Separate Peace Symbols

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A Separate Peace Rough Draft

War is inescapable. During hard times, bad things often have a way of embedding themselves in the good. A Separate Peace is the story of disobedient schoolboys during the second World War, and the writing focuses on how they are directly and indirectly affected by it. In A Separate Peace, John Knowles portrays how the boys achieve a separate peace during the Winter Carnival, yet their actions and symbols are tinged with war-like imagery.

The actions of the boys during the Winter Carnival show how the war affects their day-to-day lives. Brinker and Finny are both good at giving orders, the latter especially, as if they are leaders or generals in the war. On page 134, when Brinker asks Phineas what’s next, Phineas
One example is Chet’s use of the trumpet. Trumpets are a popular instrument in war and are often used for different reasons, such as waking up soldiers or celebrating victorious battles. On page 132, the story says, “Chet Douglass stood next to him holding his trumpet.” He is a symbol of the war, for the reasons listed above. Another symbol of war during their Winter Carnival scene is the forged draft registration card that the boys set up as a prize as the story says on page 132, “on [the table] rested the prizes … a forged draft registration card.” The teens have the constant thought of enlistment hanging over their heads, and this is revealed by their forged draft registration card and other items. Finally, on page 137, the story says, “I took the telegram from Phineas, facing in advance whatever the destruction was.” Telegrams were used during the 1940s to communicate important information to the families of the soldiers, often which had to do with pain or death. Gene immediately expects the telegram to have harsh information because that is how others receive bad news. The boys’ war experience is depicted by the symbols in the Winter Carnival scene.

In A Separate Peace, John Knowles demonstrates how the boys’ “separate peace” has underlying war imagery through their symbols and behavior. It’s obvious that the boys have the war on their minds because it appears in small,

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