Zusammenfassung der Ressource
LENNIE
- IDENTIFIES WITH ANIMALS
- Very possessive over his animals
- mouse and puppy
- George treats Lennie like a pet
- Orders Lennie around & uses his
strength to get them job
- In the end George treats Lennie like Candy
treated his dog - he shot him
- Follows George around
- Relies on George
for food
- Looks like a bear
- Eats & drinks like
a hungrey animal
- drags his feet the way a
bear drags his paws
- "huge man, shapeless of face...& he
walked..... the way a bear drags his paws. His
arms ... hung loosely"
- Steinbeck describes Lennie as animal more than a child
- Animals can be dangerous though
he compares Lennie to a dangerous
animal a bear
- Only way he copes as if
he is tied to his master
like a tame dog and never let out of his sight.
- Lennie also like a wild dog
needing to be "put down" by
his owner
- CHILDLIKE
- Powerful man with huge hands
- Makes him a good farmer
- "He can put up more grain alone than most pairs can"
- Innocent & asks alot of
innocent ?
- Slim immediately sees that
Lennie aint mean
- Grown up physically but
mentally he is like a child
- "Sure he's jes like a
kid. There ain't no more
harm in him than a kid
neither, except he's so
strong"
- His condition is never
explained
- Called dum dum & Curleys wife
& Slim thinks he is cuckoo
- George denies he
is insane
- Likes to stroke &
pet soft things
- Curleys wifes hair
- Has a childs mind in a mans body
- "He's jes' like a kid"
- His mind has never learnt to control his body
- DEPENDENT ON GEORGE IN BOTH BODY & MIND
- George looked after him since
his Aunt died
- Couldn't survive on his own
- George has the brains
Lennie the strength
- Good partnership
- Lennie has 1 practical skill he
is a good worker
- Slim says "There aint
nobody can keep up with her 2
- Useful for George as it helps
them get work
- "Me an' him goes ever place together"
- READERS FEEL SORRY FOR HIM
- in weed Lennie
held on to the
girls dress
because thats the
only thing he
think to do
- Lennie isnt malicious just doesn't
know his own strength
- George tells him to get Curley
- "I didn't want no trouble"
- Kills Curley wife because he
cant control his own strength
- KILLER
- Most gentle but most
destructive character
- His fear
tends to turn
into anger
- Steinbeck tells us twice
Lennie is angry with Curleys
wife
- So angry he
shakes her to
death
- Fear makes him hold onto
curleys wife
- Panics
- He cries with fright
- Dangerous and violent
- Kills mice
- Attacks Curley & his wife
- Throws his dead puppy
across the barn
- "He was scairt
he couldn't let
go of that dress.
And he's so
damn strong,
you know"
- "Why do you got to get killed? You ain't
so little as mice. I didn't bounce you hard"
- Lennie blames the animals he kills for their
own death because they are tiny
- Unwilling to blame himself
- MOMENTS OF CLEVERNESS
- Sometimes he
realises how much
George has sacrificed
for him
- When George is unkind to him in
Chapter 1 he threatens to go live
in a cave
- Knows George would feel
guilty about leaving him and
uses this to get his own way
- After George persuades him not to go he uses this to
his advatage to get George to talk about the Dream
farm
- "Come on George Tell me. Please George. Like you done before"
- "An I won't get no mice stole from me"
- Knows how to make George feel guilty