РефератыИностранный языкSeSeparate Peace Essay Research Paper A Separate

Separate Peace Essay Research Paper A Separate

Separate Peace Essay, Research Paper


A Separate Peace is a novel by John Knowles that is about prep school


experiences during World War II. This book was a good story about an adolescents


attempt to understand the world and himself. I enjoyed reading about Gene’s


journey towards maturity and the adult world. This book takes place in Devon


School, New Hampshire during a summer session when Gene Forrester was sixteen


years old. One day Gene and Finny, his friend and roommate, went to a large tree


by the river. Finny suggested that they try and jump from the tree into the


river below them. This jump was usually for older boys. But they both made the


jump successfully, and Finny formed the Summer Suicide Society, which is


dedicated to members being initiated by jumping from the tree to the river. Each


time, Gene and Finny must go first, but Gene always has a fear of jumping. Finny


always was considered the best athlete in school, and Gene tried to


counterbalance by being the best student. After a while of joining Finny’s


activities, Gene thinks that Finny is intentionally trying to make him fail out


of school. He starts to dislike Finny and his activities, and Gene starts


interrupting his schoolwork to jump from the tree more and more often. On one


occasion, he thoughtlessly jounces the limb and Finny falls and breaks his leg.


Finny’s leg is so shattered that he will not be able to play sports again. Gene


is scared that Finny will tell that he intentionally pushed him off the tree.


After his first visit to the infirmary, Gene realizes that Finny trusts Gene


completely and would never accuse Gene. After summer vacation was over, Gene


guilty conscience decides to confess to Finny that he had deliberately pushed


him out of the tree. Finny refuses to believe his confession, and demands that


Gene leave. Autumn session had started and Gene did not try to go out for any


sports. Students volunteered to do jobs left from the workers that were sent off


to war. Many students enlisted into the army, and Gene was going to do the same


until one day he returns to his room and Finny was there. Finny confronts Gene


and tells him that he is going to coach him for the 1944 Olympics. Gene explains


that sports are not important while the war is going on. Finny will not believe


in the war, and feels that he has suffered so much already. Gene is drawn into


this belief of peace with Finny, and is not in touch with the reality that is


going on. Gene’s good friend Leper was the first to enlist in the war, which


made the war seem more and more unreal since Leper had never been concerned


about anything. Leper left after the recruiter came to Devon and showed pictures


of the ski troops in action. Later, Gene gets a telegraph from Leper asking for


help, and asks Gene to come at once. Gene arrives at Leper’s house, Gene tries


to humor Leper with jokes, but notices that Leper is too nervous and disturbed.


Gene asks him how long he will be home, and Leper says that he has escaped the


war. Then Leper gets mad and accuses Gene of thinking of him as not normal.


Leper and Gene fight over new army words and Leper says that Gene will soon be


trapped. Leper reminds Gene of the time he knocked Finny out of the tree. Gene


becomes outraged and calls Lepur a "crazy bastard." Then Leper


switches moods and begins laughing at the fact that Finny is crippled for life.


Gene knocks Leper over in his chair and onto the floor, and his mom comes in and


tells Gene that Leper is ill. Gene tries to leave, but Leper makes him stay for


lunch. Gene feels ashamed to accept the invitation for lunch. Back to Finny’s


fall, some boys from the dormitory come to get Gene and Finny to take them to


the assembly hall. They begin asking questions about Finny’s broken leg, Finny


refuses to answer the questions and bursts out of the room and falls down the


stairs and breaks the same leg again. Gene tries to visit Finny in the infirmary


but Finny wants nothing to do with him. The following day, Finny wants to know


why he pushed him out of the tree. Gene says that it was a blind impulse. That


same day, while the doctor is resetting Finny’s leg, some marrow gets into his


bloodstream and Finny dies instantly. Gene does not cry about his death, and


feels that he died with Finny and that he shouldn’t cry over one’s own death.


Gene later comes to the conclusion that war never meant anything to him, that he


had fought his own war and had killed his enemy at school. The major conflict in


the story is between Gene and Finny. Gene is jealous of Finny because is the


best athlete at school and tries to compete with that by being the best student.


