Essay On Lennie In John Steinbeck's Of Mice And Men

Words: 477
Pages: 2

This story is about two people who are trying to get a job on a ranch. One of the people, Lennie, is a good worker and very forgetful. Steinbeck is successful of making Lennie sympathetic. Steinbeck shows that Lennie is a very good worker but not very intelligent. Lennie is a very good worker, but is not the brightest person. Though he is not smart he is very big and he is very strong and he is a good worker. George says that Lennie is big, strong, and a great worker. Steinbeck describes him exactly how George describes him, big, strong, not smart, and forgetful. Lennie also seems to get the two of them into trouble. Whenever Lennie talks he gets the two characters into trouble, it is always at a bad time like when they are talking to important people.. It hurts him personally because George would get mad at Lennie whenever he talk when he was not supposed to. One other trait of Lennie is that he is very forgetful. In the book he seems to always forget about things. One of the things he forgets is George’s responsibilities. George told Lennie to not talk during an interview with a boss at a ranch, of course Lennie speaks and George scolds him. George also told him, earlier in the book, that if Lennie ever got lost he should go by the river. He has most likely already forgotten this. “Maybe you're gettin’ better. When we get the coupla acres I can …show more content…
He also becomes a bit less forgetful. In the book he was told to remember something and he kept repeating it out loud until he forgot it later on. He is getting a little better and remembering things but besides that he has not changed from the beginning of the book. On page 21 Lennie was not supposed to talk, but right after he realizes that he should not be talking. “Strong as a bull, he repeated. George scowled at him, and Lennie dropped his head in shame as he had forgotten”. This quote shows that Lennie should not have been