John Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men is set during the Great Depression where America’s economy was devastated causing hundreds of farmers and workers migrate to California in search of jobs. The death of Lennie in section 6 is regrettable, yet inevitable in this hostile environment the men find themselves in. Many of the characters have influence over Lennie’s downfall, however, George, Curley’s wife and Lennie himself are the most culpable characters for his unfortunate death. Lennie’s failure to follow the instructions given by George causes him to be vulnerable to the unsympathetic environment they are working in and likely to suffer from hateful people. Before the protagonists arrive at the ranch in section 1, George instructs Lennie not …show more content…
to say a word when they meet the boss, Lennie replies confidently “I can remember”. The fact that Lennie is so sure of himself creates a sense of unease because as seen from the previous events, Lennie does not have the ability to remember information and can only repeat and remember in a superficial way.
Lennie’s certainty makes George relax and put his faith in Lennie, causing even more trouble. When the two of them arrive at the ranch in section 2, Lennie speaks to the boss and makes him suspicious, he “stared hopelessly at his hands” after the incident. Lennie’s “hand” is a symbol in the story that symbolizes his wrong deeds and guilt. The word “hopelessly” shows his inability to control his own actions, giving the reader an idea that Lennie is not capable of improving and almost as if he knows that he has done something wrong and is doomed. George tells Lennie not to get involved and to ignore Curley’s wife, Lennie knows this too, telling her “I ain’t supposed to talk to you”. However when Curley’s wife begins to talk, Lennie cannot restrain his fascination and interest in her and eventually, his unbounded strength kills her. Curley’s …show more content…
wife’s brutal murder is the last straw for Curley, leading him to order his ranch hands to find and kill Lennie. Lennie’s disobedience and him failing to do what George requires cause him to make mistakes repetitively, angering and provoking the boss and Curley, this makes his death pitiful yet inescapable. It is notable that Lennie has a selective memory where he can remember instructions sometimes but not always, therefore it is rather harsh to blame Lennie’s death on himself. Curley’s wife’s desperation for attention which made her oblivious to the simple-mindedness of Lennie endangers both herself and Lennie’s life. At the beginning of section 5, when Curley’s wife talks to Lennie, she recognizes that Lennie does not think like a normal person. She demands “what makes you so nuts about rabbits” which implies that she understands how peculiar Lennie’s behaviour is through his obsession to talk about tending rabbits. Despite knowing Lennie’s different demeanour, she still tries to attract him by dressing up with “red ostrich feathers”. This visual and tactile imagery represents softness that allures Lennie as he likes soft and furry objects, however Lennie is unable to control his strength and desires which causes him to unintentionally destroy everything he loves, leading to his death. The situation further worsens when Curley’s wife “took Lennie’s hand and put it on her head”. Now that she finally has Lennie’s awareness and the spotlight she always longed for, she cannot control herself and tries to hold onto Lennie’s attention, overlooking the danger of Lennie’s unrestrained strength. When the two character’s fatal flaws come together, disaster happens and in this case, Curley’s wife’s attention seeking and Lennie’s strong physique cause her death that leads to Lennie’s deplorable demise. Curley’s wife can be blamed for Lennie’s death to an extent, but her activities does not really influence Lennie directly as it is not her fault that Lennie cannot resist her charms due to his simple mindedness and the neglection of his partner. George knows that Lennie’s disability makes him unsuitable for life on the ranch, yet he still believes that he will be able to cope and encourages him to do so.
