Not everyone in this life can be the very best and express themselves to their full potential one hundred percent of the time; that is because no one is perfect. Everyone who has common sense in this world knows that we all make mistakes. Making mistakes is just one factor of beginning to grow up. I do think that more people need to take this to consideration that mistakes, or even doing something on purpose, is just a normal part of maturing. So, if you were to get into some really deep thought about this topic, then you would realize that yes, every person would have to leave their innocence behind in order to mature. When a person has eventually left their innocence behind, they become a much stronger, bold, and real person. What leaving …show more content…
One of the main characters named Gene eventually loses his innocence and realizes it within himself. He used to suck up to everybody and be one of those kids that would be silent and was a follower. Throughout the rest of the story, Gene gets brave and expresses what he wants and what he has on his mind. He plays with the fire that sparked inside of him and let it grow stronger. Gene matured greatly and became a stronger person. I think everyone needs to take that opportunity to start that fire within you because once you do, you will make things a whole lot …show more content…
I think you will always have some kind of innocence in you because of the way you act. Maturity is the fact of growing up and realizing when to be serious and when you can mess around. I believe everyone will be innocent till they witness something tragic in their life. Innocence can mean any way you want. Innocence in this book would be Gene always following the rules, but at one point Finny makes Gene break his innocence by breaking the rules. I think Gene has matured a lot from the beginning of the book. He was always messing around and at the end he knew when it was time to be serious and when he could laugh and joke around. I think that whenever you learn to mature then you will have lost some or most of your innocence. I believe that to be able to mature you should know how to act in all times. You should be able to know at all times when you should be serious or whenever you can be messing around and having fun. For example if someone in your family passes away you should be serious at the funeral and not goofing around. Now, if you are at a birthday party you do not have to be serious and you can have fun. In the book whenever they were jumping off the tree they were having fun. Whenever Finny was getting yelled at for jumping off the tree, whenever he broke his foot, and whenever Gene got
Finny's death causes the greatest maturity growth in Gene's character. After Finny dies, he realized how his own hatred caused the death of his best friend. "He came to understand Finny's innocence and purity which causes Gene to see flaws within himself and forces him to grow up" (Alton 1). Being able to admit your own flaws is critical in maturing. When Gene finally sees his impact of immature behavior, he realizes how much he needs to mature. Even though Finny is physically gone, his spirit remains with Gene and essentially makes him the adult that he grows up to be. Finny's death is a crucial part of Gene's coming of age. When Finny dies, Gene's immature behaviors also die. Because Gene's hatred was gone, he entered war as a man.
Knowles reveals the other characters’ feelings of Gene to indirectly characterize him as both paranoid and compassionate. Gene is shown as paranoid when he and Leper are talking after the Winter Festival. Leper tells Gene that he is “‘a swell guy, except when the chips were down’” yet “‘always [was] a savage underneath’” (145). Leper knows of Gene’s paranoid tendencies and
To start off, all the boys show the theme coming of age in their own personal ways. Gene shows this theme because he has more inner battles and struggles that he has to overcome than any other character. For example, Gene shows this when he along with others discuss enlisting. Gene starts contemplating and thinking of everything he has to lose. He also
The author’s use of parallel character’s aids the reader to comprehend the deeper meaning and realize the character’s maturation throughout the text. Knowles uses The Bible to allow for the reader to better understand the relationship of the characters. Gene often talks of how he “lost a part of himself to [Finny]” (Knowles 85) similarly to how Eve was “made from the rib [God] had taken out of man” (Genesis 2:22). This presents the reader with the realization that Eve and Gene are akin. People are also able to understand this when Finny dies because Gene “[felt] that [it] was [his] own funeral” (Knowles 194) and suffered just as much. In Genesis Adam and Eve’s “eyes… were opened” (Genesis 3:7) when Eve ate the fruit enabling both of them feel the impact of Eve’s actions. This is also the case in A Separate Peace, both Gene and Finny mature because of Phineas’s fall. Finny “looked older than [Gene] had ever seen him” (Knowles 70) and the reader is able to feel how “peace had deserted” (Knowles 73) Gene. Also, all of the character’s fates are determined by greed of either Eve or Gene, causing their maturation to occur. Over the course of the book Knowles continuously allows one to see how Gene and Phineas are made for each other, allowing them to learn and grow together, just like Adam and
Learning is a strong aspect in the novel. The characters learn who they really are and choose their own path. Gene, in the beginning was a character of self doubt, jealousy and greed. He never took a step back to realize that he had traits that others wished they had. Nothing was ever good enough for him, not even his best friend. He had to learn who he should be just like his companion Finny did. Finny chose to be a man of forgiveness, loyalty and strength even before the clock ran out of time. He truly did succeed in shaping Gene to be a good person. And Finny learned about himself as he held Gene’s hand along the rocky road. Gene started to learn about himself when he said in the novel on page 59, “Now I knew that there never was and never could have been any rivalry between us. I was not of the same quality as he. I couldn’t stand this.” Gene was finally realizing that he was not going to be the best at every single thing he does, but that he has someone who can be the tour guide for him in his own life and who can show him who he really should be. This exact situation happens in our modern day lives. We see the things and characteristics that others have and we never take a step back to take in and learn that we are each different and we all have strengths and we all have weaknesses. Everyone shouldn’t be greedy for the ear to ear smile we “don’t have” or the blond hair that we can’t have. But what we can get, that we may not have is the ability to be accepting or forgiving. We can learn to acquire these traits as we learn from example and try these traits on.
