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Gene Finny In John Knowles A Separate Peace

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The ignorance and innocence of the summer session are quickly fragmented when the seriousness of Gene’s actions are unveiled with Finny’s death.
Both during and after Finny’s sudden fall from the tree, Gene tried to conceal what actually happened by not truly believing it himself. And when he attempted to confess to Finny what had caused the tree limb to shake, Finny quickly shunned any idea that Gene had anything to do with his grim fate. But after the doctor told Gene what had happened to his best friend, he realized what he had done: “I had all and then most of you / some and now none of you” (Huron). Lord Huron uses this line in his song, representing how Gene slowly but surely lost Finny; first, he began to be extremely jealous of his perfection, and then became an indirect cause of Finny’s demise. His death snaps him back to reality, and unveils the gravity of his actions. He even compares this event to his time in the military: “Because my war ended before I ever put on a uniform; I was on active duty all my time at school; I killed my …show more content…

He explains that his prep school had a completely different atmosphere after Finny’s death: “I never talked about Phineas and neither did anyone else; he was, however, present in every moment of every day since Dr. Stanpole had told me” (Knowles 202). He remained a major part of the school, the kind of person no one forgot about, even when he was not around. Even as a grown man, this event torments Gene: “I don’t know what I’m supposed to do / haunted by the ghost of you” (Huron). This quote from The Night We Met gives insight to exactly how Gene feels for harming his best friend. Word like “haunted” and “ghost” makes the audience aware of how Finny controls every aspect of Gene’s life after his tumultuous fall. While it is a tragedy that Finny passed away so young, it was something that shaped to Gene to be the person he is when narrating the

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