Monday, August 19, 2019
Curleys Wife Essay -- English Literature
Curley's Wife  =============    At first, Curley's wife is described to the reader through the comments of the men on  the ranch. Candy tells Lennie and George when he first meets them that she ' got the  eye' for the men on the ranch, even though she has only been married to Curley for  two weeks. Candy thinks that she is 'a tart'.    We first meet Curley's wife when she comes into the bunkhouse, when Lennie and  George are in there. She is apparently looking for Curley but she already knows that  new men have arrived. Steinbeck gives a detailed description of her as she stands in  the doorway of the bunkhouse and talks to Lennie and George. She is 'heavily made  up', with 'full rouged lips' and red fingernails. Her body language is provocative as  she positions herself in the doorway so that 'her body was thrown forward'. She  smiles 'archly' and 'twitched her body'. The general impression the reader gains is of  a young girl who is pretty and wants the attention of men.    George's reaction to Curley's wife, however, makes the reader realize that she is a  potential threat to the two men. George sees her as 'poison' and 'jailbait'. He is angry  with Lennie's admiration of her 'she's purty' and fiercely tells him that he must stay  away from her. 'Don't you even take a look at that bitch.' Later, when we find out  what happened at Weed, where Lennie frightens a woman by stroking her dress and  they are forced to flee the town from a lynch mob, we understand why George is so  alarmed that she will be the cause of more trouble for them.    Whit's opinion of Curley's wife is one of bewilderment, he sees  through the flirty appearance and just sees a girl trying too seek  attention, but he still doesn't understand why she acts like ...              ...only married Curley to get away from home. She  met him at the Riverside Dance Palais, probably attracted to him because he was the  son of a ranch owner. Now, however, the reality is that she doesn't even like him. 'He  ain't a nice fella', she confides in Lennie. When they are talking together she shows  some kindness to Lennie when she realizes that he understands little of what she is  saying. After she is dead we are shown by Steinbeck a different side of Curley's wife.  In death the 'meanness and the plannings and the discontent and the ache for  attention' have gone from her face. We see she is just a young and pretty girl.  Steinbeck's description of her dead body seems designed to make us see her as a victim of life.    The best laid plans o' mice and  -------------------------------    men gang aft agley.  (Robert Burns)    Best laid Plans often goes astray.                      
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