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  1. Of Mice and Horses: Directed by Jack Shea. With Norman Fell, Audra Lindley, Jeffrey Tambor, Patty McCormack. Ethel tries to get a china horse, supposedly from the Ming Dynasty, away from Helen.

    • (37)
    • Comedy
    • Jack Shea
    • 1980-02-09
  2. Sol Gandy. | Certified Educator. Share Cite. In chapter one of Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men, the author describes Lennie with animal imagery. He does so to suggest that Lennie is not only...

  3. Get an answer for 'What is the symbolic meaning of the horses in the barn scenes with Crooks, Lennie, and Curley's wife?' and find homework help for other Of Mice and Men questions at eNotes.

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    The narrator employs animal metaphors throughout the story, and in this first description of Lennie, suggests both his bear-like brute strength and his “heavy,” “dragging” psychological simplicity. This simile comparing the way Lennie drinks water from the pool to a horse further demonstrates Lennie’s unrefined instincts and his simple nature, and ...

    This colorful metaphor, in which George indignantly demands to know whether there are lice in the bedding, unexpectedly evokes the rabbits that Lennie so desperately longs to tend, since, as George says, they are not interested in “pants rabbits.” In this metaphorical exchange, Candy warns George that Curley’s wife of two weeks is dangerous because...

    In this simile, the narrator aptly compares Curley’s approach to engage Lennie in a fight to that of a terrier, a dog bred to hunt vermin and renowned for its fearless and relentless pursuit, no matter how big its opponent. However, Curley, who was spoiling for a fight with anyone, didn’t account for how he might counter Lennie’s defense of himself...

    In this metaphor—which immediately follows Curley’s wife’s threat to have Crooks lynched because he told her to leave his room—the narrator observes as Crooks erases himself, comparing him to “nothing” that would elicit any kind of response. This description deftly demonstrates how precarious his place as the lone Black man on the ranch is.

    This metaphor describes Curley’s wife’s desperation to be seen and heard for longer than a moment; the words come out of her mouth so fast because she needs someone to hear her, and Lennie is the person who gives her the space and attention to speak and be heard. In this simile, which echoes the description of Lennie crushing Curley’s fist, the nar...

  4. Of Mice and Men: Chap. 5 Lyrics. It was Sunday afternoon. The resting horses nibbled the remaining wisps of hay, and they stamped their feet and they bit the wood of the mangers and rattled...

  5. Of Mice and Men: Chapter 4. John Steinbeck. Track 4 on Of Mice and Men. 1 viewer 456.5K views. 110 Contributors. Of Mice and Men: Chapter 4 Lyrics. FOUR. Crooks, the Negro stable buck,...

  6. He lies, explaining that they travel together because they are cousins and that a horse kicked Lennie in the head when he was a child. They are hired. They meet Candy , an old “swamper,” or handyman, with a missing hand and an ancient dog, and Curley , the boss’s mean-spirited son.

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