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Lynching In John Steinbeck's Of Mice And Men

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Weaving in and out of the brush like a rabbit being run down, leaves crunch under Lennie’s thunderous boots. The sound of barking dogs echoes off the trees in the distance as men shout to one another far-off, and the continuous panting of breath sounds through the forest. Lennie is frantic as he sprints in between trees and bushes. Behind Lennie, George runs through the forest, searching desperately for signs of him along the bank of a small pond. Finally spotting him, the two sprint towards one another as the sound of men’s voices echo far-off, colliding in a bear hug. The sound of shouts echo far-off, and George considers the eventual fate of Lennie and what he should do. Curley and his men are minutes away from reaching them, and should he find them, Lennie will surely be killed. My position on lynching is strictly that it should never be acceptable, particularly when mental illness of the accused is in question. In addition, the act of killing someone without due process of law takes away one’s rights as a human. Finally, the convicted in a lynching could have been wrongly accused or committed the crime accidently. In any case, this situation …show more content…
For Lennie, the reasoning of why he killed Curley’s wife was never because he wanted to, but his mental illness in a sense, blinded him from realizing what he was really doing. In the book Lennie was clearly in denial for what he had done as it states in the book, “For a moment he seemed bewildered. And then he whispered in fright,’I done a bad thing. I done another bad thing.’ He pawed the hay until it covered her.” This is obviously not likely to be the case for virtually every other case in which lynching is a possibility. Nonetheless, sticking to the original position of the fact that lynching is extremely undesirable, it should never be

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