Lennie is friendly in "Of Mice and Men." He enjoys petting soft things like mice, puppies, and rabbits, although sometimes his strength can accidentally cause harm. Overall, Lennie is kind-hearted and means well.
Lennie has a fixation with petting soft things, like mice, because it gives him a sense of comfort and security. However, his strength and inability to control his own power often lead to him accidentally harming the mice, which causes him distress.
Lennie had a dead mouse in his pocket as a pet. He enjoys petting soft things, like mice and rabbits, but his strength unintentionally causes harm to them. This scene helps to establish Lennie's innocence and his inability to control his own strength.
In "Of Mice and Men," two animals die: the puppy that Lennie accidentally kills by petting too hard, and the future dream of having rabbits that Lennie will not be able to tend to after George is forced to shoot him.
Playing with the puppie, but he then realizes that the puppy is dead. Cause of death? Lennie was petting him too roughly. It's the mice all over again.
Lennie is a large, very strong character and killed the puppy by petting it too hard.
Lennie takes a dead mouse out of his pocket, which causes George to yell at him because he knows that Lennie's habit of petting soft things often leads to trouble. George doesn't want Lennie to get in trouble again.
He likes soft things, such as those because of the soft fur. He likes to pet them and feel them.
The two animals that die in "Of Mice and Men" are a puppy that Lennie accidentally kills by petting it too hard and Curley's wife, who dies when Lennie accidentally breaks her neck while trying to silence her after she becomes scared of him.
It depends on your book, but its usually around page 37-40.
Because he kept killing them all.
eventually lennie, and georgre and lennie's dream