The Sound of the Shell The opening chapter begins with two boys, Piggy and Ralph, making their way through the jungle. We learn, through their dialogue, that they had been travelling in an airplane with a group of British school children. The plane had presumably been shot down and crashed on a an island in the Pacific. It is hinted that the rest of the world is at war, and that most of it has been destroyed by nuclear attacks?possibly explaining that the children were A storm has come and gone, washing the wreckage away. Ralph and Piggy meet and revel at the prospect that they are alone on a tropical island with no adults. They make their way to the beach where they find a large conch shell. Using the shell as a horn, Ralph summons any other children that may be on the island. They begin to come from the jungle and Piggy tries to take names. Along the beach two marching files of black-clad children approach. This is the first we see of Jack Merridew (who, oddly enough is the only child, besides Percival, whose last name we will learn).
Piggy is immediately singled out by the group and made fun of. The children do not like him and Being children, and at first thinking that survival is a game to be played and that rescue is inevitable, they decide to vote for a chief “to decide things.” It is obvious the only two contenders are Jack and Ralph. Ralph is voted in; he had possession of the conch?already magical in quality to those present?and seemed the most able. Jack’s black-clad choir are designated as hunters upon Jack’s insistence?already revealing his need to hunt and kill. Ralph’s first decision as chief is to send a party out to investigate whether or not they are really on an island. Himself, Jack, and Simon leave to scale the mountain. As they climb the pink granite, they take time to have fun and roll a large boulder off the edge to watch it be destroyed “like a bomb.” This need to destroy begins with this innocent rock-rolling and will eventually culminate with the killing of a sow, Simon, Piggy and the hunting of Ralph later in the They reach the summit and indeed discovery they are on an island, apparently uninhabited.
The Essay on Stalin And Trotsky Vs Piggy And Jack
Lord Of The Flies vs. U. S. S. R leaders The events in Lord of the Flies seem to model what happened in the struggle for power in the U. S. S. R. in the mid-1920's. Both show what happens when dissension grows and people get desperate. There is an obvious battle between good and evil. In the beginning of the novel, there is one group, where all the boys essentially work together, and there is ...
A new friendship developes between Ralph and Jack. They savor the “right of domination,” and Jack comments about how they will have fun and hunt “until they fetch us.” Jack believes rescue is inevitable and these thoughts will contribute to his behavior later in the novel. On the descent down the mountain they discover a piglet caught in the underbrush. Jack unsheathes his knife and raises it, ready to let fly?but he cannot. His current nature will not let him spill blood?but this will change. He is embarrassed and promises that next time he will kill. Fire on the Mountain Later that evening, Ralph calls another meeting by blowing on the conch. He conveys to the group of kids that they are on an island with no grown ups (The number of kids is not fully known?and will never be known?but we assume it is around thirty. Most of them are very small, possibly five or six years old and are called “littluns.” The rest are near Ralph’s age, possibly twelve years old.) Also, Jack insists on having an army of hunters and begins talking excitedly At this time Ralph lays down some rules.
The Essay on Differences Between Jack And Ralph Represented Through Their Actions As Chief
... showing as a signal. Dont take fire from the mountain. Take your food up there (81). Ralph exercises his power to get things ... later on as Jack and Ralph begin to separate from one another, Ralph becomes increasingly civil, so civil, that Piggy handed Ralph his glasses (162). ... them of all the rules associated with the conch. On the other hand, Jack threatens with violence and utilizes fear in order ...
First, when someone wishes to speak at an assembly he must hold the conch shell. No one is allowed to interrupt the holder of the conch except Ralph. The conch begins to symbolize the organization of society and the rules that such a society must uphold to function. They speak excitedly about their new temporary home, how it is a “good island” and how much fun it will be. Then, a littlun with a large birthmark on his face steps forward to speak. He is given the conch shell. The child tells of a “beastie” that he saw in the dark, lurking on the island. It looked like a snake and is the first manifestation of the Beast. It is argued whether or not such a beast could live on a small island. Ralph doesn’t think so, but nonetheless he feels himself “facing something ungraspable.” Jack says his hunters will kill the beast if, indeed, it does exist. Ralph then introduces another prevailing symbol of the novel: the signal fire.
