The book Of Mice and Men warns against dreaming, particularly about the American Dream, and teaches us the value of friendship and connection.
In the first paragraph of Mice and Men, Steinbeck sets the scene by describing the final leg of George and Lennie's journey to their new workplace. George and Lennie are traveling to Soledad, a city in northern California whose name translates from Spanish as "loneliness" or "solitary." According to descriptions, the Salinas River's lovely and serene section is home to content animals and is reminiscent of the Garden of Eden. Steinbeck piques the reader's interest in their background while also raising the question of how serious Lennie's error was.
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Just find two nonfiction texts, after you read them, write down a list of benefits for each text. then just sum it all up in a few sentences and you're done.
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Answer:
Rappaccini said these lines.
Explanation:
Nathaniel Hawthorne's short story "Rappaccini's daughter" tells the story of a scientist Giacomo Rappaccini who selfishly kept his daughter Beatrice confined with him in his experimentation with poisonous plants. Along the way, she also became poisonous for other people, herself being immune to the poison of the plants.
Beatrice had began to love a young man named Giovanni, but is fatal for him. She wants to be with him but hadn't realized that he had also became just like her. The excerpt is from when Rappaccini asked her why she claimed to be miserable when she had been endowed with something that no one else has. He could not understand why Beatrice wants to be like a "<em>weak woman, exposed to all evil, and capable of none</em>". According to him, he had given her the greatest gift of being able to withstand any poison but can be destructive over others, whereas she wants to be like other women who can love openly and be like them.