George And Lennie In John Steinbeck's Of Mice And Men

480 Words1 Page

In the story of Mice and Men, George and Lennie are the Majors in the story. The Story revolves around these two and their odd relationship. Their relationship consists of George being the caretaker and almost father figure to Lennie. George is a decent character with moral and dreams just like everyone else, but his Bond with Lennie and Lennie having the mind of a 5 year old always gets them into trouble. But even so George stayed with him until Lennie had gone too far. Even though George would have Forgiven him, they would've been on the run but this time as murders. A couple Quotes that kind of tell you what kind of character George is. First Quote “Guys like us, that work on ranches, are the loneliest guys in the world. They got no family. They don't belong no place.” This Quote is From George to Lennie and in this he is implying that being Lonely is worse than being broke. The Quote itself says alot about George but the meaning is even deeper. He cares for Lennie even …show more content…

“Whatever we ain't got, that's what you want. God a'mighty, if I was alone I could live so easy. I could go get a job an' work, an' no trouble.” This states that george doesn't want to be with lennie. He thinks he would be better off alone. I think that’s George Ranting and saying stuff he didn't want to say, but he meant it deep down. Even though they share a deep bond that bond gets George in a lot of trouble. The conflict in Of Mice and Men with George is Character Vs. Self. I think this Because its George's decision to stay with Lennie even Though it Causes him a lot of trouble and he can't do things any Grown Man or Farmer wants to do with their money and life outside of work. So Because George Choses to stay with Lennie, He Chose to Have a life and future with Lennie over a life of his own, He Chose to Kill him when he could've had someone else do it for him,

Open Document