He will make it paramount that a signal fire be maintained to aid in their rescue. At mention of creating such a fire at the top of the mountain, the children become excited and rush off, lead by Jack, to the summit to see if they can complete such a task?to really prove they can make it on their own. Ralph follows, and Piggy comments that they are acting like “a crowd of kids.” This is ironic, because they are a crowd of kids. It shows how Piggy is set apart from the group; that he is more mature and does not throw caution to the wind as Jack does. A huge pile of gathered wood is made on the top of the mountain. Jack, against Piggy’s protest, grabs his specs to light the fire with and soon it is blazing. Piggy comments that the effort was wasted because the fire produced little smoke. Jack begins arguing with him. Piggy tells Jack that he has the conch, thus he should not be interrupted, but Jack says, ” ?The conch doesn’t count on top of the mountain, so you shut up.’ ” Jack is beginning to dislike the rules of the conch.
The Essay on Sam And Eric Ralph Jack Fire
... clubbing. Now in reduced in numbers, Ralph's tribe is made up of Ralph, Piggy, Sam, and Eric. Jack's tribe's fire goes out when it rains ... of power from the conch, to the glasses (fire). Ralph holds another meeting in which he decides to confront Jack and ask for Piggy's ... conch, giving the conch a special power to the boys. It is also decided that the choir should become hunters for food, with Jack ...
The group of hunters are divided up to take shifts keeping the fire going. It is then noticed that the sparks from the now-dead fire have ignited half the forest below the mountain. Piggy speaks out against the group’s immaturity. He tells them that they ought to be more responsible?they don’t even know how many kids are on the island. Jack argues against him. Piggy points to the inferno and asks where the boy with the birthmark is. Nobody knows?he has been killed by the fire, by the lack of responsibility, the rampant adventure and maybe something else that is present in the boys. He is the first to die and the boys can only stare at the fire, marveling with horror at what they have The chapter begins many days, possibly weeks, after the fire on the mountain. Jack is hunting for pigs and has become good at tracking them, but has not killed one as yet. He comes back to the beach where Ralph and Simon are trying to build a hut. Two rickety huts have already been constructed and this last one is not turning out so well.
Ralph complains to Jack how the kids don’t help; they are bathing or eating fruit in the forest instead. This seems to be a trend with every project they try to accomplish?a project is proposed at a meeting and they work hard for a little while, but never see it through to completion. Jack and Ralph have a small argument about whether building huts is more important than hunting. This is the first of many disputes they will have. The subject of the beastie comes up again. Many of the littluns are frightened of it, which is why they are building huts. Jack comments that when he is alone hunting he feels he is, ” ?not hunting ? but being hunted… As though something is behind you all the time in the jungle.’ ” Jack has a sudden insight as to where the pigs hide during the day. Ralph continues to badger him about the fact that keeping up the signal fire is more important than hunting, but Jack doesn’t seem to think that way. The two boys are beginning to dislike each other.
The Term Paper on Ralph And Jack Simon Beast Piggy
... ve talked and talked. x From this quotation, Jack is openly resenting Ralph. Beast vs fear Jack s speech to the rest about the ... t find a match to start the fire, Jack pointed out that they should use Piggy s spec as burning glasses. So the ... s and Maurice s behavior with the littluns Roger and Maurice s behavior toward the littluns suggests that they re finally revealing ...
They go to the bathing pool, where, “…the shouting and splashing and laughing were only just sufficient to bring them together again.” Simon wanders into the jungle, helps the littluns pick fruit, and then wanders off further, finding a clearing. There is a thick mat of creepers that grow here. He climbs under them where it is cool and dark and stays there until night fall Painted Faces and Long Hair Roger and Maurice are walking through a group of littluns, kicking over the things they’ve made in the sand. They split off, and Roger hides behind a palm tree watching a littlun playing by the water. He begins throwing rocks at the littlun, but he aims to miss, because “the taboos of the old world” are still Jack comes up behind Roger and asks him to come watch as he puts on a “mask” of painted camouflage in order to hunt pigs better. As Jack smears the clay on his face, the mask is “…a thing on its own, behind which Jack hid, liberated from shame and self-consciousness.” The mask allows Jack to not worry about rescue and what he knows is right.
Behind it he can do what he Later, Ralph and the rest of the boys are swimming in the bathing pool and smoke is spotted on the horizon. Ralph looks to the mountain top, but the signal fire has gone out. Running up to the summit, with the others following, Ralph reaches the top and the fire is dead?the watchers absent from duty. Jack and a crowd of hunters move up to the summit, carrying a dead pig. The hunters are excited about their first kill and begin to explain it all to Ralph. None of them care that the fire had gone out, it was not important to them; all they can talk about is the hunt and the kill. When Ralph tells them a ship passed the island they fall silent. Jack tries to make excuses, and during Piggy’s protests and lecturing Jack punches him and he falls to the ground. His specs go flying and one lens breaks?the lenses that made the fire possible are now broken by Jack. Jack apologizes about the fire, but Ralph The fire is re-lit and the pig is roasted.
