Chapter six: Lennies'last momnets
Predict:
Imagine:
Lennie is sitting on the riverbank, slowly waiting for the person who he knows will come to break through the bushes, and to rescue and take him away from there. Yet when George does show up, he isn't there to rescue Lennie, he's there to end it all, yet not before Lennie's imagination getting the best of him, and seeing his Aunt Clara, and seeing a rabbit scold for all the things he's done, like trusting George, like going places with George, and also all those animals he's killed.
Clarify:
The fact that Lennie was hallucinating his Aunt, and a talking rabbit, I feel like it was his common sense scolding for everything he's done, and also a closure thing for himself, saying as if, I know I'm about to die, so I'm going to admit all the horrible things I've done, and get them out on the tablet in from of me.
Try:
Use:
The only thing i could compare this to would the scene in the Deathly Hollows part 2, where Harry goes to the Kings Cross Station to learn more things from Dumbledore, even if Harry isn't dead, he's preparing himself for the fact that could eventually die from Voldemort's last flick of his wand.
Review:
The ending of the story is a very quick and easy one. It's short in it's thought process, and also get's the point across that George had to do it not matter happened. That it would eventually happen.
- Lennie will be hiding in the bushes along the river, waiting for George to come and collect him. Lennie probably plans on not telling him about the puppy, since it won't matter to the fact that Curley's wife is dead.
- George will listen for a small while, yet he knows what he'll have to do eventually, and Lennie knows it, yet he keeps begging for George to start anew somewhere else.
Imagine:
Lennie is sitting on the riverbank, slowly waiting for the person who he knows will come to break through the bushes, and to rescue and take him away from there. Yet when George does show up, he isn't there to rescue Lennie, he's there to end it all, yet not before Lennie's imagination getting the best of him, and seeing his Aunt Clara, and seeing a rabbit scold for all the things he's done, like trusting George, like going places with George, and also all those animals he's killed.
Clarify:
The fact that Lennie was hallucinating his Aunt, and a talking rabbit, I feel like it was his common sense scolding for everything he's done, and also a closure thing for himself, saying as if, I know I'm about to die, so I'm going to admit all the horrible things I've done, and get them out on the tablet in from of me.
Try:
- Why would Lennie even try to convince George into running away again, since all their friendship is is that they have to runaway from a town or farm that they just got settled in?
- Why would Aunt Clara show up finally, in person, a face to a name, only to say that Lennie should have known better for himself?
- Why would the rabbit have a reason to scold Lennie at all? Is it due to the fact that Lennie could have had rabbits if could have kept his hands to himself and follow orders?
Use:
The only thing i could compare this to would the scene in the Deathly Hollows part 2, where Harry goes to the Kings Cross Station to learn more things from Dumbledore, even if Harry isn't dead, he's preparing himself for the fact that could eventually die from Voldemort's last flick of his wand.
Review:
The ending of the story is a very quick and easy one. It's short in it's thought process, and also get's the point across that George had to do it not matter happened. That it would eventually happen.