I’m arguing why George should have killed Lennie in Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck.Curley was going to make Lennie’s death painful anyways. Curley was mad about his hand and losing his wife so he thought he would shoot Lennie.”Ill shoot him in the guts”(Steinbeck).Lennie was going to die either way so why not just get it over with.George should have shot Lennie because he may be slower but being slower does not get you out of murder.George should have killed Lennie when he saw Curley’s wife’s dead body because he got nervous and scared for him because George knew what the guys were going to do to him .”I know what I have to do” (Steinbeck) I think the quote proves my point because George knows he is going to have to kill Lennie.Lennie
One reason George shouldn't shoot lennie is because due to his mild mental disability lennie looks up to jeorge. Lennie believes in wholeheartedly. Lennie is a large lumbering childlike migrant worker. George is obviously devote to lennie, Lennie is slow and acts like a little kid sometimes, George said, “ There was splashing down at the river. “ (steinback 8) Lennie was splashing water with his fingers. In my conclusion lennie is to slow to know what he is doing bad or good .
Questions Response With Textual Evidence (include chapter and page number) 1. Does George do the right thing by killing Lennie? Consider the advantages and disadvantages of George’s actions. George does not do the right thing by killing Lennie because even though Lennie was a hassle and hard to be around sometimes because of his mental issues, he did not deserve to die. Lennie does not purposely hurt anyone and he tried to control himself throughout the novel because if he would not then George would get mad at him.
The main thing that stood out to me was how smart George was when he decided to take Lennie in. First off, Lennie needed the help, Lennie wouldn’t have been able to handle life in general without that adult or big brother figure which George took the role of. George took care of Lennie and in turn, even without specifically trying to, Lennie helped George stay on track to reach their goal where most men during that time would have fallen to alcohol and other time wasting, money sucking, life ruining expenses. This topic also goes with my quote that goes, “An’ I got you. We got each other, that’s what, that gives a hoot in hell about us.” It shows how working together allowed them a better opportunity. It shows how they were happier and
George was right to kill Lennie. Lennie, a man of tremendous size, has the mind of a young child, while George on the opposite, is an independent individual. Yet such two different people have formed a “family”, clinging together in the face of loneliness and alienation during their journey. Innocent Lennie is mentally challenged with no ability to understand abstract concepts like death. He consistently does not mean to do the things that put him into trouble, and once he does get into trouble, he has no conscience to define his actions in terms of guilt. Consequently, the dramatic scene unfolded - George had no choice but to kill his best friend Lennie after he knew that Lennie killed Curley’s wife. Was George right to kill Lennie? This essay
George should have “dealt with” Lennie in a different way at the end of the book. George finds Lennie sitting next to the river. Lennie asks George if he is mad at him for killing the dog and Curly’s wife. George says he is not mad at Lennie. Lennie then asks George to tell him the story about how they are going to raise a farm together and Lennie will get to tend the rabbits. While George is telling the story he asks Lennie to look towards the river. George tells Lennie to look toward the river so that he cannot see what is about to happen, “George raised the gun and his hand shook” (Steinbeck 105). George ends up killing Lennie. George should not have killed Lennie because Lennie was his best friend, and the only thing he had. Lennie just
"He had brought the muzzle of it close to the back of Lennie's head". (Steinback 106) Curley wanted to kill Lennie himself, and make it hurt as much as possible. As Lennie saw it, he had no other option then to kill Lennie. Wanting to make it hurt as least as possible. George put the gun right up too Lennie's head, which would make him die instantly and not have to suffer in pain. Compared to the way Curley wanted to kill Lennie, by shooting him in the gut so he would stay alive, while suffering and bleeding out. Without a doubt this quote demonstrates how George felt obligated to kill Lennie in the least hurtful way possible. Also, after shooting Lennie George's body language after he had killed Lennie told the reader he did not want to kill Lennie to make him suffer. After George killed Lennie the author states "George shivered and looked at the gun, and then he threw it from him". (Steinbeck 106) Meaning only one thing, George really kept having second thoughts on killing Lennie. As he began too think about it and realized Lennie is going to suffer far less if he would shoot him at that moment. Because Curley would have hurt him horribly, and George would have to witness these fatal events taking place right in front of his eyes. George may have regretted killing Lennie, however deep down he knows he did the right things by flowing his obligation of not
Imagine someone very close to you and ask yourself what you would be willing to do to help them. When that person’s way of life is threatened to come to a very violent end or to continue in a way of almost torture, would you want them to go on accepting their fate or grant them peace from suffering? In John Steinbeck’s heartbreaking novel Of Mice and Men, George Milton and Lennie Small are a couple of friends who travel together escaping the law. When Lennie accidentally kills the wife of the farm owner’s son, Curley, Lennie is put into a rough situation and must face his actions. Instead of allowing Lennie to be killed violently by Curley and his men or rot in jail, George takes matters into his own hands and “mercy kills” Lennie in the same place the book starts. Some may say that this killing was ruthless and unnecessary, however George’s decision to kill Lennie was justified.
