Compare three poems from within the relationship cluster to John Steinbeck’s ‘Of Mice & Men’

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‘Of Mice & Men’ is a novel written by John Steinbeck, set in the Great Depression era of the 1930’s tells of a journey of two itinerant workers in search of the American Dream which gives readers the real experience by taking them on an emotional rollercoaster. Three poems written by different poets share many similarities with the novel; ‘Brothers’’ by Andrew Forster, the title of the poem gives away a great deal as the poem is based on sibling rivalry between three siblings. Charlotte Mew’s ‘The Farmers bride’ is loosely based on attitudes towards women in the late 19th century and provides a stereotypical view on how women were objectified, and ‘Nettles’ by Vernon Scannell which illustrates a mother’s love and compassion toward her child. All four texts share many similarities all in the form of themes, historical context and writer input.
It is in chapter one of Steinbeck’s novel where George Milton and Lennie Small, (two male protagonists of the novel), first begin working in the ranch to ‘buck barley’. Lennie Small ironically is described as ‘large and intimidating’ despite his name, George is the small one. Lennie has the mental capacity of a child and often tends to get on the wrong side of people which acts as the primary reason as to why the pair travel from place to place frequently. During the Great Depression era money had to be earned and women stayed at home as housewives. George and Lenny’s mutual friendship is seen as much more by readers, the pair are like ‘Brothers.’ However, due to Lenny’s bothersome nature George sees Lennie as a burden and confesses that “I could live so easy and maybe have a girl…” in comparison to Forsters poem ‘Brothers,’ the title connotes love and friendship however can be seen as misle...

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...mbol of immaturity and growth. The mother then goes on saying; “…slashed in fury with it Till not a nettle stood upright any more.” This quote tells of how the mother was trying to inflict the same amount of pain on to the nettles as they did to her son. However, readers soon find out that the weeds grew back and the poem ends; “My son would often feel sharp wounds again.” George and Lennie relate to this as George is constantly cleaning up after Lenny’s mess but trouble seems to follow him around.
To conclude, Forsters’ poem ‘Brothers’ explores the relationship between three typical brothers in the midst of leadership. The poem ‘Nettles’ demonstrates the agony and compassion behind a mothers love and the poem ‘The Farmers Bride,’ which tells of a typical farmer in the late 1800s stereotyping women through the use of metaphorical and literal language by the writer.

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