Thursday, November 14, 2019
Of Mice And Men: Lennie And George :: essays research papers
 Of Mice and Men: Lennie and George      Of Mice and Men, written by John Steinbeck, is the story of two  simple farm hands, Lennie Small, who incidentally, really isn't very small, and  his better half, George Milton, on their quest to have "a place of their own,"  with plenty of furry bunnies, of course. Sound strange? Read on to get clued  in.         The book opens along the banks of the Salinas River a few miles south of  Soledad, California. Everything is calm and beautiful, and nature is alive.  The trees are green and fresh, lizards are skittering along, rabbits sit on the  sand. There are no people in the scene. Suddenly, the calm is broken. Trouble  is in the air. Animals begin to scatter. Two men have arrived on the scene,  and the environment seems troubled by their presence. For a moment the scene  becomes "lifeless." Then in walk George and Lennie.         Lennie, a large, retarded, big man who has the mind of a little child,  and who loves to pet soft, pretty things, and George, a little man, who has  assumed the responsibility of taking care of his simpleminded friend Lennie,  are walking on their way to apply for a harvesting job on a nearby farm. The  two had been traveling together for quite some time now, which was very rare,  because most farm workers rarely have companions, but George and Lennie have  been together ever since Lennie's Aunt had passed away, and Lennie began to  follow George around everywhere.         Instead of hurrying to the farm that night, they stop by a stream to  camp in the open, and they'll arrive at work the next morning. Why? Well,  Lennie isn't very bright. George didn't want him to blow the job opportunity.  The logic between waiting until morning until going to work was, that way, all  the other farm hands would be out working, thus they'd have a better chance of  getting the job, since Lennie wouldn't have to confront to many people, which  can easily make him "confused."    During that evening, George had to take a dead mouse away from Lennie, who  had been hoarding it because he liked to pet it. George tried to teach  simpleminded Lennie that you don't pet dead things, but Lennie had a hard time  remembering.         George is aware that Lennie has difficulty remembering things, so he has  to remind him every time that they went for a job not to say anything, and to  let him do the talking. He also stresses the importance that Lennie returns to  the particular place and hide in the stream or bushes if gets in any trouble,    					    
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