When the pair first meet the boss in section 2, George tells him that Lennie is a “god damn good worker”, showing that Lennie is a physically strong character who has the ability to be a worker on the ranch. However, George admitting and recognising that Lennie “ain’t bright” tells the reader that even though Lennie has the strength to work, he is not mentally prepared to survive in such an antagonistic environment. In spite of that, George still insists on bringing Lennie with him to find work, thinking that he can manage to take care of Lennie anywhere even if they run into trouble, believing that Lennie can endure this life as a ranch worker. The inhospitable environment is shown in section 2 where the walls are “whitewashed and the floor unpainted” which reflects the impersonal, plain and mundane living conditions the men find themselves in. Moreover, the action of the boss “squinted one eye nearly closed” emphasizes the hostility and unfriendliness of the world where it is a rarity to have friends or companionship as most people are suspicious or wary of others. Later, Lennie tries to reason with George, telling him to “get outta here. It’s mean here”. Even Lennie, who cannot remember anything, who is always unaware of his surroundings, feels that this place is antagonistic which foreshadows that something
unfortunate is going to happen. Not surprisingly, George naively ignores Lennie’s pleas of discomfort and because he is blinded by this opportunity of achieving the American dream, he did not foresee the troubles ahead, forcing Lennie to dwell with disdainful men. Subsequently, Lennie, who cannot fit in with this inhospitable world, submits to it. George, as Lennie’s companion seems to have the most influence over Lennie’s death as it is his responsibility to ensure the safety and welfare of his friend, which he is clearly not able to do. It seems that at the time of the Great Depression, where people live in an adverse world, tragedies can only be the ending, as seen from Lennie’s grim end caused by George’s naivety, Curley’s wife’s desire and Lennie’s own mistakes from his failure to meet George’s regulations. It is notable that readers still feel sympathetic and a sense of melancholy towards the characters that cause Lennie’s death as both Curley’s wife and Lennie are dead, leaving George miserable and has to live his life alone without his best friend.
In chapter one, George and Lennie are introduced onto the scene and you get to know them a little bit and you get to see how they are related/ their relationship. When I read this first part, I could tell that George was pretty much Lennie’s caretaker and it was his job to find Lennie a job and make sure he ate enough and stayed a live. He kind of resented having to drag Lennie around (pg 11~12: “Well we ain’t got any!” George exploded. “Whatever we ain’t got, you want. If I was alone I could live so easy… But wadda I got? I got you. You can’t keep a job and you loose me every job I get.”), because Lennie’s a bit slow and he messes up a lot. He tries really hard to be good and listen to what George tells him to do, but in the end of every situation, Lennie forgets what George told him beforehand and sometimes it creates a little trouble (pg 45~46: “Well, he seen this girl in this red dress. Dumb like he is, he likes to touch ever’thing he likes. Just wants to feel it. So he reaches out to feel this red dress an’ the girl lets out a squawk, and that gets Lennie all mixed up, and he holds on ‘cause that’s the only thing he can think to do. Well, this girl just squawks and squawks. I was jus’ a little bit off, and I heard all the yellin’, so I comes running, an’ by that time Lennie’s so scared all he can think to do is jus’ hold on. I socked him over the head with a fence picket to make him let go. He was so scairt he couldn’t let go of the dress. And he’s so strong, you know… Well, that girl rabbits in an’ tells the law she’s been raped. The guys in Weed start a party out to lynch Lennie. So we sit in an irrigation ditch under water all the rest of that day.”). But when you look at them, you can tell that George is...
John Steinbeck wrote a story about two men that only had each to depend on. Many of George and Lennie's struggles come from things they cannot control such as Lennie's mental issues. George and Lennie are very poor and they work on farms together, but they have to move a lot because Lennie always does something stupid. The greatest tragedy in Mice and Men was when Lennie was left alone with Curley's wife. She was the reason why Lennie ended up being killed. She knew of to manipulate others to get her way and that is what she relies on most of the time.
Lennie's stupidity and carelessness constantly causes him to unintentionally harm people and animals. When he gets into sticky situations, George is there to help him get out of them. Ever since Lennie's Aunt Clara died, George has felt that he has a sense of duty
Lennie is broken and incomplete in many ways. He has a mental disability which differentiates him from the others. He depends on George for everything and cannot do things on his own even though he is a grown man.
One of Lennie's many traits is his forgetfulness. He easily forgets what he is supposed to do, but he somehow never forgets what he is told. An example of how Lennie is forgetful is when he has the mice in his pocket and when he went to pet them they bit his finger. “Lennie picked up the dead mouse and looked at with a sad face. When they bit him he pinched them, and by doing that he crushed their heads” (page 5) . This is important because he knew that if he squeezed their heads they would die, but since he is forgetful, he squeezed anyway. Another example of how Lennie is forgetful is when he grabbed Curley's hand and crushed it. “ Curley’s fist was swinging when Lennie reached for it. Lennie squeezed on until George came running in shouting ‘let go’. The next moment Curley was on the ground wailing while he held his crushed hand” (page 64). This event is important because Lennie had held on, not knowing what to do next, until George told him what to do. A final exampl...
