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Wednesday, December 19, 2018

'Of Mice And Men Characters Essay\r'

'In ‘Of Mice And Men,’ totally the characters rent different problems, whether they ar physical, psychic or personal. Although the two characters who I feel have the most problems are Crooks and George.\r\nCrooks, the black stable yank is forever being pick on by the other(a) hands at the scatter, mostly because of his colour. In the succession in which the book was set, black state in America were thought of as scorn than white deal. At the cattle farm, Crooks can non live in the bunk-house with all the other men, but he has to sleep in the harness elbow room, at the certify of the barn. In this room he is surrounded by all the out of work horse tack, and t presentfore has hardly each blank for his personal belongings.\r\nCrooks is given no screen, and gets quite bad-tempered because he is not allowed to acquaint the bunk-house but the other men can just walk into his room. In the book he says to Lennie, â€Å"You’ve no right to nonplus int o my room, nobody got any right in here but me.” After he has talked to Lennie for a while, he starts to enjoy having somewhat maven to talk to, because when he is in his room by himself, there is no one he can talk with. I envisage that he likes talk to Lennie because he realized that Lennie is slow, so Crooks can say what he wants and Lennie will not mobilise anything.\r\nTo get the other men back for teasing him, he becomes very sour when they enter his room, and as he passes the other men he ignores them, as a pay back for the call they call him. Although I do feel that Crooks gets passing lonely. All day long he is on his own, he cannot work because he has a flex back, from once being kicked by a horse, so he has to puzzle behind at the ranch and generally look after the place. When he was abuse by Curley, he cannot answer back, because Curley is the Boss’ son, and he knows that if he gets fired, he will probably not get another job because of his disabili ty.\r\nThe other worldly concern who I think has a lot of problems is George. He has to take Lennie with him everywhere, although, Lennie often gets into trouble and this gets George into trouble too. Without Lennie roughly him George could have such a good life, â€Å" paragon almighty, if I was alone I could live so easy. I could get a job and work, an’ no trouble. No mess at all, and when the end of the month come, I could take my fifty bucks and go into townsfolk and get whatever I want.” This shows that without Lennie with him, causing trouble, he could keep a good job, and spend his time in the way he wants to, without having to think some anyone else.\r\nAlthough I do think that George likes Lennie, as he is always there to talk to and to share dreams with, they are obviously very close, but George does get irritate with him, especially because Lennie finds it hard to remember things, such as where they are traveling to. Although he does seem to remember e very bad word George says about him. When George negotiation of the ‘little place’ they’re going to get, his baptistery lights up and he really enjoys seeing Lennie content and even though George is stuck with Lennie, he still likes having him there. When George is talking to Slim, in the book, he tries to cover up for Lennie’s mistakes in Weed, as he knows that Lennie would never injure anyone on purpose.\r\nAt the end of the book when George shoots Lennie he knew that he had to kill him. I think that part the reason for this is because George knows that Lennie will be shot any way, but if he did it, it would be out of venerate and protection, and not revenge and hatred. George also knows that he cannot go on with Lennie, always running away from some kind of trouble that Lennie has caused, and the incident at the ranch was probably the last straw.\r\nOut of the two men described, I think that the person with the most problems is George. In the first part of the book, he always had Lennie with him, qualification things very difficult for him to have any privacy or time for himself. Lennie prevented him from ever keeping a job, and this often got him into trouble. At the end of the book, when George shot Lennie, he felt awful, because he was killing his best, and probably single friend. George would always live with the memory of Lennie, and the memory of how he shot him. All throughout the book George was impressive Lennie that the other guys on these ranches move from place to place, having nobody. instanter George would be like these other guys, but earlier he and Lennie.\r\nI think that George has more problems than Crooks, because in America in those times, all black people were treated lower than whites. Crooks cannot succor this problem, because wherever he goes, he would receive the same kind of abuse. other disadvantage Crooks has, is his crooked back, but again, he cannot help this so he did not create the probl em. I feel very sorry for George, as he and Lennie have been through so much together, at some times, he wished that he never had to stay with Lennie, but now everything it over for him and he wants Lennie back.\r\n'

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