Tuesday, May 28, 2019
A Separate Peace - Phineas And Carpe Diem :: essays research papers
"He was everywhere, he enjoyed himself hugely, he laughed out loud at passing sea gulls"(39). This line is describing Phineas, or Finny, and how he lives life to its fullest and seizes the day. Finny is an example of living the "carpe diem" (seize the day) philosophy from the movie "Dead Poets Society." There are a few examples in the first part of this novel of how Finny takes advantage of life. The first example is how he enjoys himself so much at the beach. Gene describes how Finny has such a great time at the beach as seen in the opening quote. He says he runs all over the place and jumps into waves, laughing at the seagulls, when most(prenominal) others would be lying on the beach being lazy. Another example of Finny living a full life is that he makes up his own bouncing just because he doesnt want to waste his time playing badminton. The strange thing is that this endorse turns out to be a popular game in the novel which is still played 15 years lat er as the author says. Finny invents this game just on a spur of the moment, do up the rules as he goes along, you can see that he surely doesnt want to waste any of his ability. Which points you to the last example. The last example is concerning his flimsy athletic ability. Finny and Gene are in the pool one day, and they read the plaque that holds the swimming record times. Finny looks at one and decides that he can sidestep that time record. He tries, and he beats the record. Gene wants him to do it on front of an official judge. Finny Refuses and says "No, I just wanted to see if I could do it. Now I know"(35). This tells you that he lives life to its fullest, since he is just doing this to see if he can. Most people wouldnt even speculate about trying to see if they could break the record, they would be too lazy to go find a stop watch anyway.
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