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John Steinbeck 's Of Mice And Men

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People’s largest obstacles often lie solely in their minds. Loneliness, for example, at its greatest extent, can potentially drive people to extreme measures in order to extricate themselves from it. George Milton and Lennie Small, central characters in Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, are nomadic workers in the fields of Californian ranches. The men are polar opposites; George is small, sharp, and quick-minded while Lennie is ponderous and intellectually disabled. However, the two are inseparable, sharing with each other the privilege of companionship. What compels them to continue seeking jobs and working is their enduring dream of a farm to themselves. As George and Lennie begin a new job on a ranch in the Salinas Valley of California, they befriend and come across numerous unique workers. Throughout the course of the novel, most of these ranchers exhibit traits that illustrate their lives of loneliness and lack of companions. Candy, and old swamper who first situates George and Lennie on the ranch, lacks acquaintances and offers to do anything to minimize his time in seclusion. Candy’s first act of desperation occurs one night in the bunkhouse as he rests with his old, blind dog. Carlson, an insensitive and bitter rancher, insists on killing the dog and ending its misery, but Candy claims that he is too close to part with it. Candy also adds, “’ I don’t mind takin’ care of him’” (45). He not only rejects Carlson’s reasonable proposal to kill the dog, but also vainly

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