Lennie is a very big and strong man but not very intelligent. I know this because Steinbeck explains Lennie’s character traits. The author says Lennie is not the brightest man and this is how everyone in the story thinks of him as. “Lennie, for God’s sakes don’t drink so much.” This is the part where Lennie drank water out of a green pool. George thought Lennie would get sick from this. This explains that Lennie …show more content…
He can’t talk in public without getting in trouble. He is very nice though because at the end of the chapter, Curley is hitting him and Lennie did not do anything until George told him to. This caused Lennie to crush Curley’s hand and basically break every bone in it. Also, Lennie ended up killing Curley’s wife by breaking her neck. This is what caused Lennie’s death because George shot him after this. George shot Lennie because the other people on the ranch were searching to kill him and George got there first so he could do it. Lennie was told not to talk at the farm because of what happened in Weed. I think that Lennie gets more intelligent throughout the story. Even though he still acts childish, he becomes smarter than he was before. Lennie starts to develop intelligence. He acts more mature around others. George told Lennie to not talk at the ranch and Lennie followed George’s instructions. This trait shows that Lennie is sympathetic throughout the book. I do not think he was that sympathetic though, just a little bit. Overall, Lennie is not too sympathetic. He was on track of getting more intelligent but when he killed Curley’s wife everything just went in the wrong direction. Lennie did not play much role on the ranch because all he did was just the wrong