Lennie And The Creature Analysis

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Lennie and the creature both share qualities present in the other as well as differences. Lennie from Of Mice and Men is an extremely large fellow. He often gains glances and looks from passersby as they stare at his unusual size. The creature is also huge, as Shelley puts him to be 8 feet tall. While Lennie does draw stares from ongoing passerby, the creature on the other hand gains looks of disgust and horror from his outwardly appearance. He dashes around the countryside in fear, no one giving thought to even listen to his thoughts or feelings due to his abhorrent face and his obtrusive size. Contrary to this, Lennie meets humans, yet everything that comes from his mouth reveals his lack of social grace and etiquette. No one knows how to …show more content…

Both of these characters are victims of their environment. Lennie moves through his story oblivious to the fact that his actions have consequences. He only has a vague sense of what is deemed right and wrong by what George has reinforced within him. For example, killing Curley’s wife did not elicit any emotions indicative that he had murdered someone and felt bad for it. Instead, he only remembers that murder is something that you shouldn't do, learned from George, and goes to the designated rendezvous point, set by George. George tried to get others to see past his mistakes and see how kind he was, but society only saw him as a killer and a monster and because of this, George killed him. The creature on the other hand, committed his heinous for a different reason. Not only society, but also the very being that created him spurned him. The original kindness and concern for others is burned away by his anger, which drives him into a rage that sharpens into a deadly rivalry with Frankenstein. Completely aware of what he is doing, he kills several of the people closest to Frankenstein, including his lifelong friend Henry, and his newlywed wife, Elizabeth. At the end of the story, he claims that he is satisfied that he made his pain his creators pain, yet appalled and remorseful that he had to kill so many to do it. Both of these characters began as kindhearted beings, intent on only trying to learn and grow. However, because they did not “fit” within a societal structure and could not be classified, they were instead rejected and hunted down for becoming the monsters that human nature had

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