I think what is even more telling than the likenesses are the dissimilarities between LENNIE and a mouse. LENNIE - big, bulky, ignorant, and bumbling - is the opposite of a mouse, that we imagine as coniving, premeditating, tiny, quick on its feet, et cetera.
I think that Steinbeck was playing with irony when he chose this particular title.
The title was mainly influenced from a poem by Robert Burns. The line reads "The best laid schemes of mice and men often go awry". Steinbeck alludes to this line to show how Lennie and George's dream will never be accomplished and this is representative of many of the ranch workers at the time who shared a common dream of owning land etc.
Although Lennie is physically opposite to a mouse, his personality is similar: meek-mannered and mild. Also, Lennie carries a dead mouse at the beginning of the novel to 'pet' because he likes soft things.
The title of the novel 'Of Mice and Men' comes from a poem called 'To a Mouse' by Robert Burns
No: "Mice" is the plural form of mouse. Possible pronouns for "mouse" are "it", "he", or "she".
The song Vanilla Twilight is about someone you love who you are no longer with. It has no relation to 'Of Mice and Men'. The themes are completely different.
The word mice is the plural form of mouse. (one mouse, two mice)
Lennie does not have a work card in his pocket.
The plural of mouse is mice
The plural of mouse is mice.
Mice. One mouse is a mouse. Mice is more than one. The lady had mice in her house. The cat caught a mouse.
No, Mice is a plural noun. Mouse is the singular noun.
mouse is singular, mice is plural
mice for 2-infinate mouse for 1 For example i added my MOUSE to my friends group of MICE.
The title is taken from Robert Burns' poem "To a Mouse", which read: "The best laid schemes o' mice an' men / Gang aft agley." (The best laid schemes of mice and men / Often go awry.)