Steinbeck named his novel "Of Mice and Men" after a line from the poem "To a Mouse" by Robert Burns as it reflects the themes of vulnerability, fragility, and the struggle for survival that are central to both the poem and the novel. This connection helps convey the idea that the characters in the novel, like the mouse in the poem, are at the mercy of larger forces beyond their control.
The poem "To a Mouse" by Robert Burns highlights the theme of the unpredictability of life and the struggles of the lower class, which inspired Steinbeck to write "Of Mice and Men." The poem's message resonated with Steinbeck's own views on social issues and informed the themes of his novel. Additionally, both works explore the fragility of dreams and the harsh realities of the world.
The title of the novel 'Of Mice and Men' comes from a poem called 'To a Mouse' by Robert Burns
"Of Mice and Men" is actually a novella by John Steinbeck, not a poem. It tells the story of two migrant workers, George and Lennie, during the Great Depression in California. The novella explores themes of friendship, loneliness, and the pursuit of the American Dream.
The phrase is the title of a book by John Steinbeck, written in 1937.Although written in the then contemporary context of the Californian Great Depression, the dramatic turns in the plot echo a certain truism of human expereience, as aptly expressed by poet Robert Burns:"The best laid plansOf mice and menOften go awry"(from his Poem 'To A Mouse, On Turning Her Up In Her Nest With A Plough' 1725)For full text of poem, see Related links below this box.
It's from the poem To a Mouse by Robert Burns:But, Mousie, thou art no thy laneIn proving foresight may be vain:The best laid schemes o' mice an' menGang aft a-gley,An' lea'e us nought but grief an' pain,For promised joy.
The name of a fantasy is an imaginative poem , play or novel.
Check out this site. The poem has an amazing backstory! http://www.wenaus.com/poetry/blkmar-full.html
it was originally going to be called "Something That Happened" until Steinbeck read the poem "To A Mouse" by Robert Burns which has the same theme about dreams as the novel itself.
Robert Burns is a Scottish poet who inspired John Steinbeck to call his novel, "Of Mice and Men". He wrote a poem about a mouse that built it's home on a field, and a farm machine rides over it and destroys the nest.
The title "Of Mice and Men" is actually a line from the poem, "To a Mouse" written by Robert Burns in 1785. The poem is about how a mouse's den was destroyed, leaving the mouse vulnerable. In the last two stanzas, the poem states that the mouse is not alone in its troubles and that humans go through the same thing. The theme of the poem is that most things don't go as planned for most people, including Lennie and George. While most people think that the title was chosen because of the symbolism of mice in the book, it was actually chosen because the themes of the poem and Steinbeck's work are relatively the same. So in full, to understand the meaning of the title you have to understand where it came from. look at the stanza in the poem that includes "of mice and men" and you will understand the meaning.
sorry but pathetic question john Steinbeck was around ages ago he copied a poem by this man called brynes the poem was about a mouse with a dream house but it never came true Steinbeck did this but with George and Lennie and the're dreams never coming true
dies