A Separate Peace
Dealing with enemies has been a problem since the beginning of time. “I never killed anybody,” Gene had commented later in his life, “And I never developed an intense level of hatred for the enemy. Because my war ended before I ever put on a uniform, I was on active duty all my time at Devon; I killed my enemy there.” In A Separate Peace, by John Knowles, the value of dealing with enemies is shown by Gene, who was dealing with few human enemies, but his emotions created far greater rivals than any human could ever posses.
One of the enemies that Gene created for himself was jealousy. Gene was jealous of everything about Finny. The openness which Finny possessed was one of these things which Gene envied. One incident of
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The real war, however, started when he got the idea that because Finny had low grades, he wanted to lower Gene’s grades as well, so he could remain “better than” Gene. Gene believed that Finny was trying to wreck his studies with games and going to the beach, and their Secret Suicide Society. Another time Gene’s anger shows is when Finny wanted Gene to come jump off the tree into the river with him, as they had been doing, and he claimed that Leper would be jumping too. Gene burst out angrily at the idea because he was studying, and he thought Finny was trying to wreck his grades, so he said no. Finny responded with no offense taken. Gene not being able to say “no” to Finny changed his mind and went to the tree anyway. Gene was now enraged on the inside because he realized that Finny was not trying to wreck his studies, and really was “perfect.” Still feeling angry by Finny’s “perfection,” Gene jounced the limb when they were about to jump, causing Finny to fall and break his leg. This shows that Gene’s anger, mixed with this jealousy, drove him to cause physical pain to someone who was dear to him.
Another enemy of Gene’s is Finny’s modesty. Early in the story, Finny demonstrated his modesty by when asked for his height he replied “Five feet eight and a half inches.” Gene replied that he himself was “five feet nine inches.” Finny pointed out that they were the same height and that Gene shouldn’t be ashamed to
Gene’s envy and imitation of Finny affect him in many ways. Gene begins to lose his identity and start conforming to Finny. According to Knowles, “If I was head of the class and won that prize then we would be even…” (27). This quote explains how Gene follows finny by trying to be head of the class with him. Gene gets jealous of Finny being head of the class, so he tells him if he was head they would be even. When Finny introduce jumping off the tree to Gene at first he didn’t want to do it, but he wanted to be like Finny so he did it. In Knowles words, “what was I doing up here anyway? Why did I let Finny talk me into stupid things like this? Was he getting some kind of hold over me? (5).
Furthermore, this immensely supports my clause in how Gene was jealous of Finny and was fighting an inner struggle. Gene made this comment because he was trying to hide his jealousy under a mask due to his non athleticism unlike Finny. Gene foresees that Finny is very popular and has many friends from the Devon school around him because he's so endearing to be around. In other words, This is also a silent blow to Finny because with the comparison of being surrounded by a hockey team, it shows that Gene was getting at that Finny is surrounded by chaos and loudness like Gene endured when around Finny just like a real hockey team. Jealousy goes hand in hand with creating our darkest
In his highschool years at The Devon School, Gene became close with a complicated group of teenage boys, like himself. His closest friend and roommate is a boy named Finny who is obviously the most outgoing and rebellious in the group. He is the initiator of most of their activities. Throughout the story it is obvious that Gene is jealous of his friend and therefore gets pressured into the things Finny puts on him. Because he is constantly following the crowd, Gene begins to lose his individuality and finds himself completely overcome with jealousy. Subconsciously, Gene even puts his best friends life at risk by shaking the branch of a tree while Finny was ontop of it at the time. As a result of this Finny falls off which disables him and ultimately leads to his
According to the novel, Finny and Gene are best friends. They would both go to places together and share a room at school. As Gene gain his knowledge, he becomes more conscious about his greed and desires for being successful at beating Finny for his athleticism and capability. He also surmised that Finny was keeping him from making good grades by stopping him from accomplishing his academic courses. Gene had came to a realization that he hated Finny and wanted to be better than him. It was all a misunderstanding because Finny never
At the beginning of the story, Gene is unconcerned about his actions, but after he has suffered and understands how selfish he was. He was blinded by his jealousy of Finny and eventually his insecurities overwhelmed him. “This time he wasn’t going to get away with it. I could feel myself become unexpectedly excited at that” (30). In this
Gene contemplates his and Finny’s friendship many times in the book, but despite what Gene may have thought, Finny was a good friend to him. He always took Gene’s feelings into account, and through all that happened he had faith in Gene. But Gene never knew this,
In A Separate Peace, John Knowles uses Gene’s experiences at Devon and his encounters with other people to demonstrate three levels of war, which is internal, impersonal, and international, which causes Genes character to have a lasting effect on his life, which are guilt, Inhumanity against Man, and coming of age. Firstly, Genes character is being effected by his guilt which causes an internal war with himself. Finny and Gene are at a bar at the end of the day, and all of a sudden Finny tells Gene that he was his best pal, but Gene did not say that finny was his best pal also, because something in him stopped himself from saying it. “... your best pal”... I should've told him then that he was my best friend also and rounded off what he had
To illustrate, at the start of the novel, Gene shows himself to be malicious and carefree: “We met every night, because Finny’s life was ruled by inspiration and anarchy, and so he prized a set of rules. As we drifted on through the summer, with this one inflexible appointment every day- classes could be cut, meals missed, chapel skipped.” (Knowles, 34). Gene was so untroubled in life simply because his friends were with him daily. However, the war took all of his friends away, which led to his innocence being taken away.