Eventually, Gene’s jealousy causes him to jounce the limb while Finny jumps.


Gene then becomes aware of his inner self and learns of his true feelings. He


realizes that Finny has no hatred or jealously towards him. Another conflict is


between Leper and Gene. When Leper decided to enlist in the army, it made Gene


think that the war was unreal because Leper was not really in touch with


reality. When Gene went to go visit him at his house, they got into a verbal


argument, and went off on each other. Leper keeps saying that he has escaped


from the war, and Gene doesn’t understand what he means by it. Gene is really


infuriated with Leper when he blames Gene at the meeting and causes Finny to


fall down the stairs, and die. The mock trial, or assembly, was the climax of


the story. It was called by some of the boys at Devon. At the meeting, they


tried to get down to what really happened on the tree the day that Finny fell


and broke his leg. Fingers started to point at Gene, and Finny could not answer


any questions. Finny angrily left the assembly and fell down the stairs, braking


the same leg again. While in the process of resetting his knee, some marrow got


into his bloodstream and he died. The theme of this novel is Man’s Inhumanity to


Man. There is a strong relation of this in this novel. The first point is about


Finny’s tragic fall and how Gene was the cause of it. Support from the story is


Finny’s desire to jump from the tree. Gene said that he was coming to join him


but Finny reminded him about studying. Gene’s thoughts on the matter were,


"He had never been jealous of me for a second. Now I knew that there never


was and never could have been any rivalry between us, I couldn’t stand


this." The second support is Gene’s actions leading to the accident. He


took a step toward the trunk, put his knees and jounced the limb. Thus, Finny


lost his balance and tumbled to the ground. The third support goes back to the


scene of the accident after Gene watches Finny fall. And he thinks to himself,


"It was the first clumsy physical action I had ever seen him make."


More less, this is a sign of pride within Gene as he watches the good athlete,


Finny fall out of the tree. The second point is on the scene where Brinker


brings Finny and Gene to the mock trial to let everyone know the real truth


about the cause of the accident. In other words, it was a way of blasting away


Gene and shoving his reputation as a respected individual into the ground.


Support from the story is when Brinker and three acquaintances

come into Gene


and Finny’s dorm and pull them out. After they entered the Assembly Room,


Brinker remarks, "You see how Finny limps." This phrase was the


beginning of his plan to set the truth loose, or primarily break the friendship


link between Finny and Gene. Brinker chose the Assembly Room as the setting for


this trial since there is nothing humorous about the place. It is a place which


would be terrible for Gene’s sake to talk about the cause of the accident. The


second support is Brinker’s remark in consociation to the accident. He says to


Gene, "There is a war on, here’s one soldier our side has already lost.


We’ve got to find out what happened." A powerful remark by Brinker which


ignites the trial. This indicates a strong reason for the trial, Brinker uses


this tactic to have the truth let out. The truth that will undoubtedly break the


strong bond between Finny and Gene. The truth in which will lead to another


tragic fall of Finny. The third support is during the trial when Brinker and


Gene are talking about the accident. Brinker asks Finny, "Have you ever


thought that you didn’t just fall out of that tree?" This inquiry from


Brinker sets Finny into a different focus, which will open up the accident, a


focus that will narrow it all down to Gene being questioned. These are the


examples of Brinker’s inhumanity to let the truth loose. His focus is not on


just getting the truth out, but breaking Finny and Gene’s friendship. The third


point is about when Leper calls Gene to visit him in his Vermont home and Gene


runs away. This falls under the Man’s Inhumanity to Man category because Gene


runs from Leper because he cannot face the fact that Leper has gone crazy. The


support for this is when Leper tells Gene, "You always were the lord of the


manor, weren’t you?" This statement is an example of pushing Gene. It gets


Gene upset. The next support is Leper’s quote to Gene which resulted in Gene’s


physical outburst on Leper. Leper says "like the time you knocked Finny out


of the tree." This provokes Gene because it is reminding him of his


inhumane action to Finny. Thus, resulting in Gene being inhumane to Leper and


knocking him out of his chair. The final support is when the scene finally ends.


