Of Mice And Men George And Lennie's Relationship Essay

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The story "Of Mice and Men" was written by John Steinbeck and set in America in the late 1920's early 1930's, in California near Soledad. The novel is based on two migrant workers named George and Lennie. Both very similar in that they are both very lonely, making them very reliant on each other. In a time where loneliness was very common, the two needed each other the most. George and Lennie’s relationship is a complex one. For Lennie, it is all he has known since being brought up by his Aunt Clara. He makes a veiled threat to George at the beginning of the novel that he can live alone “If you don’ want me I can go off in the hills an’ find a cave. I can go away any time.” However both George and the reader know that Lennie would not survive. George feels responsible for Lennie, and in a way is making up for the mean things he did to him as a child, like making him jump into a river when he couldn’t swim. However, Lennie also gives George great comfort as his love for his friend is unconditional. Lennie is an honest companion: he brings out the paternal side in George “I wisht I could put you in a cage with about a million mice an’ let you have fun.” …show more content…

Lennie does not just admire George; without George's help, Lennie would be in jail, institutionalized, or possibly dead. George feels a certain obligation to continue taking care of Lennie, even though he says repeatedly how much happier he could be if Lennie were not around. Lennie mimics George in every respect. "He pushed himself back, drew up his knees, embraced them, looked over to George to see whether he had it just right. He pulled his hat down a little more over his eyes, the way George's hat was"

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