The Essay on Boys Jack Ralph Simon
... Boys are doing a chant and mistaken Simon for a pig and kill him ii. Even Ralph takes a part in this killing ... scene created is Jack flushing the whole island with fire just to try and kill Ralph and in return the fire signals an oncoming ... and he realizes that the only beast that is present is the beast inside everyone. e. Simon "speaks" to the Lord of the ...
Jack hands out portions of meat to all the boys except Piggy. Simon gives his portion to Piggy and Jack can’t stand it. The tension is broken and the story of the hunt is re-enacted by the boys. Maurice pretends to be a pig, while the rest dance and chant around him. This is the first time the “dance” is preformed. Ralph tells them all that he is calling an assembly even though it is dark out. An assembly is called and the group of kids come. Ralph talks about how they start projects and never finish them. No one is abiding by the rules very strictly; they don’t gather water in coconuts anymore, nor do they use the designated places as bathrooms. And of course, there is the matter about the fire. He tells them that ” ?…we ought to die before we let fire out.’ ” He tells the hunters that the fire is more important than a pig. Furthermore, he explains that, ” ?Things are breaking up. I don’t understand why. We began well; we were happy.
And then?…Then people started getting frightened.’ ” They are all frightened of the Beast, and the children have been talking about it?a large animal living on the island. The Beast, in reality, is something that resides in all of the kids?a sort of dangerous evil that must be withheld. Ralph, from the start, has tried to hold it back by laying down rules and organizing society. Nonetheless, none of the kids yet realize this, and the Beast is manifested in their minds as an animal lurking on the island. Jack argues that he has been everywhere on the island and has never seen a beast. Piggy gets up and makes a very important speech in which he states that there isn’t a beast, at least, ” ?…not with claws, and all that…’ ” Also, ” ?…there isn’t no fear either…Unless we get frightened of people.’ ” A littlun comes forward and talks of how he had been dreaming about fighting the the creepers and saw something “horrid in the forest.” It turns out that the horrid thing was Simon, who had been returning from the clearing he likes to be at.
The Essay on Ralph Jack Beast Life
... as soon as possible. N/A 152 During Simon s death: Piggy and Ralph, under the threat of the sky, found ... N/A 126 On The Beast: The beast is a hunter... we couldn t kill it. Jack 127 Upon leaving the ... There was something good about a fire. Something overwhelmingly good. N/A 170 Ralph s thoughts: after all we aren't ... bad business. N/A 139 On the fire: We can t keep one fire going. And they don t care. ...
Another littlun comes forward, Percival, and explains another type of beast?the Beast from the water. Again, this is debated. Then, Simon takes the conch and says something very important. He says that, ” ?Maybe there is a beast… What I mean is… maybe it’s only us.’ ” Simon begins to understand what the Beast really is, but his is jeered at and will be jeered at for the rest of the novel, until his death. The debate continues and turns toward talk of the rules. Jack doesn’t know why Ralph has the right to make rules. He points out that Ralph cannot hunt, nor can he sing. Ralph counters that he was chosen and that is reason enough. More arguing ensues, and, “The world, that understandable and lawful world, was slipping away.” Jack turns against Piggy as well: ” ?Bullocks to the rules! We’re strong?we hunt! If there’s a beast, we’ll hunt it down! We’ll beat and beat and beat?!’ ” Jack does not like rules and the Beast within him his beginning to expose itself little by little.
The assembly breaks up and the hunters do their dance once again. The boys are drifting apart into two distinct groups: those who follow Ralph’s ideas and those who follow Jack. At the close of the chapter, Ralph, Simon and Piggy are sitting on the assembly platform listening the cries of the littluns’ Two fighter planes are engaged in a nighttime battle over the island?more evidence that the world is at war. One of them is shot down and the pilot bails out and opens his parachute, but he is already dead. As the victor flies away the dead man floats to the island only to be caught on the rocks of the mountain. There he will stay for some days, slowly rotting. Presently, though, the twins Samneric are on fire duty and have fallen asleep. They wake up, re-light the fire, and see the “Beast from air” ?breathing’ in and out. They run to tell Ralph. As the sun is rising an assembly is called. The kids all believe that they are now in terrible danger.
