Dreams, Friendship, and Tragedy in Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men

520 Words2 Pages

According to Steinbeck, “They fell into a silence. They looked at one another, amazed. This thing they had never really believed in was coming true. George said reverently, “Jesus Christ! I bet we could swing her.” His eyes were full of wonder. “I bet we could swing her,” he repeated softly” (Steinbeck 30). Candy and George realize that if they all put their money together they could actually afford a small farm of their own. According to McCarthy, “In the last analysis, George and Lennie symbolize something of the enduring and hopeful as well as the meaningless. They manage—if only for a brief time—to rise above circumstances and to convince others as well as themselves that dreams are part of the territory, that all they have to do is keep working and hoping and some day they will have their own place” (McCarthy). George and Lennie illustrate something of the everlasting and fearless as well as the inexpressive (McCarthy). George and Lennie have been searching for another land and goal because they want something better. They freed away from the furious townspeople, while Georg...

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