Discover
A Separate Peace in English

11 Episodes
Reverse
Chapter 13
The quadrangle surrounding the Far Common was never considered
absolutely essential to the
Devon School. The essence was elsewhere, in the older, uglier, more
comfortable halls enclosing
the Center Common.
Chapter 12
Everyone behaved with complete presence of mind. Brinker shouted that
Phineas must not be
moved; someone else, realizing that only a night nurse would be at the
Infirmary, did not waste
time going there but rushed to bring Dr. Stanpole from his house.
Chapter 10
That night I made for the first time the land of journey which later became
the monotonous
routine of my life: traveling through an unknown countryside from one
unknown settlement to
another.
Chapter 9
This was my first but not my last lapse into Finny’s vision of peace. For
hours, and sometimes
for days, I fell without realizing it into the private explanation of the world.
Chapter 8
“I can see I never should have left you alone,” Phineas went on before I
could recover from the
impact of finding him there, “Where did you get those clothes!”
Chapter 7
Brinker Hadley came across to see me late that afternoon. I had taken a
shower to wash off the
sticky salt of the Naguamsett River—going into the Devon was like taking a
refreshing shower
itself, you never had to clean up after it, but the Naguamsett was
something else entirely.
Chapter 6
Peace had deserted Devon. Although not in the look of the campus and
village; they retained
much of their dreaming summer calm. Fall had barely touched the full
splendor of the trees, and
during the height of the day the sun briefly regained its summertime
power.
Chapter 5
None of us was allowed near the infirmary during the next days, but I
heard all the rumors that
came out of it. Eventually a fact emerged; it was one of his legs, which had
been “shattered.”
Chapter 4
The next morning I saw dawn for the first time. It began not as the
gorgeous fanfare over the
ocean I had expected, but as a strange gray thing, like sunshine seen
through burlap.
Chapter 2
Our absence from dinner had been noticed. The following morning—the
clean-washed shine of
summer mornings in the north country—Mr. Prud’homme stopped at our
door.
I went back to the Devon School not long ago, and found it looking oddly newer than when I was
a student there fifteen years before