Lennie's Dreams

Words: 657
Pages: 3

Keith Skrdlant
Ms Hale
English II
14 November 2017
To A Mouse And Its Affect on Of Mice And Men
Several thousands of people have broken dreams every single day. In the novel Of Mice and Men, author John Steinbeck tells the story of George Milton and Lennie Small. George and Lennie are close friends with a common dream, and their dream would be broken thanks to things that went wrong. Of Mice and Men’s title comes from a poem by Robert Burns that explains how things can go wrong with a plan, and how it will affect the “mice” and “men.” John Steinbeck conveys the theme of broken dreams in Robert Burns’s poem with the broken dream of the story’s “mouse,” Lennie, and the story’s “man,” George. The dream George and Lennie shared would be broken like the poem suggests. George realizes the dream is broken when he finds out about Lennie killing Curley’s wife, and proceeds to say,“--I think I knowed from the very first. I think I knowed we’d never do her. He [Lennie] usta like to hear about it so much I got to thinking maybe we would” (Steinbeck 94). Lennie killing Curley’s wife caused the dream to be broken for him because it guaranteed his ill fate. George no longer believed in the dream once he knew what Lennie did which led to the dream
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George immediately hated his decision by throwing the gun, and him looking at his hand infers that he wish he could undo it. This made George the man because he has already been affected by the broken dream, and will likely never get over it either. George will not want to fulfill the ranch after what he did, and will likely continue working ranches by himself. With Lennie dead and George distraught over his tough decision, the dream has completely