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The Power Of Dreams In John Steinbeck's Of Mice And Men

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Dreams Control You
Migrant workers in the early 1900s created dreams to give them hope during the hard times. Most of their dreams were not completed. Lennie and George are migrant workers who go and work on a farm in California. Just like real migrant workers George and Lennie have a dream. Their dream is to buy a small farm with cows, chickens, and rabbits. John Steinbeck shows the power of dreams with Lennie through his following of orders, his fear of losing the dream, and his hope at the end of the story.
George illustrates the power of dream by threatening to take away Lennie’s dream if he gets into anymore trouble. Lennie loves the dream so much that he would do anything thing if it meant he would be able to keep it.“But you ain’t gonna get in no trouble, because if you do, I won’t let you tend the rabbits” …show more content…
Lennie knows that if George finds him then he will be in trouble and his dream will be taken away. As a result of him being scared Lennie accidentally kills
Curley’s wife in the process of trying to get her to stop screaming. This proves how powerful Lennie’s dream is to him, it is enough to accidentally kill someone over …show more content…
When Lennie is hiding in the brush and waiting for George, his guilt overpowers him and his mind plays tricks on him. “He ain’t neither. George won’t do nothing like that” (Steinbeck 102). An imaginary rabbit tells Lennie that George will not allow him to take care of the rabbits because of all the bad things he has done. Lennie refuses to believe that he will not be able to have his dream anymore. Lennie makes George tell him their dream so that he will feel better and less guilty about killing Curley’s wife. “Lennie said craftily-”Tell me like you done before” (Steinbeck 104). The dream gives Lennie a special comfort that gets him through the trauma of killing Curley’s

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