Lennie sees a girl in a pretty red dress and he likes it very much. He grabs it and wont let go. George hits Lennie over the head and the girl runs to the law and says she was raped.
In "Of Mice and Men," Lennie accidentally frightened and grabbed a woman's dress in Weed when he was trying to feel its soft texture, causing her to panic and accuse him of assault. This incident led to Lennie and George having to flee from Weed to avoid trouble.
he touches a girl in a red dress and when she screamed and he got confused and held on to the dress. he scared her but didn't hurt her, that's why they had to leave
Holds on to a girls dress and doesn't let go so the girl basically freaks and calls it as a rape.
He grabbed onto a girls dress and didn't let go. This resulted in her screaming and calling it rape.
Lennie touched a woman's skirt, she thought that he was getting ready to rape her and reacted as any person would if they thought they were about to be raped.
Lennie pull a girl dress and she though it was raped.
The town that George and Lennie are running away from in "Of Mice and Men" is Weed. They are fleeing from Weed after Lennie's inappropriate behavior with a woman led to trouble.
weed
Weed
They originally worked in the town of Weed.
In the incident in Weed from John Steinbeck's "Of Mice and Men," Lennie accidentally scares a young woman by grabbing her dress because he likes soft things. This leads to a misunderstanding and the woman accusing him of trying to assault her. Lennie and George have to flee from Weed to avoid trouble.
The internal conflicts are George vs. keeping Lennie out of trouble George vs. his belief in the dream of being rich Lennie vs. keeping himself out of trouble
Mice, rabbits, dogs
he has to take care of Lennie and he is mentally handicapped so if he didnt have Lennie then he would be able to have fun and not try to get his friend out of trouble
After accidentally killing Curley's wife in "Of Mice and Men," Lennie flees to a nearby hiding spot in the brush by the Salinas River where George had instructed him to go if he ever got into trouble.
Lennie dies in Chapter 6 of "Of Mice and Men" by John Steinbeck. It happens after he accidentally kills Curley's wife and realizes the trouble he has caused. George is ultimately forced to make the difficult decision to prevent further harm by shooting Lennie.
Lennie Small .
in the 1930's. George and Lennie left the town called Weed and were in another town just outside of Soledad, California