|












Discover!
Explore!
Learn...
Studyworld.com
|
| Chapter
4 |
On the
next day, in the gray light of dawn, the sleeping Phineas looks dead to Gene. They both
rise later on and make it back to Devon undiscovered and in time for Gene's trigonometry
test, which he flunks. Finny tells Gene: "You never waste your time. That's why I
have to do it for you" (43). Gene feels competitive and wants to be had of the class
so that his accomplishment would balance out Finny's athletic achievements. Suddenly cast
into doubt and distrust, Gene suspects Phineas of being a bitter rival: "He minded,
despised the possibility that I might be head of the school" (44). Gene's doubt and
insecurity destroy his confidence in their friendship: "Up like a detonation went the
idea of any best friend, up went affection and partnership and sticking by someone and
relying on someone absolutely in the jungle of a boys' school, up went the hope that there
was anyone in this school-in this world-whom I could trust" (44-45). He suspects
Finny of intentionally keeping Gene from his studies all along, with his blitzball and his
trips to the beach and his Suicide Society meetings: "That way he, the great athlete,
would be way ahead of me" (45).
Gene becomes a determined, excellent student thereafter, though remaining detached and
uninterested in what he learns. He studies for competition's sake and finds solace in the
idea that he is "ahead" of Finny because he is a better athlete than Finny is a
student. There are moments during those summer days, however, when Gene finds himself
"slipping back into affection for him again" (47). But for the most part, Gene
maintains distrust for Phineas: "I had detected that Finny's [heart] was a den of
lonely, selfish ambition. He was no better than I was, no matter who won all the
contests" (48).
Tensions come to a head for Gene one evening when Phineas asks Gene, who is studying, to
come to the tree because Leper has declared that he will jump. Gene is furious at Finny's
interruption but lacks the courage to accuse of the surprised Finny of hindering his
studies. Finny, realizing that Gene wants to study, shrugs and says: "Don't go. What
the hell, it's only a game" (50). When Gene asks him what he means, Finny says,
innocently: "I didn't know you needed to study. I didn't think you ever did. I
thought it just came to you" (50). Gene is shocked and humiliated, feeling isolated
by having distrusted his best friend: "He had never been jealous of me for a second.
Now I knew that there never was and never could have been any rivalry between us. I was
not of the same quality as he" (51).
Gene refuses Finny's insistence on him staying and studying and follows him to the tree, a
familiar chapter-ending place by this point in the novel. Finny suggests that they jump
together again. While the two are on the overhanging limb, Gene intentionally jounces the
branch, causing Finny to lose his balance. Finny "swung his head around to look at me
for an instant with extreme interest" (54) and then tumbles out of the tree to the
bank below. His fear of jumping forgotten, Gene jumps, alone, into the river. |
|
 
|




Teacher Ratings at Campusrat.com
SAT; ACT; GRE Test Prep
Studyworld.com -- large listing of sample reports and essays
|