Corey 's wife, Currie' s wife 's article is the only female character in the male novel; Curly' s wife never gave her name but only about her husband. Like other people in the ranch she is very lonely, dreaming of a beautiful life never realized. Author John Steinbeck symbolically introduces Curley's wife, George and Lennie talk about their dreams, and when Curley's wife saw the two men for the first time they will see this. "The two men looked up at the door as the sun was blocked.
When we first heard Curley, he was married his wife for only two weeks. Curley's wife is very young, very beautiful, and very confused - probably why he married her. Curley is not safe because of his manhood and male sensibility, perhaps his low stature, so he licks his wife so that she will not let her talk to others, quarrel with other men and argue this I will try to prove it. He was often proud of his wife, Kant said that Collie put petrolatum in one of his gloves, "Curry said that he keeps his hands to keep his wife tender Fortunately, he has never spent time treating her like her. In her novel she was called "Kelly 's wife". He tried to stop her from spending time with other people in the pasture.
Curley's wife has never been named. Through the book, she is still "Kelly's wife". This fact helps transform her personality into things - a person who is away from fear. George repeatedly warned that Lenny was about to leave Colley 's wife. Despite the threat she represents (aspects expressed in her Croix room), Collie's wife is in Crooks' room and belongs to helpless and helpless people. Like group candy, Crooks, Lenny, Curly's wife has little effect on her world. She was under her husband's control and was scared of her hands, so he was isolated as the only woman in the pasture.
At that time, Colley 's wife was a group completely left behind in American society. In the novel, the character has never fully developed, but it appears as a silhouette or a symbol of a real person. Candy, Crooks, Curley's wife represents discriminated age, race, gender group. Before they met Candy, Curly 's wife already had a big picture of George and Renee' s eyes. Candy depicts how she tends to put everyone in the "eyes" of a ranch. Nobody really knows Collie's wife because no one is talking to her, and she has heard what she really wants to say.