Sunday, August 18, 2019
A Separate Peace: Three Symbols :: essays research papers
 A Separate Peace: Three Symbols           The three dichotomous symbols in A Separate Peace by John Knowles  reinforce the innocence and evil of the main characters, Finny and Gene. Beside  the Devon School flow two rivers on opposite sides of the school, the Naguamsett  and the Devon. The Devon provides entertainment and happiness for Gene and  Finny as they jump from the tree into the river and hold initiations into the  Super Suicide Society of the Summer Session. Finny, Gene, and their friends use  the Devon's warm water to play in during the carefree summer session. The Devon  brings out Finny's carefree character and personality when he jumps from the  limbs of the tree. Not one Upper Middler in Devon has ever jumped from the  tree; Finny becomes the first. After surfacing, Finny says that jumping from  the tree causes the most fun he has had in weeks. However, the Naguamsett and  the Devon completely contrast. When Gene and Finny emerge from the Devon, they  feel clean and refreshed. However, Gene describes the Naguamsett as "ugly,  saline, fringed with marsh, mud and seaweed" (68). When Gene starts a fight  with Quackenbush and falls into the Naguamsett because Quackenbush calls Gene "a  maimed son-of-a-bitch," Gene surfaces from the Naguamsett feeling grimy, dirty  and in desperate need of a bath (71). Much like the clean, refreshing water of  the Devon and the ugly saline water of the Naguamsett, Gene's carefree attitude  of the summer session vastly differs from the angry, confused attitude of the  winter session.       Likewise, the two sessions, the summer and winter, give a different  sense of feeling toward school and life at Devon School. The summer session  allows Finny to use his creativity. Finny invents blitzball and founds the  Super Suicide Society of the Summer Session. The students let their carefree  attitudes flow during the summer. Finny and Gene willingly break the rules to  have fun during the summer by skipping class and going to the beach. Finny also  wears the school tie as a belt to the traditional term tea. Gene feels that  Finny cannot leave the room without being disciplined, but Finny manages to talk  his way out of the mess. However, the winter session causes a sense of  strictness. The sermons now exhort the thought of "what we owe Devon," but in  the summer the students think of "what Devon owes us" (65). The masters and  class leaders try to enforce continuity, but Gene realizes that resurrecting the  summer session becomes impossible. Finny is not in school, no longer shall the  students have their carefree attitudes, and the class officials and masters now    					    
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