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tried not to forget. Honest to God I did George and Tried and tried, but it
didnt do no good. I remember about the rabbits, George. This shows that
Lennie is very forgetful but like a child, he wants to please George and to prove
his innocence. Lennnies childishness is also portrayed when he needs comfort
and secureness from petting the dead mouse with his thumb, and hiding his face
against his knees, thinking that when he cant see George, George will not be
able to see him too. Lennie also repeats I aint gonna say nothin three times
when George told him that it is vital that he didnt talk to the boss or else they
would lose the job at the ranch.
Lennies imitation of George could be seen in page 24, George lay back on
the sand and crossed his hands under his head, and Lennie imitated him, raising
his head to see whether he were doing it right. This shows that Lennie trusts
George fully and believes what he does is always the best for him, linking back
to his childish manners and his animal-like qualities.
However, when people think that Lennie is injudicious, on page 31, it said,
Lennie avoided the bait (George trying to give him a puppy). He had sensed his
advantage. If you dont want me, you only jus got to say so, and Ill go off in
the hills right there right up those hills and live by myself. An I wont get no
mice stole from me. This proves that Lennie is actually quite astute because he
knew that George would never leave him because they relied on each other.
Question 2: What does Soledad mean? How does it link to a) ranchmen and b)
George and Lennie?
In the book Of Mice and Men, Soledad means loneliness, and it is an
essential theme Steinbeck has rendered. To the ranchmen, loneliness is an old
friend, an inevitable experience people of their kind are having due to the Great
Depression, and like the book had said, Guys like us, that work on ranches, are
the loneliest guys in the world. They got no family. They don't belong no place.
(Of Mice and Men page 15) They routinely drift off to ranches, working for a
month, collect their money, and go on the road again, yearning that their
drudgery would pay off as they attained their dream of luxuriating with a farm,
not having to travel anymore. All the ranchmen could not trust nor rely on
anyone as they dread that their friends will betray them and emulate their
chance of work. However, even if some ranchmen did not have to traverse
around the country to find work, there are also intimate relationships between
them and the solitude in Soledad. Some of the best examples are Candy and
Crooks.
Candy is the old handyman at the ranch who had his arm extirpated in a
calamity while he was working at the ranch, thus becoming a swamper. He is
agitated that the boss would declare him nugatory and demand him to leave the
ranch, which reveals the utilitarian environment that Of Mice and Men is set in,
where a person is discarded when they are redundant and do not bring benefits.
Because of this utilitarian environment, Candys only companion is his dog, yet his
dog, like him, had already no uses for the ranch and ergo, was shot dead by
Carlson. On top of that, Candy was always excluded from the group, especially
when they went in town on Sundays. Therefore, Candy thinks that the only way
for him to abscond his loneliness is by succouring George and Lennie into
fulfilling their dream.
Soledad is also linked with the stable buck, Crooks. The cause of his
loneliness is straightforward he is a black man, and others discriminate, give
him prejudicial treatment and embargo him from activities. Even when he was
allowed into the bunkhouse at Christmas, he was abused and beaten up, yet he
crooked back did no good to him.
On the other hand, Soledad means contrarily when it comes to George
and Lennie, mainly because their common fear of loneliness, they have each
other to watch their back, care for them, and as the book states, We got a
future. We got somebody to talk to that gives a damn about us. We dont have to
sit in no bar room blowin in our jack jus because we got no place else to go. If
them other guys gets in jail they can rot for all anybody gives a damn. But not
us and I got you to look after me, and you got me to look after you. In
addition, it is the fact that they are together makes their American Dream
diverse, as they would be sharing the farm and the virtuous life there, instead
of being solitary.
Question 3: What Part does the American Dream play in the lives of a) iterant
workers and b) George and Lennie?
Even though in both the iterant worker and George and Lennies
perspective, the American Dream was a motivation to work harder, to proceed
from one ranch to another, there are many disparities in their dreams.
The dream of the itinerant workers was to have a farm all by themselves,
to have freedom and liberty, where they would not have to obey commands but
work by self-determination. They would also have no trepidation over the
meagre work opportunities ranches give and could select their preferred job.
Yet, George and Lennies dream plays a distinctive role in them. As their
dream is to live the fatta the lan and 'we'll have a big vegetable patch and a
rabbit hutch and chickens. And when it rains in the winter, we'll just say the hell
with goin' to work, and we'll build up a fire in the stove and set around it an'
listen to the rain comin' down on the roof..." (Of Mice and Men, page 14-15), the
role of their American Dream is to impel both of them to toil on bucking barley
so they could roll up a stake and buy their ten acres of land. Still, there are
slight variations in George and Lennies dream. Georges dream is to have
everything from vegetable patches to his own smoke house, while Lennies dream
is solely to tend a lot of rabbits and be able to stroke them whenever he wants,
and he doesnt genuinely mind if there were other things present. Nonetheless,
it is revealed in the book that their dream was fantastical, idealistic and it
forebodes that their dream may not come true.