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The American Dream

Decent Essays

Almost everyone has a dream. Some dreams may vary from one person to the next, but undoubtedly, mostly everyone has a dream. Of course, these dreams will want to be met, but that is not always the case. Some people reach obstacles, which lengthens or sometimes even prevents the time it takes to make their dreams a reality. In the story Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, best friends George and Lennie, along with many others in the story, share the American Dream, in which these dreamers ultimately want to own land and live off of it. However, most of these people faced obstacles along the way from reaching these desires, as physical disabilities, mental disabilities, loneliness, and euthanasia all played a role in these eventual failures. Physical disabilities prevented many dreamers from reaching the American Dream. One example of this is when George and Lennie meet the handless Candy, in which Steinbeck mentions, “He pointed with his right arm, and out of the sleeve came a round stick-like wrist, but no hand” (18). Candy, just like George and Lennie, wants to have his own land, as he attempted to persuade the duo if he can “live off the fatta’ the lan’” with them. Candy can not do this on his own, as he is underpaid, sweeping and mopping the barn with his one hand. George and Lennie also stumble across Crooks, who happens to have a crooked back, as he was seen medicating it in the story when it is seen that “In one hand he held a bottle of liniment, and with the other

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