Friday, October 25, 2019
Of Mice And Men Essay On Loneliness -- essays research papers
 In the novel Of Mice and Men, John Steinbeck looks at the  theme of loneliness as it affects many characters on the  ranch. Crooks, Curley's wife, and Candy are the most  excluded characters on the ranch, because they all have  dreams that they will not be able to live out and they all are  at loss when it came to companionship. Crooks is lonely  because he is the only black man on the ranch. Since this  book is set during the Depression, Jim Crow laws are still in  effect, whites and blacks had separate facilities for socializing  and living. Crooks comments that he can't live in the  bunkhouse, and cant even play cards in there. "I cant' play  because I'm black. They say I stink."(68) This quote  illustrates that Crooks feels the pain of rejection more that he  let's people see. In fact, Crooks protects himself by acting  like a "proud and aloof man."(67) The full extent of Crooks's  suffering is made clear in chapter 4 when Crooks lashes out  at Lennie. Viewing Lennie as a symbol of all the white men  who had hurt him, Crooks strikes out in anger, saying "You  got no right to come in my room...Nobody got any right in  here but me."(68) Steinbeck states that "Crooks's face  lighted with pleasure in his torture."(71) Crooks's anger,  though, is really just a cover for the pain he experiences from  constant isolation. "A guy goes nuts if he aint got nobody ...  A guy gets too lonely and he gets sick."(73) This desire to  have a connection is apparent later in the scene when  Crooks hears Lennie and Candy's plan to buy a little ranch.  Wistfully, he suggests, "If you guys want a hand to work for  nothing, just his keep, why Id come and lend a hand."(76)  No matter how hard Crooks may try to hide the hurt he  feels, he clearly would like to be included in this venture with  the other men. Crooks's dream, however, lasts only for a  few minutes. When Curley's wife threatens Crooks with a  lynching, he quickly remembers the terrible reality of his  situation . Steinbeck writes "Crooks had reduced himself to  nothing. There was no personality, no ego - his voice was  toneless."(81) The character of Crooks reflects the universal  need for human connection as well as the brutalizing effects  of racial prejudice. Like Crooks, Curley's wife is very lonely,  but she is lonely for different reasons. Like Crooks Curley's  wife suffers from...              ...ion. But Candy gets some life  back in him when he hears George and Lennie talking about  their dream farm. Hearing this gives Candy a reason to live.  He would love to join George and Lennie on there farm and  he even tells them that he'll give them money to help finance  it "I aint't much good with on'y one hand. I lost my hand right  here on this ranch...an' they give me two hunderd an' fifty  dollars ââ¬Ëcause I los' my hand. An' I got fifty more saved up  right in the bank, right now...and I got fifty more more  comin... S'pose I went in with you guys. Tha's three hundred  an' fifty bucks I'd put in."(59) When George agrees to let  Candy jump on the wagon and join the farm, you can tell  Candy is extremely pleased. But with death of Lennie the  dream of the farm dies to. Like the other characters Candy's  dream was stolen from him. Candy's character was lonely  because he needed human contact but his only companion  was his dog which was killed. Loneliness affected many  characters in John Steinbecks novel, Of Mice and Men.  Crooks, Curley's wife and Candy were affected the most by  this loneliness because none of them had a real companion  and all of them had dreams which were shattered.                       
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