Jack calls for volunteers to help him go to the top and kill it. A debate ensues and it is determined that the Beast does not leave tracks and moves by swinging through the tree tops, which is why Jack has never seen traces of it. It is decided that a party of hunters, plus Ralph and Simon, will go to hunt the Beast. Piggy is left at the beach with the littluns. They will first check the only place on the island that no one has been to: Castle Rock. If the Beast is not there then they will check the mountain and re-light the fire. They trek to the castle and discover that nothing is there. Jack exclaims that the rock would make a great fort and he and his hunters proceed to push a boulder into the sea. Ralph breaks up the fun and they start the journey to the Shadows and Tall Trees As they make their way to the mountain they stop to eat and rest and Ralph thinks about how dirty and scraggly they all look. He yearns to have his hair cut and take a bath?revealing again his character and longing to hold back They start off and Jack finds traces of a pig.
They decide to hunt it. A boar is found and Ralph wounds him with his spear. He is delighted that he made the only strike on the animal. The boar gets away and the hunters begin to dance again, but this time it is a little different. Robert is playing the part of the pig, but the kids are a slightly out of hand and some of the fake blows to the “pig” are landing hard. Even Ralph, who previously shunned the dance and chanting feels that, “…the desire to squeeze and hurt was overmastering.” Here is the first time we see Ralph having trouble suppressing the Beast. They continue to the mountain and Simon is sent through the forest to tell Piggy and the others that the hunting party will not be back before dark. Night falls as they reach the base of the mountain and the boys argue about whether or not they should wait until morning to scale it. Jack goes to the top and comes back down, reporting that he saw something billowing up on top. They all climb to the summit and see the Beast.
Instead of fighting it and finding out that it is only a man, they run. As they flee, “…the creature lifted its head, holding toward them a ruin of a face.” Gift for the Darkness The tale of the Beast is related to Piggy and the boys must decide what to do. Ralph tells Jack that they are not armed well enough to kill it. Someone comments that, ” ?…now that thing sits by the fire as though it didn’t want us to be rescued.’ ” Which, in a sense, is what the “real beast” is doing. Jack calls an assembly by blowing the conch. He tells the group that the Beast is real; they have seen it. Also, Ralph has called the hunters cowards and Jack accuses Ralph of being a coward himself. Jack asks the assembly if any of them think Ralph should not be chief. No one raises their hand. Jack, in defiance, says, ” ?All right then… I’m not going to play any longer. Not with you…I’m not going to be a part of Ralph’s lot.'” Jack feels that survival is a game to be played and he is fed up with the rules that Ralph deals.
He invites others to come join him and runs off into the forest. Simon steps forward to propose that they climb the mountain. No one wants to. Instead, Piggy decides that the signal fire should be moved to the beach, and the kids start building a fire. The fire is lit, and as the crowd gathers, it is noticeably smaller. Most of the bigguns have left to go “play” with Jack. The only bigguns left are Ralph, Piggy, Samneric and Simon. Simon wonders off to the mat of creepers, while Jack gathers a group of boys in the forest to teach them how to hunt. They decide that Jack will be chief, they will forget the Beast, and they will try to take more bigguns away from They begin to track a pig and and it leads them to Simon’s clearing. A few pigs are laying around and the group decides to attack a sow and her piglets. The piglets escape, but the sow is brutally killed. Jack decides to offer the pig’s head as a gift to the Beast. He orders his new henchman, Roger, to sharpen a stick at both ends.
One end is jammed in the rocky earth and the other is draped with the head of the sow. Simon climbs from under the creepers and is confronted with the head. Later, Jack and his gang raid Ralph’s encampment. They steal a burning log for their own fire and Jack invites all the boys to come join his tribe at the feast they are to have that night. As the “savages” leave Ralph comments about how he wishes he could have fun too, but still the fire is more important to him. Nonetheless, this importance of the fire and of rescue are drifting away from Ralph and he must be constantly reminded of it by Piggy. A storm is building above the island and thunder promises rain. Back at the clearing Simon is having a “discussion” with the pig’s head. This discussion is probably mostly in Simon’s head, but Golding uses this interview as an eerie way to unveil the theme of the novel. Golding now refers to the fly-covered pig’s head as the “Lord of the Flies.” The Lord of the Flies asks Simon if he’s afraid of him.
It says: ?…I am the Beast… Fancy thinking the Beast was something you could hunt and kill! You knew, didn’t you? I’m part of you? Close, close, close! I’m the reason it’s no go? Why things are the way they are?’ Although Simon may have known that the Beast was really inside the kids, it is now confirmed. Now that Simon knows for sure, the Beast warns him not to tell anyone the truth, otherwise he will be killed.. The storm keeps boiling over the island, possibly representing the turmoil that is occurring below it. Simon regains consciousness and heads for the mountain. He sees the rotting airman and realizes the Beast is “harmless and horrible,” which, in reality is true. If the boys choose to suppress the Beast it is harmless, or they can let it run rampant. Simon makes his way to the beach to tell the other boys. Piggy and Ralph have decided to go to the pig roast, just to see what is going to happen.
