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The Inner War

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The enemy is a focal point for war; the objective is to attack and conquer. If success is reached, all is well, if not, jealousy conquers all. War is more than a physical battle among people; it is also a psychological fight against one’s inner conscience. The relationship between the two friends also follows the same ideology of war, but on a smaller, more personal scale. The coming-of-age novel, A Separate Peace by John Knowles, takes place in a New Hampshire academy school during World War II; with the plot encircling the adventures of two friends, Gene and Phineas. As their friendship entangles, new personalities are revealed when Gene attempts to fight, both his enemy and urges. The enemy has a stealthy way of sneaking into the novel, hiding in between the lines, becoming apparent at the end; the reader must be the private eye to conclude who the enemy is. Gene’s adversary grows to be himself; in which, he has multiple factors that add up to equal his own tormentor. He infuses his desire to fit in at Devon Academy along with the ambition to be like Phineas; and to top off the enemy, his own guilty conscience. When trying to become a part of the group, Gene set himself apart from the world and imagined as if he was never a real figure. While on his walk, he explains, “I felt that I was not, never had been and never would be a living part of this overpoweringly solid and deeply meaningful world around me” (Knowles 177). The quote shows not only Gene’s inability to

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