What is the significance of dr
What is the significance of dreams in "Of Mice And Men"The book "Of Mice and Men" was written by a man called Steinbeck. This novel deals with the plight of migrant labourers in California during the great depression, set around the 1930's after the great Wall Street crash. At that time morale and money was at an all time low. A lack of jobs forced men to travel to seek employment, causing familial divides and creating the itinerant workforce. Steinbeck not only wrote about what he knew, having been a ranch worker himself, he wrote about that which fascinated him. One of Steinbeck's favourite books was Le Morte d'Arthur, Sir Thomas Mallory's retelling of the stories of King Arthur and the Knights of the Round Table, and the King Arthur legends play a part in several of Steinbeck's works. One of those legends was Sir Galahad's search for the Holy Grail, the cup from which Jesus was said to have drunk. Finding the Grail will cause all sins to be forgiven, according to the knights. Throughout literature, the Grail serves as a symbol of that which is sought but can never be possessed. Galahad was the only knight pure enough to find and touch the Grail, but once he touched it, he died and his spirit went to heaven. This novel co
That's three hundred an' fifty bucks I'd put in" the three men talk about their dream which gives us an incite into their feelings. he can not aspire to buy and run a farm with his limited intelligence and can only hold on to that which is familiar to him;; in this case the soft fur of the rabbits he will tend. The focus of the book is on two random migrant workers, George and Lennie. It is crushed and broken, like Curley's wife's neck, for without Lennie there is no purpose in the dream as far as George is concerned, he told it, lived it, only as a means of placating Lennie, rewarding him. Candy is the only other character in Of Mice and Men who manifests an interest in others and hope for the future. In the end the dream of the ranch is not realised by any of them. Lennie is the archetypal gentle giant who behaves foolishly, a pattern that the novel will certainly continue. It could be said that, ironically, Curley's wife is the only one to achieve her dream, albeit posthumously, as there will be much notoriety surrounding her death, gaining her the media fame she coveted. George and Lennie are unique, by having something that they alone share, by holding onto their dream in their hearts and their minds, they have a bond that could never be broken. Lennie's dream was to "tend rabbits" Lennie has made the dream his own, it is a more simplistic and uncomplicated version of George's. Curley's wife is never given her name throughout the play, therefore we understand that she is obviously married to Curley, but moreover she is his possession. Through the graphological feature of italics "rabbits" Steinbeck is trying to emphasise the great excitement which Lennie feels at the prospect of tending and caring for them. The dream is over for George and candy as there will be no Lennie in part of that dream. In desperate time when life seemed to be at its lowest ebb, dreams gave the men something to cling to, gave them the last ray of hope that life would get better. " Crooks' thinks George and Lennie's dream is absurd, but once he believes that the dream is close to being realised he becomes attracted by the idea of freedom and the opportunity for a better life it symbolises "why I'd come an' lend a hand" but he is soon reminded of his status in society, courtesy of Curley's wife who reminds him scornfully that she could have him 'lynched' if she chose, therefore he told the others to "forget it".
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