George I sit here waiting, waiting for the day for the I can be free. Free from work, free from these awful people, free from everything. I wish I could just settle down at my own place where I can grow my own food, farm my own land, be my own boss. I already dont have to worry about Lennie getting in any trouble. I guess I'm halfway there. It could just be me on my own, on a little farm, with some chickens, maybe some pigs or a cow. I can grow my own food. I know how to cook, I’m not too bad. I can teach myself some things. I can even go into town every saturday and trade in some of my things. While I'm there I can visit Lennie's grave, maybe bring him some pretty flowers. Oh I'm sure he would like that. I really do miss that sun of a gun. …show more content…
Mood: happy then sad I want his dreams to be happy with lennie until he dies then I want his dreams to be sad after lennie is gone Point of view: first person I want it to come from george so we can hear how he truly feels …show more content…
The newspapers, the streets, billboards, people even got posters and t-shirts of my husband, Jim Braddock the heavyweight champion! Oh how life life is going be now. I'm so excited for him, for our family, for us. The kids don’t have to be hungry anymore. We have money we have food, and we also have a new pet for the kids. They are so excited, probably even more than their dad is. I so happy he made it out alive. Oh good god I was so nervous for him. I can't wait until he comes back from his next fight tonight. It's going to start real soon. I hate watching him fight so I'll just have my friends tell me what happened when it's over. I heard the guy he's fighting is new so no one knows how good he really is. Hopefully he's new enough that it won't last long until he's
I am the wife of an innocent dead man. I raised three without a father. People see us as less. We are the Robinson, and me I’m Helen Robinson. Living in the deep south in the 1930’s wineries. The Depression affected most everyone in Maycomb except for us. All of the blacks in the county live in one area outside of the landfill. I lived on the edge of farm which grows acres of cotton every year. We were a poor family that sharecropped. There weren't many people in Maycomb who treated us kindly except for Mr. Link Deas and the Finches. One year the white trash family accused my Tom for a serious crime that he never did. For months we never saw him due to the polices never let blacks and women in. The Finches and neighbours came and helped during
Far back, in the midst of a time when the world was very young, there lived a princess named Lucille and a bunny named Fluffy. Lucille was a beautiful girl with chocolate brown hair, and eyes as blue as the sweet summer sky. Fluffy was as white as snowflakes and as soft as clouds. He offered plenty of razzmatazz but little manners. They lived together in a tall castle, covered in green vines and grey cobblestone, hidden in the dense forest filled with animals and nature.
Lennie comes across as a powerful man to us in this book, yet is this
Hollow eyes glanced around the pristine apartment, the gray scale color scheme seems to match the women clasping her hands together, pursing her lips and searching for approval from the girl that stood in the doorway. Automatically, the girl deduced the woman was quite wealthy, especially in the neighborhood she'd now live in. The streets were busier, filled with nicer cars instead of busted ones without their fenders falling apart at the edge. Her nimble fingers explored the wall as she took careful steps into the living room. Winnie wasn't acclimated to this life style: the wallpaper wasn't being striped at the corners, stainless carpets without nothing questionable left behind, no sign of undesirable critters, and silence. She could finally
I cried as we locked up the house for the last time. I felt like we had just spackled, primed, and painted over my childhood. I felt as if my identity had been erased, and like the character in the song, I had lost myself. There was no longer any physical evidence that I had ever lived in, much less grew up in, the house.
“squick”! “Bang”! I walk in trying to find out where i’m going. Fast. Before anyone notices me. My mom is a vet and i really want a dog so bad! “Lily” said my mom. “squick” my mom enters the room seeing me look at all of the dogs. “Mom can i please…..” “Do you really want a dog this bad”? My mom asks. “Yes and i will do anything… anything” i say in a soft way. “Fine but only if you take care of it and clean up after it”. “thank you.. mom.” I whisper as my mom leaves the room. “Now it’s time to pick out a dog”.
