Answer:
Sometimes it's actually big NO.
FAME IS NOT IMPORTANT TO INDICATE THAT SOMEONE IS SUCCESSFUL. SOME PEOPLE SEEKS NO FAME, FOR EXAMPLE IS TO WORK WITH PASSION AND WITH THE MISSION TO HELP BUILD OUR SOCIETY AND HELP PEOPLE TO GROW MORE RESPONSIBLE. YOU CAN BE SUCCESSFUL EVEN WITHOUT PRAISES OR FAME FROM OTHER PEOPLE, THAT'S THE REAL HERO, AN UNSANG ONE AND SOMEONE THAT MAKES OUR SOCIETY BETTER AND WAS CONTENTED OF WHAT PEOE HAVE IN THEIR HEARTS.
FAME IS JUST A SMALL STEP
BUT DOING THINGS FAR MORE GREATER EVEN WITHOUR PEOPLE SEEING IT, IS SOMETHING HEROIC.
BRAINLIEST PLEASE ❤❤
The direct object always answers "what?'
Do you make what?
The direct object is 'cages'
He uses Candy as a tool to continue his use of the theme of fraternity, which means a group of people sharing a common profession or interest.
Steinbeck uses Candy to state that society in the 1930's was an extension of life on the ranch in the novella. Each person is to embody a group of people in the larger society, for example, Candy embodies the elderly and disabled, yet not hopeless portion of the society, Slim is the successful big-shots who have made it in the world, Crooks the foreign asylum seekers who were/are discriminated against, etc.
We see that Candy is not hopeless when he talks about 'the dream' with Lennie and George, he has hopes to go to the dream farm with them, the dream in the novella being an embodiment of the American Dream.
This, in conclusion, shows that Candy is used by Steinbeck to show that the elderly and/or disabled portion of society weren't all lost causes, and that some still had hope in themselves or in the American Dream.