “I feel like an outsider, and I always will feel like one. I’ve always felt that I wasn’t a member of any particular group.” (Anne Rice). This quote imparts to Lennie and Candy because they’re both different and handicapped. Lennie and Candy are nice people who are powerless, dreamers, and social outcasts.…
When Lennie entered the barn on that ranch in the Salinas River Valley that beautiful autumn afternoon, he had no intention of killing anyone. He did not plan to hurt anyone, run away from a crime, or get in any kind of trouble. He went in the barn simply to be with his new puppy. When Lennie and Curley’s wife began to talk Lennie did not have a carefully laid out plan to kill her, nor was he filled with rage. However, when he was stroking her hair harder and harder, and she began to pull away and scream because of the pain he was causing her, he saw his one dream of tending rabbits, owning his own place, and living off of the fat of the land slip away. He got caught up in the heat of the moment. He placed one hand over her mouth, and another on her shoulder and began to violently throttle her in an effort to silence her. Lennie, by this time, was quite upset with Curley’s wife. She was destroying his carefully laid out plan. As you know after being brutally shaken, Curley’s wife’s, neck snapped, and she was suddenly dead.…
A vision of Aunt Clara met Lennie at the pond he was sitting at. Aunt Clara told Lennie that George could’ve had the best life, but because of him George stayed. She also told Lennie that George sacrificed everything him. Lennie then started hallucinating talking rabbits, as if the universe was telling Lennie a message. George appeared when Lennie started yelling about his mistakes, Lennie questioned why George wasn’t giving him hell about Curley’s wife. Frankly, George had a plan up his sleeve, he was going to get Lennie to be calm. Lennie talks about the future he has with George, how they will have rabbits and pups for Lennie to tend and a nice home to live in. “Look acrost the river, Lennie, an’ I’ll tell you so you can almost see it.” (Steinbeck, 105) George used the river excuse as a distraction to get Carlson’s Luger ready. Lennie waited for George to complete the story about their home, but George heard the voices getting closer and closer and he knew that what needed to be done, needed to be done now. The voices were closer than ever. George raised the gun to Lennie’s head height and steadied it. George's hand shook violently as his pointer finger was slowly pressing on the trigger. He steadied himself, his face was focused and his hand was finally still. He pulled the trigger. The sound of the gunshot filled the air around them. Slim heard the sound, so did Curley and Carlson. Grey filled the scene when…
The story 'Of Mice and Men', written by John Steinbeck, is bassically a novel that is about impairments that are both symbolic and literal. Most of the characters in the novel are impaired in a constricting way, whether it is mentally through isolation, loneliness and intellectuality or physically through their damaged bodies.…
He returned to the calm, cold ranch and quietly entered the workers bunkhouse. The men all lay in a deep slumber from the hard days work. George sat down on his damp bunk and stared at Lennies old, deckendant bunk. George was angry, he believed that Curley had defeated his intelligence and won. He turned to the white-washed wall on his bunk and his mind started to project memories of the times him and Lennie had shared in the past. A tear trickled down his cheek as the picture of Lennie face after he had dropped to the floor was replaying over and over again in his mind. He tossed and turned uncomfortably on his bunk going through all the options he had and how he came to the dyer end that it did.…
Right beside the fireplace, Candy was brushing his dog’s hair, his name was pugs. George sat around the fireplace, Candy said, Today, I got twenty eggs. We are getting richer, Lennie would have laughed with happiness. George stepped near Candy, yeah, he would have slept with the rabbits and dogs. I wish Lennie was here, if he was here, I might have let him tend the rabbits inside. Candy was confused. You talking about Lennie, aren’t you? You always said Lennie never existed, and now, you’re talking about Lennie. George didn’t answer. Candy went on, everybody was wrong, Crooks was wrong, he was always saying that we would end up with no land, But here we are, you’re family and me, and the ranch. We don’t have to listen to anyone. George said, we were right. Candy said, That Curley should have of died earlier, man, that boy died by a bullet, Curley’s mouth got himself killed. That horrible man should have had died earlier, he deserved it.…