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  1. Jan 23, 2019 · Chapter 1. The story begins with two childhood friends, George Milton and Lennie Small, who are traveling through California in search of work. Lennie is drinking from a puddle of standing water, and George reproaches him. When Lennie stops drinking the water, George reminds him that they only have a little way to go until they arrive at their ...

  2. Lennie’s death conclusively demonstrates one of the novella’s central ideas: according to the rules of the American economy, the weak and vulnerable cannot survive. At the end of Of Mice and Men, George spares Lennie from Curley’s wrath by shooting Lennie in the back of the head after reciting their shared dream of owning a farm one final ...

  3. Of Mice and Men Chapter 1 - Key Takeaways. Chapter 1 serves as exposition for Of Mice and Men, setting up the main characters, George and Lennie. In the chapter, George and Lennie are heading toward a new ranch, after they got ran out of the last one. Lennie loves small, furry animals but accidentally kills them with his strength.

  4. Of Mice and Men Chapter 1 Summary. It's a hot afternoon near Soledad, California, sometime during the 1930s. Everyone (or nearly everyone) is poor and scrambling around desperately for work, food, and money. We meet Lennie Small and George Milton: two guys who are among the poor and the scrambling. These two are dressed nearly identically, but ...

  5. verb to make a loud, repetitive noise. tramp. noun a person who travels on foot from place to place, especially a vagabond living on occasional jobs or gifts of money or food. stilted. adj. as if standing on stilts; artificially formal. bindle. noun a bundle, usually of bedding and other possessions, carried by a hobo. dabble.

  6. Of Mice and Men Full Book Summary. Two migrant workers, George and Lennie, have been let off a bus miles away from the California farm where they are due to start work. George is a small, dark man with “sharp, strong features.”. Lennie, his companion, is his opposite, a giant of a man with a “shapeless” face. Overcome with thirst, the ...

  7. The title, Of Mice and Men, comes from an eighteenth-century poem by Robert Burns entitled “ To a Mouse .”. This poem features a couplet that has become widely known and quoted: “The best laid schemes of mice and men / Gang oft aglay.”. That last phrase, written in Scottish dialect, translates as “often go wrong.”.