Day after day you take care of your parents trying to make their pain stop. You try and hope that things will eventually get better. Their cry for help as nothing gets better. What would you do? In the novella Of Mice and Men, there is a similar situation. Should George have killed Lennie? George made this decision based on how he didn’t want anyone to hurt Lennie. But, isn’t that what he is doing? George killing Lennie was wrong this is wrong because Lennie didn’t know what was happening and he wasn’t in any pain. George should have let Lennie make that decision for himself.
George a kind caring friend or cold blooded killer? As we read Of Mice and Men we watch as George and Lennie’s friendship develop as they work on the farm. They encounter many problems along the way because of Lennie’s mental disability;George basically takes care of him since Lennie has no one else, they’re very close and they always got each others back. Then after all that we are hit with very heartbreaking ending. Where George has to decide whether or not to kill Lennie.
When is the best time to end someone’s life? Is it ever okay to change their life without asking “why”? These questions are faced by George Milton at the end of John Steinbeck’s novella Of Mice and Men. Some might think George should not have killed Lennie since George was his friend, George should have help Lennie get away like he helped Lennie escape from Soledad when he have gotten himself in trouble. However, the guys on the ranch did not know about Lennie’s past, if they did know about his past and knew he was a wanted criminal they would have killed him right on the spot.
George does not make a wise decision in Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck. George chooses to kill Lennie because of Lennie’s uncontrollable killing. Lennie does not mean to kill anyone but he is unaware of his strength. George thinks he is doing the right thing by killing Lennie, but really he is making a huge mistake. He believes that he is doing this for the sake of others but his decision if immoral. George was wrong for doing this, he does this for his benefit, and he is guilty.
George did the right thing when he shot Lennie because Lennie did not understand what he had done wrong. His hidden strength manifested in many moments of their journey. The worst that could have been for George is seeing Lennie be killed by the ranchmen; on the other hand he had a choice of killing Lennie himself. But who is he to predict fate or take away Lennie’s life?
If you had the choice of doing what is in your best friend’s interest, would you consider it? What if the friend’s death was a factor? In the story of Mice and Men, George may have taken Lennie's life, but he made the decision for the better interest of his friend. He knew that Curley and his men would kill Lennie, he would suffer and/or be placed in jail. George made the justified decision of killing Lennie because it was the better choice of Lennie’s foreseen future. Therefore, George was morally justified for shooting Lennie for merciful reasons.
In the book Of Mice and Men by John Steinbeck, George and Lennie learn to travel and experience the world together as they take on a new job working on a ranch in central California "bucking barley" for the ranch owner and his son. Lennie, not being able to control his actions, hurts too many people and things and men were chasing after the two, so George decides to take action and shoot Lennie. Although some may disagree, George did the right thing by shooting Lennie because he could not have avoided hurting someone else in the future, he could not eventually learn that the things he did were wrong due to his disability, and he could not learn to eventually control his own strength.
“ Less people will eventually have to repay.” The book “Of mice and men” recounts the story of two men: Lennie Small and George Milton. They travel together because at the beginning of story Lennie touch a girl’s red dress and they need to run out of town. Lennie is strong and tall with the pale eye man. His behavior is kind of silly his personality is like that of a child. He loves the soft things, but he always killed lives because he doesn’t know his own strength. At the end of the story, he killed Curley's wife by accident and got murder by George. George is the best friend and guardian of Lennie. He helps Lennie to sustain his dream of having a farm in future. He has a black face, slender arms, and a thin bony nose. In the book, the trouble Lennie made becomes worse and worse, and George ends up had to kill Lennie. “However, George is justified in killing