Tuesday, February 19, 2019

Everyone Has a Dream :: miscellaneous

Most stack have some kind of hopes or dreams. Hopes are desires accompanied by expectations of fulfillment, they are one that give promises to the future. ( The Merriam Webster Dictionary, scalawag 367). Dreams are nonable for their beauty, excellence, and/or enjoyable quality. ( The Merriam Webster Dictionary, pages 234-235). However, these dreams are many time thwarted by many obstacles along the way, as happens to George and Lennies in John Steinbacks novel, Of Mice and Men. George promises Lennies aunt Clara, right before she dies, that he will take care of Lennie, and that they will always be together. During the 1930s, people wish Lennie, who has a mental handicap, and blacks, such as Crooks, the static man, are discriminated. During this time, also known as the Great Depression, barn workers like George and Lennie would go around looking for work at a ranch. real few Americans owned land, and further rarely did they have any freedom. George and Lennie unavoidableness to buy a piece of land. To George this symbolizes his freedom, he will then be able to control his destiny, yet to Lennie, it means he will be able to tend the rabbits, and therefor pet them as much as he likes. Steinback expresses some of mans hopes and dreams through the main characters actions. George and Lennie lie in hope that their own, very particular dream, will one daytime come true. They hope they will work enough to earn the comfortable amount of money needed for their piece of land. The land is important to them because it symbolizes their liberty, their independence. From the snatch they buy the land and on, they become independent human worlds. They stop depending on whether they have a job, on whether they have enough food amongst new(prenominal) things. They dream of building a small house on this land, and on having a small farm with chickens and rabbits and cows. Lennies greatest dream is being able to tend the rabbits. Whenever Lennie does anything wrong, in stead of thinking of the consequences that may follow, he only thinks of not being able to tend the rabbits when they acquire their new home. Lennie tries not upset George, because when he does, George threatens not to let him tend the rabbits. George, on the separate hand, dreams on living a self sufficient life onward the money and food they can make off the land and the animals.

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