Wednesday, February 3, 2016

Section 3 George and Lennie's dream

     Section 3 gives a full explanation of George and Lennie's dream. George said that "I know a little place we can get cheap, but they ain't givin' it away." This means that George probably has a plan in mind about how they could get that place. George and Lennie go on to describe the "perfect" American Dream at the time (living off the land). However, George and Lennie both jumped as though they had been caught doing something reprehensible when Candy spoke. I think that this is because the dream was always their own little secret that they wanted to do on their own. Lennie was probably just surprised because he was too entranced in his own picture to pay attention to Candy, but George was probably a little afraid that Candy could get in the way of their dream. Candy could find George and Lennie's dream house and try to buy it, or he could tell the other guys about George and Lennie's dream.
     I think that Lennie might want "in" on George and Lennie's dream because it gave him a purpose. Candy knows that he's old and basically useless to the ranch, and he'll get fired once he can't do his job anymore. That was probably confirmed when Carlson shot his dog. Candy told what he thought to George and Lennie: "You seen what they did to my dog tonight? They says he wasn't no good to himself nor nobody else. When they can me here I wisht somebody'd shoot me. But they won't do nothing like that. I won't have no place to go, an' I can't get no more jobs." George and Lennie's dream gave Candy hope, so he wanted "in" on the dream. Candy is also a big help to George and Lennie if they want to make their dream come true because he's putting in three hundred and fifty dollars. 
     Even though George and Lennie's dream seem within their grasp, I don't think that it will actually come true. I think that their dream will be ruined someway by Curley or Curley's wife. I think this because everything's going a little too well at the ranch right now, so something could go wrong at any moment. Also, George stated that it would take one month for them to make one hundred dollars, but the book only took place over a few days. If the dream actually came true, it probably should be in the book. 

1 comment:

  1. Your observations and rationale reasoning are spot on. Yes, I think something will happen to ruin their dreams, most likely involving Curley. Seeing as how the book only spanned throughout a couple of days, and they would need at least a month to gather all the money, and then a couple of days to set up their land, something has to happen to destroy it. Also, in the matter of Candy, George and Lennie's dream gave him a reason to want to stay alive and well, seeing as how he explained he had no family and he wished that someone would shoot him. I gave him a drive, or it impelled him to want to be apart of their little secret plan. I agree with your observations and statements.

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