1) Lennie by accidentally kills one of the puppies and he tries to hide it under a pile of hay. It seems as if he is more worried that George wont let him tend the rabbits, than he is upset with the fact that the puppy is dead. 2) Curley's wife enters the barn and tells Lennie not to feel bad about killing the puppy because there are plenty of dogs in the world. She also tells him that she could of been a movie star, but things didn't end up well for her.…
Afterwards, he begins to cry, “I didn’t wanta hurt him” (64). Also, multiple times throughout the book, Lennie asks George to tell him their dream for a better life, which includes buying their own land and raising animals. Lennie is obsessed with the prospect of caring for his own rabbits, and this plays into many of his actions. He wants something he can cherish and cuddle whenever he wants. Lennie, despite any of his weaknesses, is a very loving character.…
Through Lennie’s physical power he is often incapable of controlling himself resulting in disasters for instance the unintentional killing of animals such as the mouse. Slim’s puppy is a symbol, which embodies the triumph of the strong over the weak. Lennie kills the puppy accidentally by ‘petting it too hard’ equally in the way that he ‘petted the mouse too hard’; however he fails to acknowledge his own strength. Even though no one is stronger than Lennie, he can be portrayed as a harmless animal as he is unconscious of the vicious powers that surround him. The author has used irony to show that no matter what mental state you are, you can still own a certain degree of an alternative form of power.…
After Lennie runs away from the scene of Curley’s wife’s death, he encounters a couple of imaginary characters. The characters, Aunt Clara and a giant rabbit, talked to Lennie and reprimanded him for not listening to George or thinking he could take care of rabbits. This scene, as it was cut out of the play, is more effective in the book. It depicts Lennie’s innocence and childish desires. A major scene, used to help shape Lennie’s personality was left out of the play.…
Some say Lennie is a monster, who kills things on purpose, others say he's just a man who doesn't do mean things for meanness, but everyone can agree that unless supervised, Lennie can be a menace. Lennie is a gentle giant, compared to a horse, dog, and bear in the book. And with his animalistic qualities, tends to hurt things and not understand the norms associated with his actions. Lennie, in a childish attempt to touch Curley's wife's hair in order to feel how soft it is, breaks her neck and kills her. Lennie didn't do it to actually hurt her.…
Lennie Smalls is a character in John Steinbeck's novella, Of Mice and Men, who is just like any other person on the ranch, searching for his American Dream. Although, for Lennie and many others, achieving this dream will be impossible. Lennie is a mentally handicapped outcast that is constantly dehumanized by being compared to that of an animal. The author describes him as a man with a “shapeless face” who “drags his feet like a bear drags his paws” . Throughout the entire novella he is constantly talking about his dream of owning rabbits and a farm with his closest companion George Milton.…
“The best laid schemes Of Mice and Men often go askew,” said poet Robert Burns. George and Lennie travel around together working on ranches. Lennie is a big guy, strong, and a really hard worker, Lennie is a little slow and is not the brightest. George is Lennie’s best friend who makes sure Lennie doesn’t get into any trouble. Lennie got into some trouble back in Weed where Lennie was stroking a girls dress, he wasn’t trying to cause any harm, but the girl screamed until eventually people from the town were after George and Lennie.…
In the start of the novel Lennie is compared to a bear. Because of his large stature he can be mistaken for a large animal. When Lennie is first introduced to the reader, he is described as a bear walking. On page 2 the author says “ Dragging his feet a little, like a bear dragging its paw.” They had just left another work town and were on there way to another.…
However, this new idea of being able to tend for the rabbits really eagers Lennie because rather than someone caring for him, he could care for something. " The rabbits we're gonna get, and I get to tend 'em, cut grass an' give 'em water, an' like that” (69). It will be a moment of redemption, due to he would be able to take back his actions and show how caring and affectionate he really is towards the animals. This can also tie up with his innocent ways and attitude, by being able to show how eager he is to care for them. In addition, the idea of the rabbits also can be related to being able to…
From the beginning of the story, Lennie’s hopes are built up only to be torn down by the disastrous nature of the Great Depression, being set up for failure by Steinbeck. From the very beginning it is made evident g Lennie’s overly aggressive petting could be a problem, with the killing of the mouse in the first chapter acting as foreshadowing to the the climax (Steinbeck 4). A common theme becomes visible in Lennie’s interactions with animals and people, as George recounts when he had to hit Lennie with a fence post in order to stop him from petting a girl’s dress to Slim (Steinbeck 23). Lennie’s accidental murderous petting rampage does not end with the dress or the mouse however, as he also accidentally kills the puppy he was going to take off of Slim’s hands (Steinbeck 42). Lennie was doomed to continue this pattern because of the nature of his character, in which right and wrong are not concepts in his head unless George is around dictating them.…
On the surface level, this quote just shows Lennie's anger at himself after killing a puppy. He is mad at himself for killing this small animal that he was so excited to have as a pet. With Lennie's strength and interest in feeling textures, he commonly kills small animals like the mice his aunt used to give him. The mice and puppy symbolize the victory of strength over weakness. The small mouse and puppy are small innocent animals.…
Lennie is sweet, caring, and he is simple-minded. When George is telling Lennie about their American Dream, Lennie keeps on getting excited about the rabbits. George always tells Lennie that he can tend the rabbits. Lennie always loves to hear that he gets to tend the rabbits. Also when Lennie accidentally crushed Curley’s hand broke all his bones.…
In Thomas C. Foster’s best-selling book, How to Read Literature like a Professor, readers learn about symbols used to tell a deeper story and enrich a theme. Foster employs his lengthy experience as a teacher and avid reader to enlighten readers about how to recognize and decode cryptic, “between-the-lines” writing. Likewise, he also identifies several key phrases and messages to search for within text. These flags may be related to setting, plot, or characters, but can be analogous to moods, biblical tales, and mythological entities. For example, Foster discusses how most works have political undertones, represented through different symbols and objects.…
How do Steinbeck and Gilman explore the themes of isolation, confinement and loneliness within Of Mice and Men and The Yellow Wallpaper? Isolation, confinement and loneliness are major themes within Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men and Gilman’s The Yellow Wallpaper. Without isolation, confinement and loneliness, the novels would have an entirely different consequences and outcome. With the narrator in The Yellow Wallpaper and Lennie from Of Mice and Men being isolated in the setting of the novels, there is no escape from achieving a positive resolution.…
Lennie doing this did not fit into the societal norm seeing as though Lennie thinks as a child and acts like a child is not helping him because he 's a grown man. Lennie crushing the mice foreshadows the frailty of his dreams and the inevitable way they, will be crushed. Lennie 's dreams will be crushed because he is incapable of self regulation. When Lennie drank from the dirty lake that is an example of him not showing self regulation because he can 't control himself when he does that kind of stuff while the other people in society can regulate themselves from doing such thing. Lennie does now learn from his mistakes because he doesn 't know better.…