Lennie has always been told what to do by George. George really helps him through problems that keep happening during the book. Lennie is incapable to live because he does not know his strength and George has to play the role as a living assistant for Lennie. Lennie does not mean to harm but because of his condition he essentially harms people. In the book it explains the
Lennie dreams of living on a wide open ranch with George where he tends to the fluffy little rabbits he loves so much. Nevertheless, Lennie sadly never reaches his ultimate goal as his flaw finally becomes his fatal flaw. Lennie kills Curley 's wife by shaking her so hard that her neck breaks. He does not kill her on purpose but Lennie does not know his own strength. He is only shaking her like that because he wants her to stop yelling.
Lennie is depicted in a very childlike manner throughout Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck. Accordingly, he acts in a manner that is persistent with a child in that his motivations precisely lead to his actions. He does not act in a pure sense of dishonesty, reflective of the purity that is peculiar to someone who is like a kid at heart.
First, when Lennie sticks his head in the scummy water from the stream in the beginning of the book it shows his inability to think things through before he carries through with them. Another example includes when he grabbed the woman’s dress in Weed. He did not think it through when a normal fully mentally capable person would be able to think that grabbing a strange woman’s dress would not be appropriate. Similarly, he almost duplicates the situation except this time instead of finally letting go of the dress he accidentally killed Curley’s wife resulting in a worse outcome than the situation in Weed. Lennie is unable to think for himself in a safe and well opinionated manner, therefore, he needs someone like George to take care of him and prevent him from bad situations. However, the worse part about Lennie’s neverending trilogy of mistakes is that he does not learn from them. He makes the same mistake of killing multiple mice because he pets them too hard and never learns to be more gentle. George states in the novel ,”He’s awright. Just ain’t bright. But he can do anything you tell him.” (Steinbeck 22) This statement shows that though George is telling the boss how well he can work, he is also expressing how he doesn’t make decisions for himself and that he needs George to take care of him. George also says,” Yeah, you forgot. You always forget, an’ I got to talk you out of it.” (Steinbeck 23) This statement also portrays some of the reason he doesn’t learn from his mistakes. Lennie has a very difficult time remembering anything other than instructions that George gives him. George could not have just let Lennie go because he would not be able to make good decisions, nor could he take care of himself on his own, therefore George made the right decision to end Lennie’s
Lennie constantly causes trouble. “George told Lennie to keep quiet while George was trying to find them a job”(Steinbeck 35). “Why can't you just let em’ talk?” (Steinbeck 35). It's hard for Lennie to have a regular conversation with someone. He does not understand people well. The boss found it hard to believe that George wasn't trying to fool him by talking about how great Lennie was at working and how strong he was.
Life for ranchers in the 1930’s was very lonely. They have no family, and they do not belong anywhere. They come to the ranch, earn their pay, go into town, waste their money, and start all over again at another ranch. They have nothing to look forward to. But George and Lennie are different; it is not like that for them because they have each other. It was George and Lennie’s dream to own a piece of land and a farm. That dream is long gone. In the story, Of Mice and Men, by John Steinbeck, Curley caused the death of his wife and Lennie’s death; Curley also shattered George and Lennie’s dream.
What truly led up to this, and how would the story have gone differently if George had not killed Lennie? As aforementioned, they lived in the Great Depression, a time where achieving the American Dream was almost impossible to do, especially with all the farms being lost in Oklahoma. Most of the character's perspective of Lennie was that he was most simply a passive aggressive retard. Later in the novel the reader notices that he is incredibly strong which serves to positive and negative effects in the story.
In the novel, Lennie faces the adversity in explaining himself to the rest of the world. Thus ,Lennie’s adversity is his mental illness which he is continuously throughout the book trying to overcome.Since ,he is mentally challenged, most people, even George intermittently, underestimates his intelligence and logic skills. At the ranch in Soledad,...
The novel Of Mice and Men, by John Steinbeck, is about two ranch hands, George and Lennie. George is a small, smart-witted man, while Lennie is a large, mentally- handicapped man. They are trying to raise enough money to buy their own ranch, by working as ranch hands. During the setting of the story, they are at a ranch whose owner’s name is Curley. It is in this setting that the novel reveals that the main theme is death and loss.
George understands that he can’t hide Lennie from the world forever and that the natural order of things is that the strong pick off the weak, and he will eventually have to let Lennie go. This motivates him to seize reality, meaning he had to kill Lennie, which itself was a sign of tremendous growth in himself. Killing Lennie had many effects on George; one of them being that he became one of the men he’d tell Lennie stories about. George believed that he and Lennie were not like the other migrant workers – travelling alone and spending all their earning on a whim. When George would te...