The Bunkhouse Men In John Steinbeck's Of Mice And Men

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The bunkhouse men in Steinbeck’s social realism novella Of Mice and Men await the shot with a guilted nature as Candy isolates himself with the treacherous reality of the loss of his dog. There is an evident tension in the room as told by the used diction and imagery whilst the men deal with their residing guilt and emotions of responsibility. They sit in a “silence” in a nervous tension, no one sure what to say or think. George is hesitant to do anything, “nervously” fidgeting with the edge of the card deck as Candy “lay still, staring as the ceiling”. As the floor squeaks with a tapped mouse beneath it, all the men “[look] down at it gratefully”. The men are thankful for the brief distraction because it allows them to push aside their residing

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