Saturday, June 1, 2019
William Goldings Lord of the Flies :: Essays Papers
Lord of the FliesThe classic novel Lord of the Flies by William Golding is an evoke adventure deep into the nether regions of the mind. The part of the brain that is suppressed by the mundane tasks of modern society. It is a struggle between Ralph and Jack, the boys and the Beast, good and evil.The story takes a look at what would happen if a group of British school boys were to become stranded on an island. At first the boys have good intentions, nutrition a fire going so that a passing ship can see the smoke and rescue them, however because of the inherent evil of the many an(prenominal) the good intentions of the few are quickly passed over for more exciting things. The massacreing of a pig slowly begins to take over the boys life, and they begin to go about this in a ritualistic way, dancing around the dead animal and chanting. As this thirst for blood begins to spread the group is split into the sane (the fire-watchers) pitted against the irrational (the hunters) (Dick 121) . The fear of a mythological beast is perpetuated by the younger members of the groups and they are forced to do something about it. During one of the hunters celebrations around the kill of an animal a fire-watcher stumbles in to try and disband the idea of the monster. Caught of in the rabid frenzy of the dance, this fire-watcher suddenly becomes the monster and is brutally slaughtered by the other members of the group. The rising tide of the novel is when the hunters are confronted by the fire-watchers. The hunters had stole Piggys (one of the fire-watchers) glasses so that they may have a means of making a readying fire. One of the more vicious hunters roles a boulder off of a cliff, crushing Piggy, and causing the death of yet another rational being. The story concludes with the hunters run Ralph (the head and last of the fire-watchers). After lighting half of the island on fire in an attempt to smoke Ralph from his hiding place, they chase him on to the beach however to fin d a ships captain and crew waiting there to rescue them, because he saw the smoke.The novel is packed full of symbolism and irony. Golding also communicates his pass quite well. The title refers to Beelzebub, most stinking and depraved of all the devils it is he, and not the God of Christians, who is worshipped (Burgess 121).
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