Undeniably, the audience knew how George felt after doing what he did. Given the fact that Lennie was conscious of what he did and knew it was wrong, he still did not comprehend the severity of his actions. Lennie said, “I down a real bad thing… George’ll be mad,” this shows how he focuses on how George will get mad and not on how he will be prosecuted and probably thrown in jail (Steinbeck 92). After that instead of Lennie fleeing away he just went where George told him to go if he ever got in trouble which makes him seem like a child obeying his parents on what to do if he get in trouble. This is one of the reasons George could have taken in account in his decision to kill Lennie. Therefore George saw it as a way to end his child’s future suffering.
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George could have called the police right away or maybe even go up to lennie and turn him in himself if he did not want Curley and the other men to murder him. After all that was his best friend; the person he was with the most. In the last chapter, Steinbeck illustrates “George raised the gun and his hand shook, and he dropped his hand to the ground again,” to show how it was really painful for george to shoot up his best friend (Steinbeck 104). George decision sounds awful but one has to take in account the time they lived in and how they were at that time. Men were closed minded and very much into having an easy solution to a problem which is why George’s choice to pull the trigger was proceeded. He knew that men had no mercy for guys like Lennie at that