The strong always overpower the weak. Throughout John Steinbeck’s famous novel, “Of Mice and Men,” He tries to express in many ways as possible that the strong will always overrule the weak no matter what. And Lennie’s puppy is a great representation of that one theme. Lennie is the type of guy who isn’t always the best to be around, especially is your small and soft as fur. Because of the fact that Lennie isn’t able to recognize his physical prowess, he tends to kill a lot of animals and objects throughout nature. As George and Lennie are in the bunkhouse, George states; “You not to pet that pup so much or ya might kill em.” (pg. 55) This quote is very significant because just as Lennie is dependent…
In the novel, Lennie doesn’t really have very complex motivations. Lennie pretty much likes to pet things. He doesn’t know his own strength; so he often accidently kills the animal that he is petting. On page five…
Lennie is a grown man with a mental disability.”Give it here”(Steinbeck,6). He acts like he is 6 or 7 years old. But he isn’t weak.”No,he ain’t,but he sure is one hell of a good worker.Strong as a bull” (Steinbeck,22). Lennie represents death/bad guy in this book even though he doesn’t know what it is. He always accidently kills animals like mice and pups.…
Furthermore, Lennie has killed many things before. What was to stop him from killing anyone or anything else? He used to kill mice back when he was little because they would bite his fingers because he loved to pet soft things, and he would attempt to pet them. So he would pinch their heads in return. On page 10 it says “I’d pet ‘em and pretty soon they bit my fingers and I pinched their heads a little and then they was dead because they was so little.” He also killed a young puppy. On page 87 it says “I was just playin’ with him…an’ he made like he’s gonna bite me…an’ I made like I was gonna smack him…an’ I done it. An’ then he was dead. Lennie also surprisingly killed a human being too! He killed Curley’s wife with no instrument at all. He just used his own two hands and broke her neck, just by shaking her. On page 91 it says “…for Lennie had broken her neck.”…
“If you ever just happen to get in trouble like you have always done before, I want you to come right here and hide in the brush.”(doc B) In the story Of Mice and Men there are two main characters, George and Lennie. George is average sized and intelligent, and Lennie is tall, very muscular, and below average. George and Lennie have a farm dream that they will own land, so they go to work on a ranch to earn money. A worker there, Candy, offers to go in with 300 dollars. Everything is looking good until Lennie accidentally kills Curley’s wife, and Curley is a hothead. He wants to kill Lennie very painfully, but George gets there first. He has to shoot him in the back of the head. Steinbeck uses foreshadowing to indicate the deaths of the farm dream, Curley’s wife, and Lennie.…
George had made the right decicion to shoot Lennie as he would have faced worse consequences. If you were in a similar situation, would you want to be the one to kill your best friend, or have a stranger do it?In the novel Of Mice and Men, John Steinbeck tells the story of two best friends living life on the run, struggling to keep a steady job working as ranch hands. George and Lennie are faced with many obstacles throughout the course of this book, beginning with Lennie and his slow mindedness, George is always side by side with Lennie, practically holding his hand to coach him through life. The story begins with the two men running away from Weed, the ranch they were previously employed at; we later find that George and Lennie had to flee after Lennie had touched a ladies dress and made her feel uncomfortable. Upon arrival at the new ranch, George had told Lennie to stay away from Curley’s wife, Lennie disobeyed George and similar trouble has followed…
The final instance in which Steinbeck skillfully displays the use of foreshadow is when Candy’s dog is about to be put down. Carlson basically begged Candy to let him kill his dog, telling him that the dog “Won’t even feel it.” This statement reinforces the earlier statement about how George must kill Lennie. It foreshadows how George will shoot Lennie in a quick and painless fashion. Nevertheless, Steinbeck takes foreshadow to a whole new level and applies it during a scene that only lasted for a couple…
So in the end John Steinbeck uses foreshadowing in the book Of Mice and Men to show what will happen in the book such as Curley’s wife getting killed by Lennie, Lennie’s own death, and their dream dying. Unfortunately nothing they had planned will work out now that Lennie is dead and George has no desire for the…
Throughout the novel, Lennie already kills several creatures such as mice, puppies, and eventually a human being like Curley’s wife. When Lennie uses his strength to kill other people, he does not even notice what he is doing. Lennie cannot restrain himself when Steinbeck states that, “She struggled violently under his hands. Her feet battered on the hay and she writhed to be free; and from under Lennie’s hand came a muffled screaming… He shook her then with anger. ‘Don’t you go yelling,’ he said, and he shook her; and her body flopped like a fish. And then she was still, for Lennie had broken her neck.”(91) The quote explains that Lennie does not know how strong he is because he is child-like. He cannot control his strength very well and does not even know what problems he might cause by using his strength. In addition, Lennie is not rational; he always does something with emotional like shaking Curley’s wife with his anger until she dies. Fortunately, George kills Lennie. Therefore, the workers on the ranch do not have to concern about risking their lives to work with this uncontrolled guy. Killing Lennie is right because no one gets injured and workers live safely. However, some people argue that George is wrong to kill Lennie because men cannot take other men’s lives easily and Lennie is not willing to kill Curley’s wife, he’s unconscious of doing it until she’s already dead. Nevertheless, the point is not important because Lennie has mental challenges and he does not mean to kill Curley’s wife. All the workers on the ranch are also lonely, so they do not want to help Lennie as well since Lennie is a new guy on the…
In the poem “To a Mouse” there is a quote that read ”The best laid schemes often go askew” and this can easily describe how John Steinbeck uses foreshadowing to show that something is going to go wrong. In Of Mice and Men Steinbeck uses foreshadowing to get the reader hint that bad things are going to happen. In the very first paragraph of the novella he gives us hints that Lennie is going to end up getting in trouble by having George say “Well, look. Lennie--if you jus’ happen to get in trouble like you always do before, I want you to come right back here an’ hide in a bush”. John Steinbeck uses foreshadowing to show that George is going to kill lennie, Curley’s wife is going to die, and that George and Lennie are not going to accomplish…
It isn’t very long into the book that we learn that Lennie is different from the others around him; he is slower mentally. He does not perceive things as they appear to others and cannot really tell right from wrong. Although his…
Lennie’s weakness is his inability to control his physical power. Because he didn’t know how to react in tense situations, he panicked and asserted too much force on his victims. His actions, which are later regretted, stirs a resentful and angry hatred directed toward him. After the accident that he created, people like Curley had reason to shoot and hurt him. This indicates that being only physically strong is not enough for one to survive in the harsh realities of our…
In John Steinbeck’s novel “Of Mice and Men” Steinbeck expertly uses foreshadowing to prelude many surprising events in the ending. From the very beginning we can predict what will happen to the two main characters: Lennie and George. It is used to hint at future events concerning Lennie’s death.…
“ The hand shook violently, but his face was set and his hand was steadied. He pulled the trigger.(steinbeck 106)” In the novella Of Mice and Men, Lennie and George are two men traveling together for work. Lennie isn’t the brightest and he always gets George in trouble. When Lennie gets himself into big trouble, George has to make a drastic decision. George has to decide if he wants to put Lennie out of his misery and shoot him, or let Lennie suffer because Curley is after Lennie. The novella shows that killing Lennie was an act of kindness and George didn’t want Lennie to suffer.…
Steinbeck uses foreshadowing to characterize Casy in two ways. Casy says “I got the call to lead the people, but no place to lead ‘em” (29). He says this because he was once a preacher, but he quit. He has the instincts of a natural leader and has public speaking skills. Casy also talks about his theory that “maybe all men got one big soul ever’body’s got a part of” (33). This shows his religious side of him and his idea everyone has.…