The End of the Affair

by

Graham Greene

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The End of the Affair: Book 1, Chapter 6 Summary & Analysis

Summary
Analysis
Bendrix details his writing schedule, one he’s closely followed for years and which has allowed him to finish one novel per year, writing at least 500 words a day for five days of the week. Bendrix says he never broke this schedule for any love affair until he met Sarah and, instead of devoting his mornings to writing, Bendrix began spending mornings and any other free time Sarah had with her. Even still, Bendrix had found ways to meet his daily quota while they were happy. Bendrix writes that it was only after he realized that their “love was doomed” that his schedule fell apart. He says that as long as he could “make-believe that love lasted” he could be happy, but that “if love had to die, [he] wanted it to die quickly,” and so he would start fights with Sarah on purpose.
The ease with which Bendrix was able to write and the quality of his writing eventually started to reflect the tone of his relationship with Sarah; his writing went well when they were happy, and badly when they were not. This detail thus highlights how jealousy within a relationship can have a profoundly negative impact on every other aspect of a person’s life. Furthermore, Bendrix’s decision to hasten his relationship with Sarah to its end reveals his own fear of getting hurt: he wants to take control and be the one to drive Sarah away, not the other way around.
Themes
Love and Hatred Theme Icon
Jealousy and Passion Theme Icon
Quotes
Bendrix stands alone in his apartment in the dark, looking at the opposite building across the Common. Bendrix’s landlady knocks at his door and tells him that a man named Mr. Parkis is there to see him. When Mr. Parkis comes in, Bendrix notes that he looks familiar, but can’t remember why. Mr. Parkis introduces himself to Bendrix as “Mr. Savage’s man” and hands Bendrix the first report and expenses sheet (which his son has helped complete). As Bendrix goes over the expense sheet, he realizes that he recognizes Mr. Parkis as the man who was watching him and Sarah at the café. 
There is irony in the fact that Bendrix hired Mr. Parkis through Mr. Savage to find out who Sarah was illicitly seeing behind her husband’s back and that, sure enough, Mr. Parkis had been there to see Bendrix meet Sarah behind Henry’s back. As soon as Bendrix recognizes Mr. Parkis as the man from the café, he knows that he’s mysterious guilty party in the report even though, for once, they were not having an affair. 
Themes
Jealousy and Passion Theme Icon
Adultery, Deception, and Honesty Theme Icon
Bendrix reads the report Mr. Parkis and his son wrote up, which includes an account of Sarah meeting a man at a café and then going to Rules for lunch with him. Mr. Parkis noticed that, when they parted outside the restaurant, they appeared to be “labouring under great emotion” and Mr. Parkis theorized that they were “parting for good.” Mr. Parkis, according to the report, then followed Sarah, who walked around until entering a Catholic church and sitting alone in a pew for a few minutes. Bendrix is surprised by this because Sarah is not generally religious.
Bendrix tried to appear indifferent, nonchalant, and entirely at ease while he was with Sarah, but Mr. Parkis’s report makes it clear that the heavy emotions Bendrix was feeling were easily seen—presumably by Sarah as well. The account of Sarah entering a church, which Bendrix considers highly uncharacteristic, is the first indication of her growing faith in God—she went there for comfort and to set her mind at ease after the high emotions she must have felt at spending time with Bendrix again.
Themes
Love and Hatred Theme Icon
Faith, Acceptance, and the Divine Theme Icon
Adultery, Deception, and Honesty Theme Icon
Bendrix, who had been sitting in the dark so far, leans into the light to tell Mr. Parkis that he was wrong about Sarah and the mysterious man at the café holding hands, which he knows because he was the man. Mr. Parkis is embarrassed and worried about what to tell his son, who admires his profession. Bendrix tries to reassure Mr. Parkis, but Mr. Parkis insists that he must come clean to his son and tell him about the mistake. When Mr. Parkis leaves, Bendrix realizes with surprise that he hasn’t thought at all about Sarah or being jealous, and, in fact, “had become nearly human enough to think of another person’s trouble.”
Bendrix’s jealousy and hatred for Sarah stays alive only as long as he thinks about it, as this scene shows. By taking an interest in other people—in this instance, the distress Mr. Parkis feels about having to reveal that he made an embarrassing blunder to his adoring son—Bendrix might be able to lose sight of his negative feelings and find peace. It is telling that he chooses not to do that, but instead to devote his time and money to finding evidence of what he sees as Sarah’s treachery.
Themes
Jealousy and Passion Theme Icon
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