April 14, 1944–August 1, 1944
SUMMARY
Tensions
in the annex run high after the break-in, and no one can shake the
feeling of impending doom. On top of that, Peter forgets to unbolt the
front door, so Mr. Kugler has to smash the window to get in. The air
raids on the city are incredibly heavy. The Registry of Births, Deaths,
and Marriages in The Hague is bombed, requiring new ration cards to be
issued.
On April 15, 1944,
Anne gets her first kiss. Although Peter only kisses her “half on [her]
left cheek, half on [her] ear,” Anne suddenly feels she is very
advanced for her age. She writes that the longer the war drags on, the
more difficulty she has imagining ever being liberated. Anne talks to
Peter about female anatomy, which she has wanted him to do for a while.
She then muses about trying to have a fairy-tale published in a
magazine.Anne writes about her schoolwork and also includes the family’s
war-ration recipe for potato kugel in her diary. She asks Peter if he
thinks she should tell her father about their relationship, and he
believes they should. Mr. Frank says that he thinks it is not a good
idea to carry on a romance in the annex, and he asks Anne if Peter is in
love with her. Mr. Frank tells her not to take it too seriously and
that it is her responsibility to show restraint.
Anne
wonders about the point of the war and laments that money is being
spent on fighting rather than on medicine, the poor, and the arts. She
reflects on human nature and concludes that until all of humanity
undergoes a profound change, people’s tendencies toward violence will
lead to endless wars and destruction. Anne writes that she is “young and
strong and living through a big adventure.” Her father complains that
she is going upstairs to see Peter too much. Anne wants to explain why
she visits Peter a lot, so she writes her father a letter, which makes
him very upset. He tells her it is the most hurtful letter he has ever
received. Anne feels deeply ashamed and decides to try to improve
herself.
Anne
tells her diary the story of her family, including her parents’
biographies. She writes that her wish is to become a famous journalist
and writer. Mr. Frank has lost a bet with Mrs. van Daan about when the
war will end, so he has to give her five jars of yogurt in payment. Anne
hears that anti-Semitism is becoming more common among the Dutch, and
she is deeply disheartened. She grows depressed again and wonders if it
would not have been better to suffer a quick death rather than go into
hiding. She counteracts this thought by writing that they all love life
too much.
On June 6, 1944,
D-Day, the BBC announces that the Allied invasion of France has begun.
The residents of the annex are very excited. Anne turns fifteen and
writes that the liberation is going “splendidly.” Her mood improves, and
she contemplates her love for nature and the question of why women are
thought of as inferior to men. Near the end of July, Anne writes about
an assassination attempt on Hitler and hopes it is proof that the
Germans want to stop the war themselves. On August 1,1944,
Anne describes her new insights into her own character and muses that
perhaps she could become the kind of person she wants to be “if only
there were no other people in the world.” Anne’s diary ends abruptly.
ANALYSIS
In
this section we see a marked shift in Anne’s writing, as she appears to
be writing primarily for other readers rather than just for herself.
She begins to think of herself as a writer and of her diary as a book.
She also sees herself as more of an adult, though at times she is still
writing from a child’s perspective. Anne’s final entries are a mixture
of personal reflection, philosophical inquiry, humor, and complaints
about her dissatisfaction with her family life and the way she is
treated. In many ways, the end of the diary reads as a more
self-conscious mixture of the ideas she presented earlier: a portrayal
of an imaginative, ambitious teenager blended with evidence of the
extraordinary and devastating circumstances of her life.
Though
she maintains an optimistic innocence throughout, Anne clearly has
matured over the time in which she keeps her diary. She becomes
interested in love and sex, as can be seen in her feelings for Peter,
and must reconcile those feelings with her desire to maintain a happy
relationship with her father. But in addition to the normal
psychological and physical changes associated with puberty and aging,
Anne is deeply affected by the confinement, fear, guilt, anger, and
sadness the war brings upon her. Faced with the life that has been
forced upon her, Anne must enlarge her concept of the world and examine
herself not only within the confines of her small family but in relation
to a world that is demonstrating an implacable hatred of her. In her
final entry, she begins to explore larger social issues, setting goals
to become a successful woman and overcome obstacles she might encounter.
Although
Anne clearly did not plan to end her diary where she did, it does serve
as an appropriate ending to her account of her thoughts and
experiences: a summation of her character and the struggles she has
endured in trying to become the kind of person she imagines she can be.
She takes a long, deep look at herself and is upset that people only
know her public side. Anne is still afraid of sharing her more personal,
sentimental inner self.
Anne’s
last sentence is a powerful statement, which is even stronger because
it is the last we ever hear from her. She writes, “[W]hen everybody
starts hovering over me, I get cross, then sad, and finally end up
turning my heart inside out, the bad part on the outside and the good
part on the inside, and keep trying to find a way to become what I’d
like to be and what I could be if . . . if only there were no other
people in the world.” This passage conveys Anne’s struggle with her
inward and outward selves. Because she knows that there will always be
both good and evil people in the world, she concludes that for only good
to exist, there must be no other people at all. Anne realizes that she
has tremendous potential but that it is stifled and contorted. Because
of the evil that she faces—and that everyone in the world faces—no one
can be exactly who he or she wants to be. Anne’s words have an eerie
prescience, since we know that she was killed at the hands of these
“other people” just a few months after this last entry. Thus, the diary
culminates with a precocious insight into human nature and a stinging
poignancy.
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