A Separate Peace by John Knowles
Chapter 1
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. It seemed more sedate than I remembered it, more
perpendicular and strait-laced, with narrower windows and shinier woodwork, as though a coat
of varnish had been put over everything for better preservation. But, of course, fifteen years
before there had been a war going on. Perhaps the school wasn't as well kept up in those days;
perhaps varnish, along with everything else, had gone to war.
I didn't entirely like this glossy new surface, because it made the school look like a museum, and
that's exactly what it was to me, and what I did not want it to be. In the deep, tacit way in which
feeling becomes stronger than thought, I had always felt that the Devon School came into
existence the day I entered it, was vibrantly real while I was a student there, and then blinked out
like a candle the day I left.
Now here it was after all, preserved by some considerate hand with varnish and wax. Preserved
along with it, like stale air in an unopened room, was the well known fear which had surrounded
and filled those days, so much of it that I hadn't even known it was there. Because, unfamiliar
with the absence of fear and what that was like, I had not been able to identify its presence.
Looking back now across fifteen years, I could see with great clarity the fear I had lived in,
which must mean that in the interval I had succeeded in a very important undertaking: I must
have made my escape from it.
I felt fear's echo, and along with that I felt the unhinged, uncontrollable joy which had been its
accompaniment and opposite face, joy which had broken out sometimes in those days like
Northern Lights across black sky.
There were a couple of places now which I wanted to see. Both were fearful sites, and that was
why I wanted to see them. So after lunch at the Devon Inn I walked back toward the school. It
was a raw, nondescript time of year, toward the end of November, the kind of wet, self-pitying
November day when every speck of dirt stands out clearly. Devon luckily had very little of such
weather-the icy clamp of winter, or the radiant New Hampshire summers, were more
characteristic of it-but this day it blew wet, moody gusts all around me.
I walked along Gilman Street, the best street in town. The houses were as handsome and as
unusual as I remembered. Clever modernizations of old Colonial manses, extensions in Victorian
wood, capacious Greek Revival temples lined the street, as impressive and just as forbidding as
ever. I had rarely seen anyone go into one of them, or anyone playing on a lawn, or even an open
window. Today with their failing ivy and stripped, moaning trees the houses looked both more
elegant and more lifeless than ever. Like all old, good schools, Devon did not stand isolated behind walls and gates but emerged
naturally from the town which had produced it. So there was no sudden moment of encounter as
I approached it; the houses along Gilman Street began to look more defensive, which meant that
I was near the school, and then more exhausted, which meant that I was in it.
It was early afternoon and the grounds and buildings were deserted, since everyone was at sports.
There was nothing to distract me as I made my way across a wide yard, called the Far Commons,
and up to a building as red brick and balanced as the other major buildings, but with a large
cupola and a bell and a clock and Latin over the doorway-the First Academy Building.
In through swinging doors I reached a marble foyer, and stopped at the foot of a long white
marble flight of stairs. Although they were old stairs, the worn moons in the middle of each step
were not very deep. The marble must be unusually hard. That seemed very likely, only too likely,