The lost of innocence can totally change the way people view the world. A person who illustrates this can be found in J.D. Salinger’s novel, the Catcher in the Rye. The story happened during the 1950s, in a small town in Pennsylvania called Agerstown. A teenage boy named Holden, who witnesses the death of his older brother Allie when he was only 13 years old. Then consequently, he blames himself all his life for the death of Allie. As time went by he starts to search for a sense of innocence that was lost in the beginning of the novel. Throughout the course of the novel, the author conveys that Holden is continually stuck in between childhood and adulthood. The author uses Holden’s struggle to convey that in reality often times people who
To attain maturity, you must have a loss of innocence. For example, when a kid finds out that Santa Claus is not real, he is disappointed and cannot believe the fact that there is no Santa Claus, because
One of the most major conflicts of the book is Gene wishing he could be like his best friend Finny and being dangerously jealous of him. Genes jealousy got the best of him when he decided to step on a branch on purpose, which leads to Finny falling and breaking his leg. Sadly, Finny breaks his leg again and dies from bone marrow passing into the bloodstream during surgery and it was caused by the first break of his leg that Gene caused. Gene learns from this that he should not compare himself to others, because it is simply not fair. There is growth shown in Gene when he learns this and he knows that if he let it happen again it could have tragic consequences. It took losing a best friend for Gene to know that he
Little sorrow and sadness is expressed around school, even in Gene; no one talks about what happened but everyone remembers, especially Gene. Throughout the novel, John Knowles' strong characterization of Finny results in a more developed and wiser Gene; in the end, Finny actually makes Gene a better person.
“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
"All things truly wicked start from an innocence,” states Ernest Hemingway on his view of innocence. Innocence, what every youth possesses, is more accurately described as a state of unknowing but not ignorance- which connotation suggests a blissfully positive view of the world. Most youth are protected from the harsh realities of the adult world. Therefore they are able to maintain their state of innocence. While innocence normally wanes over time, sometimes innocence can be abruptly taken away. Some of the characters in Truman Capotes In Cold Blood lost their innocence due to the traumatic events they experienced in childhood and adulthood while some had none to begin with.
Innocence is something that can only be lost once. Within both The Poisonwood Bible by Barbara Kingsolver and Brave New World by Aldous Huxley there are various characters that lose their innocence in very dramatic ways. A character can lose their innocence due to the death of someone else. They can also lose their innocence by just being looked at from a different perspective by others, this can be seen through the characters Bernard and Rachel. ADD ANOTHER TOPIC Someone who has lost their innocence changes their personality and perspective on life, which results in them acting in situations differently than they would before.
Holding onto Innocence is like trying to hold on to someone that is on the verge of passing, you can try your best and sometimes they do live but a lot of the time you can’t and losing the person changes you. Because you are hit with things that break your innocence and just growing up slowly makes you lose your innocence it makes it very hard to hold on to. For example “ Her hardest hue to hold” is trying to show that “gold “or innocence is the hardest characteristic to keep. In the outsiders Ponyboy tries his best to keep his innocence even if he doesn't show. When Johnny is on his deathbed he weakly says to ponyboy “Stay gold, Ponyboy. Stay gold…” and passed away. This left Ponyboy and would leave many others determined to keep his innocence and try not to get in trouble. Also when Johnny picked up a broken bottle to scare Soc’s away he picked it up and threw it away showing he still was still a kind hearted kid under all of the inadequate things he did. You are given innocence as a child, only some can hold on to
Visiting his school, Devon, fifteen years later, Gene realizes that during the time he was studying there fear surrounded them, and he had not noticed. However, with his return Gene realizes that the fear “had surrounded and filled those days” and now when revisiting he was “unfamiliar with the absence of fear”, with leaving Devon he escapes feeling of fear (Knowles 10). He did not fear those days that he spent there and looks at them as lessons that help him grow. No longer feeling the hatred he had once felt, Gene gains peace from within him, and as he loses his hatred he is able to accept the real, adult, world. With the hatred gone, Gene also loses the fury he had at people and at life. Getting rid of those feelings, that were once so normal to Gene, he begins to possess peace within himself, allowing him to come of
In the middle of the novel, Gene starts to understand events as time passes. One particular event is when Gene visits Leper. Gene learns that, Leper has turned crazy. “I didn’t care what I said to him now; it was I I was worried about. For if Leper was a psycho it was the army that had done it to him, and I and all of us were on the brink of the army.”(144) Gene realizes that it wasn’t he who turned Leper crazy, but it was the army, and him and Brinker were about to enlist. Gene understands and realizes the horrors that are really out there in the universe. It transforms Gene by letting Gene understand the horrors and the reality of things that are happening.