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| Character
Profiles |
George:
George is the story's main protagonist, a small, quick man with well-defined features. A
migrant ranch worker, George dreams of one day saving enough money to buy his own place
and be his own boss, living off of the land. The hindrance to his objective is his
mentally handicapped companion, Lennie, with whom he has traveled and worked since
Lennie's Aunt Clara, whom George knew, died. The majority of George's energy is devoted to
looking after Lennie, whose blunders prevent George from working toward his dream, or even
living the life of a normal rancher. Thus, George's conflict arises in Lennie, to whom he
has the ties of long-time companionship that he so often yearns to break in order to live
the life of which he dreams. This tension strains George into demonstrating various
emotions, ranging from anger to patience to sadness to pride and to hope.
Lennie: George's companion, the source of the novel's conflict. Lennie,
enormous, ungainly, and mentally slow, is George's polar opposite both mentally and
physically. Lennie's ignorance and innocence and helplessness, his childish actions, such
as his desire to pet soft things, contrast his physical bulk, making him likeable to
readers. Although devoid of cruel intentions, Lennie's stupidity and carelessness cause
him to unwittingly harm animals and people, which creates trouble for both him and George.
Lennie is tirelessly devoted to George and delights in hearing him tell of the dream of
having a farm, but he does not desire the dream of the American worker in the same way
that George does. His understanding of George's dream is more childish and he grows
excited at the possibility of tending the future rabbits, most likely because it will
afford him a chance to pet their soft hides as much as he wishes. Nevertheless, a dream is
a dream, different for everyone, and George and Lennie share the similar attribute of
desiring what they haven't got. Lennie, however, is helpless to attain his dream, and
remains a static character throughout, relying on George to fuel is hope and save him from
trouble.
Candy: The old, one-handed swamper who is the first to befriend George
and Lennie at Soledad. Humble and weary, Candy seems to be at the end of his line after
Carlson shoots his last possession and companion, his old, blind dog. "When they can
me here I wisht somebody'd shoot me" (66), Candy confesses to George and Lennie,
hoping for a similar fate as his dog. But when he overhears the two talking of their
little place, Candy offers all his money and his meager services to be in on the dream.
His substantial sum of money and the fact that he knows of a place make it impossible for
George to refuse him. Candy clings to this hope of a future as a drowning man would to a
piece of driftwood. It rekindles life within him, but it also becomes an obsession, and in
his excitement and indignation, he lets the secret slip to both Crooks and Curley's wife.
And when Lennie kills Curley's wife and shatters the reality of the dream, Candy becomes
hopeless and full of anguish, the broken shell of a man.
Curley: The boxer, the son of the boss, the angry and hot-headed obstacle
to George's attempt to keep Lennie out of trouble at Soledad. Insecure of his size and
over-protective of his wife, Curley is eager to fight anyone he perceives as a threat to
his self-image. From the outset, Lennie unwittingly incurs Curley's antagonism simply
because of his size, and the reader immediately braces for future confrontation. Curley
remains undeveloped, forever little and forever mean, poking his head in at various points
in the novel, either to look for his wife or to stir up trouble on account of her.
Curley's Wife: Nameless and flirtatious, Curley's wife is perceived by
Candy to be the cause of all that goes wrong at Soledad: "Ever'body knowed you'd mess
things up. You wasn't no good" (104-105), he says to her dead body in his grief. The
workers, George included, see her as having "the eye" for every guy on the
ranch, and they cite this as the reason for Curley's insecurity and hot-headed
temperament. But Curley's wife adds complexity to her own characterization, confessing to
Lennie that she dislikes Curley because he is angry all the time and saying that she comes
around because she is lonely and just wants someone with whom to talk. Like George and
Lennie, she once had a dream of becoming an actress and living in Hollywood, but it went
unrealized, leaving her full of self-pity, married to an angry man, living on a ranch
without friends, and viewed as a trouble-maker by everyone.
Crooks: Called such because of a crooked spine, Steinbeck does not
develop Crooks, the Negro stable buck, until the fourth chapter, describing him as a
"proud, aloof man. He kept his distance and demanded that other people keep
theirs" (74). Crooks is bitter, indignant, angry, and ultimately frustrated by his
helplessness as a black man in a racist culture. Wise and observant, Crooks listens to
Lennie's talk of the dream of the farm with cynicism. Although tempted by Candy, Lennie,
and George's plan to buy their own place, Crooks is constantly reminded (in this case by
Curley's wife) that he is inferior to whites and, out of pride, he refuses to take part in
their future farm.
Slim: The tall, jerkline skinner whom Steinbeck describes as something of
a living legend: "he moved with a majesty only achieved by royalty and master
craftsmen. He was a jerkline skinner, the prince of the ranch, capable of driving ten,
sixteen, even twenty mules with a single line to the leaders. He was capable of killing a
fly on the wheeler's butt with a bull whip without touching the mule. There was gravity in
his manner and a quiet so profound that all talk stopped when he spoke. . . His hatchet
face was ageless. He might have been thirty-fice or fifty. HIs ear heard more than was
said to him, and his slow speech had overtones not of thought, but of understanding beyond
thought" (37). Slim lingers in the shadow of his overwhelming description throughout
the novel. He serves as the fearless, decision-maker when conflicts arise among the
workers and wins the confidence of George, offering advice, comfort, and quiet words of
wisdom. |
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