Of Mice And Men - the significance of dreams.

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John Steinbeck

Of Mice And Men

The book Of Mice and Men was set in the depression of the 1930's in California in a place called Soledad. Men traveled around looking for any work they could find they had to leave families and homes just to make money. Even firms and companies went bankrupt, these were depressing and desperate times no hope and no future.

Without dreams no one would have a reason to keep going.

The character George is a small, quick man with well-defined features. He is a migrant ranch worker, he dreams of one day saving enough money to buy his own place and being his own boss, many men in the depression dreamed of this.

His only set-back is his mentally handicapped friend Lennie whom he travels with and has been since he promised Lennie's aunt Clara he would look after him after she died. Looking after Lennie stops George from working towards his dream and even prevents him from having a normal life of a rancher, because of this George and Lennie regularly fight. George yearns for companionship as you can tell by the metaphor of him playing solitaire.

The tension of having to look after Lennie and himself shows in George and he shows a wide variety of emotions during the novel, from anger to patience and sadness.

Lennie is mentally slow, he’s enormous. He is George's companion and he is the source of all of the novel's conflict. He is George's opposite both mentally and physically. Lennie's innocence and helplessness, his childish actions, such as his desire to pet soft things makes Lennie likeable to the readers of the novel.

Lennie's stupidity and carelessness cause him to accidentally harm and even kill animals and people, this creates trouble for George and himself.

Lennie is faithful to George he likes hearing about the dream that they share of owning a farm, although not liking in the same way as George. He understands the dream in a different way than George it is more childish and he gets excited when he thinks of tending the rabbits on the farm. Although a dream is a dream, it is different for everyone. Lennie is helpless to get the dream and relies on George to get it and him out of trouble.

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At the beginning of the novel, in chapter 1, George and Lennie are in the brush. They are sitting by the river's edge. They have been dropped off buy a bus and have had to walk 4 miles and are very tired. The next morning the two of them have to be at work on a ranch in Soledad and George tells Lennie that he will be doing all the talking.

In this chapter you also find out about the last job they had at Weed and why they had to leave, Lennie got the m in trouble and they ...

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