How can jealousy harm a person and emulating someone can change life? John Knowles is the author of A Separate Peace, which takes place in New England at a boarding school. Gene Foster is in his early thirties, visiting the Devon school for the first time in years. A Separate Peace teaches lessons, also Gene goes through situations with Finny that will cause Gene not to find peace. Gene’s envy and imitation has affect him a lot in the novel.
When Gene is quick to realize that him and Finny will never be of the same power, Knowles shows us that a loss of identity may be present in a relationship if there is an unequal amount of power. Gene realizes that Finny is someone who can do anything and he states that “He had never been jealous of me for a second. Now I knew that there never was and never could be any rivalry between us. I was not the same quality as he” (59). Gene’s low self-esteem starts to build up as he explains that no matter how hard he tries, he will never be as good and powerful as Phineas. Finny has everything in his power and is capable of so many things also remaining his own person. However, Gene feels the complete opposite as he understands that to become someone as mighty as Finny, he has to change who he is to even get Finny to notice him as a threat. As a result of this unequal
Finny pushes Gene until he get’s what he wants. As soon as Gene begins to show discomfort, Finny quickly jumps in with teasing and almost forces Gene to jump. “ Come on’, drawled Finny from below ‘Stop standing there showing off.’ I recognized with automatic tenseness that the view was very impressive from here. ‘When they torpedo the troopship’ he shouted, ‘you can’t stand around admiring the view. Jump!’ What was I doing up here anyway? Why did I let Finny talk me into stupid things like this? Was he getting some kind of hold over me?” (Knowles 10-11). Finny almost does have a sort of hold on Gene. Maybe it’s not a physical hold but emotionally, Finny is seemingly in control of Gene enough to be able to force him to do things that Gene himself things are stupid. Why would anyone go along with anything they think is stupid? Why would anyone put their own life in danger because someone else asked them to? It’s simple, Finny is a very manipulative boy who seemingly achieves what ever he sets his mind
Gene’s envy and intimidation of Finny caused great internal turmoil with himself throughout the story. He went through and identity crisis because he was unsure of who he was and who he wanted to be. In the story, Gene said, “I went along, as I always did, with any new invention of Finny’s” (Knowles 117). He always went along with everything Finny proposed or did; this gave him little to no time to discover who he really was. This lack of personal discovery lead him to doubt who he was. This internal conflict within Gene also affected his personal actions. Before Finny’s fall, Gene said, “I took a step toward him, and then my knees bent and I jounced the limb” (Knowles
Which is almost worded perfectly here “The tree was tremendous, an irate, steely black steeple beside the river. I was damned if I’d climb it.” (Knowles 14). This shows to us that obviously he remembers what he has done to his friend along with even foreshadowing the event when read from the beginning. This even helps to say that Gene wishes not to even reenact the horrible event that happened so long ago. The second reason is his general thoughts and impulses that make him lose even more of a sense of peace when reviewing previous things that he has done. As stated “we’re all liable to corruption form within by our own envy, anger, and fear. In the end, inner peace is achieved only after fighting one’s own, private war of growing up.” (Alton paragraph 6). From what is said, this helps to express how gene fights his impulses that made him go against finny. Which lead to his lack of peace for doing such a horrendous thing. In the end, Gene didn’t find any “Separate
“But I no longer needed this vivid false identity . . . I felt, a sense of my own real authority and worth, I had many new experiences and I was growing up “(156). Gene’s self-identity battle ends and he finds his real self. Gene’s developing maturity is also shown when he tells the truth about Leper. His growing resentment against having to mislead people helps Gene become a better person. When Brinker asks about Leper, Gene wants to lie and tell him he is fine but his resentment is stronger than him. Instead Gene comes out and tells the truth that Leper has gone crazy. By pushing Finny out of the tree, crippling him for life and watching him die; Gene kills a part of his own character, his essential purity. Throughout the whole novel Gene strives to be Finny, but by the end he forms a character of his own. Gene looks into his own heart and realizes the evil. “. . . it seemed clear that wars were not made by generations and their special stupidities, but that wars were made instead by something ignorant in the human heart” (201). He grasps that the creation of personal problems creates wars. Gene comes to acknowledge Finny’s uniqueness and his idealism and greatly admires his view of the world. He allows Finny’s influence to change him and eliminates the self-ignorance. At Finny’s funeral Gene feels that he buries a part of himself, his innocence. “I could not escape a feeling
In the beginning of the novel, Gene, is a clueless individual. He sees the worst in people and lets his evil side take over not only his mind but also his body. During the tree scene, Gene convinces himself that Finny isn’t his friend, tricking himself into thinking that Finny is a conniving foil that wants to sabotage his academic merit. Gene is furthermore deluded that every time Finny invites Gene somewhere it’s to keep him from studying and