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Ordinary Life In John Steinbeck's Of Mice And Men

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“A Not so Ordinary Life”

John Steinbeck’s Of Mice and Men was a story of two somewhat ordinary men that lived during the Great Depression. George and Lennie, the two main characters that had a dream of living on farm of their own and growing their own crops and living of the land. For George, working with Lennie and taking care of him was not the easiest thing. Lennie was more of the slow type, he did everything that George asked and he looked up to George. Lennie had accidentally strangled, and killed Curly’s wife, which made almost everyone at the farm very mad. Curly wanted to kill Lennie and make him suffer, but instead, George had put one clean shot into the back of his head. It was not right for George to kill Lennie, they could have done other things and worked it out. Killing for mercy is never the answer. George had made a promise to Lennie’s aunt that he would take care of him. Also Lennie did not mean to do what he did, he did not understand his own strength. …show more content…
When George and lennie were younger, George had took advantage of him. Lennie did everything that George asked. He looked up to George and followed him everywhere. One day, when both of the me were young teenagers, George told Lennie to jump in the river. Lennie struggled and George had to get help to pull Lennie out of the freezing cold water. From this point on, George realised that he needed to help Lennie and took after him. When Lennie’s aunt was sick and near death, George had made a promise to Lennie’s aunt that he would alway look after him and take care of him. It was unfair for George to shoot Lennie after he made that promise. George was the only thing that Lennie had, he depended on him, and he looked up to him. Everything that George did, Lennie followed. It was not right for George to kill Lennie because George made a promise, but also because Lennie truly did not understand or mean to do what he

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