Loss Of Innocence In Lord Of The Flies Essay

Words: 794
Pages: 4

Have you ever wondered what would happen if you put a bunch of kids on a secluded island to fend for themselves? This is the exact situation the schoolkids are placed in Lord Of The Flies, written by William Golding. The story begins following Ralph, who soon encounters a kid he names Piggy because of what he looks like. They encounter other kids on the island and form a tribe-like group, with each group having different goals, like Jack’s hunting party that is also supposed to check the fire they had set so they could be rescued. The whole time the kids are on the island, they are also worried about a beast being on the island which causes the group to go into turmoil on whether Ralph or Jack which eventually escalates to Piggy getting his head hit by a boulder thrown by Roger, Simon getting killed by the others because he was confused for the beast, and Ralph having to run for his life from Jack and the others because they have gone crazy with power, revealing that the whole time the beast was inside mankind all along. Ralph is then saved by a soldier and the others all drop their spears and start crying, realizing the innocence they have lost. The Lord of the Flies is about the loss of innocence in mankind using symbols like the conch shell, the beast, and the pig.

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Jack was so resolved to kill this pig that he would accidently let the signal fire go out on his hunt for one. His obsession would corrupt more and more as it led him to get into arguments with Ralph and try to become chief leader himself. After he declared himself chief of a new tribe, he brutally killed a pig which corrupted him to the point that he would later cause the death of Simon and Piggy, and try to kill Ralph to assert dominance. The relationship between Jack and the pig shows how killing something can ruin your innocence and turn you into a