Consequences Of Lennie In John Steinbeck's Of Mice And Men

382 Words1 Page

In the end of mice and men by John Steinbeck, George kills his best friend Lennie after he gets in trouble. The big questions is, did george have the right to kill lennie after what he did? The answer is yes because of the consequences that lennie would have faced, putting Lennie out of his misery, and it would be just a matter of time before Lennie had another "accident" and killed someone else. One reason that the killing was justified was the consequences that lennie would of faced if george did not kill him. One consequence is if the law took over lennie would have been sent to prison. If he was captured by Curly's men they would have killed him in a not so humane way. Also George’s care and love for lennie required a shift from absolute

Open Document