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  2. Read more about why George kills Lennie. The final scene between George and Lennie is suffused with sadness, even though Lennie retains his blissful ignorance until the end. To reassure Lennie, George forces himself through their habitual interaction one last time.

  3. 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 time. Because George is forced to kill his friend himself, Lennie’s death is not only the death of a single vulnerable person, but also the destruction of a rare and ...

  4. Quick answer: George killing Lennie in Of Mice and Men symbolizes the harsh reality of broken dreams and the impossibility of a better life amid societal...

  5. There are two acts of euthanasia in the story, the killing of Candy's old dog and shooting Lennie. George only takes part in the second. Lennie's death is parallel to the shooting of Candy's dog. Both Lennie and candy's dog are killed because they would suffer and can not look after themselves.

  6. Lennie kills Curleys wife because of his inability to control his own strength and emotions. However, Lennie doesn’t simply kill her—several unfortunate events lead to her death.

  7. Lennie falls forward on the sand, and George throws the gun away from him into an old pile of ashes. The men hear the shot and run up, Slim 's voice calling to George. They burst into the clearing, Curley in the lead.

  8. As Lennie envisions the dream that seemed so close a few days ago, George shoots him as Carlson shot Candy's dog, and like the dog, without a quiver, Lennie dies. Earlier in the novel, Slim told Candy it would be better to put his dog down, better for their "society" as a whole.

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