Gene says to Leper, "Do you think I want to hear every detail, I don’t care


what happened to you Leper." This quote from Gene is after Leper explained


to him the details of his insanity. Gene cannot hear anymore of Leper’s talk


about his insanity and runs away. This is the final argument in regards to the


involvement of Man’s Inhumanity to Man as the theme in the story. Gene


Forrester’s difficult journey towards maturity and the adult world is a main


character focus of this novel. Gene’s journey begins the moment he pushes Finny


from the tree and the process continues until he visits the tree fifteen years


later. Throughout this time, Gene must become self-aware, face reality and the


future, confront his problems, as well as forgive and accept the person that he


is. With the jouncing of the limb, Gene realizes his problems and the true


person he is inside. Fifteen years later, when revisiting the tree, he finally


accepts and forgives himself. This journey is a long and painful one. At the end


of this long and winding road filled with ditches, difficulties and problems,


Gene emerges a mature adult. Gene jounces the limb and causes Finny’s fall and


at that moment becomes aware of his inner-self and learns of his true feelings.


This revelation comes to him back in his room before he and Finny leave for the


tree. It surrounds him with the shock of his true self until he finally reacts


by jouncing the limb. Up in the tree, before the two friends are about to make


their "double-jump", Gene sees Finny in this new light. He realizes


that Finny feels no jealousy or hatred towards him and that Finny is indeed


perfect in every way. Gene becomes aware that only he is the jealous one. He


learns of his animosity and that he really is a "savage underneath".


Over a long period of time Gene had been denying his feelings of hatred towards


Finny, saying that it was normal for him to feel this way. Now all of the


feelings come back to him and he sees how terrible he really is. After the


realization of the person he truly is, in his room and up in the tree, Gene must


now confront his problems, face reality, and deal with the future. He must learn


that communication is very important in a relationship and that he must express


himself instead of keeping his feelings inside, as he had always done with


Finny. He must learn to listen to himself rather than to others. These were just


a few of the many problems there were in his relationship with Finny. He must


face reality and acknowledge the fact that he isn’t as great as Finny, that he


is his own individual person and that Finny isn’t as perfect as he thought. Gene


must accept the guilt for Finny’s difficulties after his injury and must help


Finny as a punishment and act of repentance for his deed. Gene does this by


"giving a part of himself to Finny" as we see with the case of sports


throughout the rest of the novel – how Gene "becomes" Finny when it


comes to sports. Although the above are all of great importance, the greatest


hurdle Gene must overcome is learning to live with what he’s done. This painful


step is the one which will allow him to completely mature. The final stage of


Gene’s maturation is his self-acceptance and self-forgiveness. He has to accept


that he isn’t perfect and that he, like any other normal being (even Finny), has


faults. Accepting that his innocence has been lost helps Gene move on into


another part of his life and realize that he can never return to the days of his


innocent youth again. He can now become a man, enter the war and adult world and


leave his youth behind. Forgiving himself is the step which allows Gene to lead


a normal life and enter society. He must finally forgive himself completely for


his blind act and allow himself to "come in out of the rain". By


accepting as well as forgiving the person that he is, Gene enables himself to


move on and join the adult world. Gene’s maturation is a painful and difficult


process that reveals a darker side of Gene that he doesn’t necessarily wish to


see. However painful, Gene is made a better person during his maturation through


his suffering. Through his pain and awful revelations about himself, Gene


matures from an insecure child to a self-knowledgeable adult. The significant


quote that I chose for "A Separate Peace," is when Brinker says to


Gene: "There is a war on, here’s one soldier our side has already lost.


We’ve got to find out what happened." This remark relates to me because is


determining and shows leadership. He is determined to find out what happened and


he will do whatever it takes to find out even if he has to break up a


friendship. I would have done the same thing. If I had a friend, and he or she


was intentionally pushed from a tree because someone was jealous of him or her,


I would become angry and agitated until I got to the bottom of it.

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