Our tragic universe by Scarlett Thomas Category
George and Lennie dream of owning a farm that they can call their own and where Lennie can raise rabbits and stay out of trouble, free from the constraints of society.
Both men constantly keep this dream in front of them. In fact, Lennie asks George to repeat the dream over and over. George, himself, refuses to frivolously spend any money, for he is saving every dime to buy the land. The dream keeps both of the working; it also keeps them close.
He offers to give his life savings to help make the dream a reality, for he wants to join George and Lennie on the farm, living out his last days in happiness.
When the two men accept Candy, he suddenly has a new lease on life; the dream has given him hope for a better future. At the end of the novel, the dream dies. He no longer has a reason to save his pennies.
Without a dream, his life is sad and meaningless. Minor Theme The pain of loneliness is another key theme of the novel. He is rejected by all for being old and handicapped. His only company, his faithful, old, blind dog, is taken from him and killed; Candy fears that he will be treated the same way in the future and wants to join Lennie and George on the ranch.
Crooks is the picture of total loneliness caused by prejudice. Because he is the only black man on the ranch, he is forced to live alone in a shed of the barn, and no one will have any interaction with him.
I get awful lonely. Ironically, the ranch hands felt great sympathy and sorrow for Candy over the loss of his dog; but they feel no sympathy for George over losing his best friend and companion. Throughout the book, George has openly complained that Lennie is a real pain.
He dreams of what he could do if not caring for his retarded friend and pictures himself not burdened by Lennie. He thinks of drinking whiskey and going to cat-houses. Ironically, during the course of the novel, George chooses not to do any of the things he has dreamed about doing, even though he is free to do them; the other ranch hands even try to tempt him.
But George does not want to frivolously spend money that could be saved for the farm. Ironically, the dream dies with Lennie. George is now a free man, without the burden of caring for someone.
Ironically, he is miserable in his loneliness and misses his constant companion.May 09, · The major theme of the book is the beauty of a dream, for it gives a person a purpose in life.
George and Lennie dream of owning a farm that they can call their own and where Lennie can raise rabbits and stay out of trouble, free from the constraints of society.
If one theme can be thought of as defining the plot and symbolism of Of Mice and Men, that theme is loneliness. In many ways, from the outspoken to the subtle (such as Steinbeck's decision to set the novel near Soledad, California, a town name that means "solitude" in Spanish), the presence of.
Of Mice and Men tells the story of two farm workers striving in vain for the American dream. Steinbeck wrote the novella with the intention to adapt it for the stage, and it was a major success in.
LITERATURE AMERICAN LITERATURE AMERICAN Zmiany w stosunku do oryginału: • • • • • podkreślenie zamienione na kursywę, pierwsze (lub pierwsze ważne) wystąpienie. "The best laid plans of mice and men" is a line in a poem by Robert Burns, which describes how a field mouse's world is destroyed by a plow.
Steinbeck's narrative voice is seemingly simple in his descriptions of nature of as well as the details of the bunkhouse. The word of the day Heart Your heart is the organ in your chest that pumps the blood around your body.
People also use heart to refer to the area of their chest that is closest to their heart.