This shows George's ingenuity at Renee. George also used his creative thinking to get out of their troubles. When they first arrived in Soledad, the boss asked why they traveled together, but George said, Lenny could not talk. George kicked herself and Lennie in the irrigation groove of Weed after Lennie suffered with a girl's soft red dress, but Carlson shot Lenny George used his ingenuity at the end of the novel.
George Milton from mouse and male John Steinbecks is an important part of the novel. During the Great Depression, he was mentally disabled, but accompanied physically fit, Lenny Small. They travel together and realize the American dream of "having their own house". George Milton is a wise man, a guardian of Lenny, a close friend and a guardian. He represents a responsible ordinary person who takes care of others with disabilities and common dreams.
John Steinbeck 's 1937 masterpiece, mouse and man are the story of two of California' s roving farm workers, George Milton and Lenny during the Great Depression. In George, Steinbeck studied the tragedy of unrealistic possibilities. At Lenny, Steinbeck is exploring human vulnerability to power beyond our control. Curley features the externalization of this threat. He is a small man with a ferocious Napoleonic estate, despising Lenny's greater strength and size and uses his power as George and Lenny's son to confront temporarily the owner of Lenny's pasture . But through Collie 's wife, their destructive power is realized. She did not hurt, but she was lonely, and she asked Rennie for comfort. The end result is their death. At the present time, Curley's wife exemplifies the risk of randomness, especially those without power or options like Lenny or George. For such men, it is easy to become a victim of power beyond your control.
I will explain how Steinbeck explores the complex relationship between George Milton and Lennie Small using John Steinbeck's book "Of Mice and Men". Steinbeck's "The Mouse and the Man" dealt with the plight of California's migrant workers during the Great Depression, focusing on two coincident migrant workers, George and Rennie. John Steinbeck explained Lennie as a very simple person. Lennie is impulsive, obsessive and instinctive, like drinking water when drinking water without thinking. He can not control the movement of his body. Because he is a semi intelligent person who can not measure or control physical strength. In other words, it can be said that his physique is not consistent with his personality. Compared with George, Lenny is big and heavy, strong and smart. "A man walking behind, a big guy, no face, there is a big and pale eyes."