Seeing his house in ruins, the mouse was sad. He had plans to stay warm in his house during the winter season. Now that that plans were ruined, the little mouse had to endure the winter’s sleepy dribble and hoar-frost cold. In the last stanza of the poem, it reads, “The best laid schemes of mice and men go often askew, and leaves us nothing but grief and pain, for promised joy” (Doc A). Steinbeck uses this situation with the mouse to foreshadow George and Lennie’s plans. Just like the mouse, the boys have big plans for their future, like purchasing a farm of their own and just like the mouse, plans can often go