There is an old saying that says, “Great friends are hard to find, difficult to leave, impossible to forget.” In the novel Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, George and Lennie take care, support, and sacrifice for one another. George and Lennie’s relationship shows us the true meaning of friendship throughout this story.
Lennie Small- Works on the ranch, has a mental disability. Lennie totally relies on George, his confidant for solely everything. Lennie is oversimplified and meek. He fixates on straightforward tactile joys, especially discovering extraordinary delight in touching delicate things. Despite the fact that Lennie is mentally disabled, for he does not have the ability to control himself physically and has an incredible defensive nature. Killed Curley’s wife
Did you know that in 2011, 79 percent of murders reported to the FBI were committed by friends or loved ones? In this novel by John Steinbeck, Of Mice and Men, it is clear that the statistics ring true. At the end of the novel, we readers have been through a roller coaster ride with our two main characters, George and Lennie, and mentally handicapped, yet strong man. For the final loop in the roller coaster, we lose a main passenger. George makes a selfless decision for himself and Lennie, he must kill Lennie for his own sake. There are actually a lot of justifiable reasons for the slaying of his own lifelong best friend. In a lot of ways Lennie was dependant , and in that he made life hell for both of the men, in the end Lennie was doomed
This play put on by SI tells the story of a young teenager named Alice trying to figure out her life. After she was raped by a popular kid at school, there was no one she could talk to and figure out what to do. Her parents, the typical very religious family was obviously against having an abortion, something Alice wanted to have but didn’t know how to ask her parents. To gauge there response, she asked them through someone else, telling her exact story but saying it was someone else, and there were definitely against it. Another character named Lennie was struggling with a common problem amongst teens as well, bullying. He was being bullied at school by the same group of the people that Alice’s rapist was in. In Lennie’s family, his dad was catching wind of a
When making tough decisions about those who are close, it is hard to know what the right call is. This is something that George from John Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men knows far too well. When George’s mentally impaired companion, Lennie, accidentally kills his bosses’ wife, George is faced with the question of what to do. Ultimately he decides that the best thing for himself and for Lennie is to shoot him. Although it could be argued that murder isn’t right for any reason, in this instance, George made the right decision to kill Lennie although it wasn’t an easy one.
Lennie is alone in the barn, petting a puppy that he has obviously petted a little too long and hard, and he can't make up his mind about it.
Hello, I am Piggy. Thank you all for attending today. In this very moment we are going be remember a littlun from the island. The boy with the Mulberry birthmark was one of the only littluns we could keep up with because he stood out. He was truly sweet and caring for those around him. I remember when he was the first littluns to let us older boys know that the beast was in the forest. I know that he didn’t intend to spread fear amongst the rest of the littluns, so I respected him as being brave because he wanted to protect those around him. It was quite hard. What would you do if you were surrounded by a bunch of littluns that were crying because they thought there was a child eating beast on the loose? He only did what he thought
In the novela Of Mice And Men, John Steinbeck produces many characters that make a huge impact to the story. Some of the most extraordinary characters are George, Lennie, Candy, and many more. Lennie Smalls is the most heard character throughout the whole novela. Steinbeck does a splendid job of characterizing Lennie’s personality and showing emotions to set the mood of dark and pessimistic. Lennie’s character is very unique for how he acts, as Lennie is a large man that can be very kind but also very powerful. His greatest difficulty is that he cannot remember anything from what others say to him. Steinbeck really seems to reinforce Lennie’s characteristics of strength, kindness, being childish, etc.!
George has only wanted the best for Lennie and nothing else. In hindsight, George didn’t truly murder Lennie. George knew that Lennie was a danger to himself, George, and others. Lennie was free of the wrong things in life that came because someone wasn’t there to look after him all the time. George also can’t be blamed for that either, a man must have some time to himself and that's what George was doing. After so many incidents, George knew that there wouldn't be a better future, Lennie will always be getting into trouble even if he doesn't want any.