All of the other boys are already there, except Simon, and they fall silent as the two outcasts approached. They are both given portions of meat as Jack begins a speech. He asks who will join his tribe. Ralph interrupts?trying to persuade the boys to help him keep the fire going. The crowd of boys instead agree to join Jack, who promises to give them meat and keep them safe from the Beast. The storm breaks and the rain comes down with lightning and thunder. Ralph is asking them what they’re going to do without shelters and Jack orders them to begin the dance. As they chant around Roger, who is playing the pig, Piggy and Ralph “…found themselves eager to take place in this demented but partly secure society.” The boys in the dance are armed with clubs and spits and are getting out of hand again with this game. A figure is crawling out of the forest and the ring opens to let it inside. Mistaken as the Beast by the Jack’s tribe, Simon is beaten to death.
The group disbands for shelter from the storm. On top of the mountain wind fills the parachute of the airman and lifts him away from the island. As the storm subsides and the tide moves in and out, Simon’s body is washed to sea. The Shell and the Glasses It is the next morning and the only boys still in Ralph’s confidence are Piggy and Samneric. The twins are in the forest collecting firewood while Ralph and Piggy discuss Simon’s murder and what they are going to do next. Piggy tries to make excuses for the boys by claiming it was an accident, but Ralph doesn’t buy into that. On Castle Rock Jack (now continually painted) has created a fortification that is constantly guarded. If, for whatever reason they need to defend themselves, Roger has placed a lever underneath a large boulder that will send it smashing onto the rock bridge that conects the fort to the mainland. Jack has begun to rule by force and the kids who are out of line are tied up and beaten.
He decides the tribe will hunt again tomorrow. Although some of them realize they have killed Simon it is sensed that they are trying to it cover up by convincing themselves they really just hurt the disguised beast. Back at the lagoon Ralph and the rest are agonizing over trying to keep the fire going. Again, Ralph must constantly be reminded by Piggy that the fire is “Something overwhelmingly good.” Ralph tells the protesting twins that ” ?Anyone can play at hunting, anyone can get us meat?’ “; anyone can buy into the irresponsible and harmful desires within them, but it is not easy to hold them at bay. They decide to leave the fire unlit for the night, and retire to the rickety shelters. During the night they awake to noises outside and they are afraid the Beast has come for them, but is only Jack and his tribe searching to steal fire. Not finding a lit fire they charge into the shelter and in the violent fight that ensues, Piggy’s specs are stolen.
They have now been stripped of the ability to make fire and the only symbol of society and order that is left to them is the conch. At day break the four plundered and bruised boys try to ignite any smoldering ashes left in the fire, but it is dead. In desperation Ralph calls an assembly. Only the four boys plus some littluns attend. Ralph speculates that maybe if they try to comb their hair, and look decent they could go to Jack to ask for the specs, ” ??after all we aren’t savages really and being rescued isn’t a game?’ ” Piggy agrees to this idea and talks about Simon’s murder and the death of the littlun in the first fire: ?What can he do more than he already has? I’ll tell him what’s what. You let me carry the conch, Ralph. I’ll show him the one thing he hasn’t got.’ As they get ready they eat, Samneric are afraid to go because Jack will be painted. They set off; with Ralph and the twins carrying spears and Piggy the conch, being led because he cannot see with out his specs.
They reach Castle Rock and Ralph steps out onto the neck of land leading to it with Piggy just behind, and the twins after him. Roger, the guard, orders them to halt and Ralph blows the conch. He tells the savages that he is calling an assembly. Jack emerges from the forest behind him with his hunters and the carcass of a pig. Ralph demands the specs to be returned and the tribe laughs at him. Ralph and Jack fight each other briefly using spears as sabers. Jack gets between Ralph and the rock and orders the twins captured. Some kids come out to tie up Samneric and Ralph has had enough; Jack and Ralph charge each other and begin fighting again. Piggy stands up and yells for them to stop and listen to him. Surprisingly, the crowd is silent and Piggy, holding the conch, asks, ” ?Which is better?to have rules and agree, or to hunt and kill? Which is better, law and rescue, or hunting and breaking things up?’ ” During this speech, the tribe, bearing spears, has formed along the far side of the rock bridge intending to charge.
A great yell goes up and Roger heaves on the lever. The huge boulder totters and crashes onto the bridge. Ralph ducks out of the way, but the blind Piggy does not move. As the boulder strikes him the conch explodes “…into a thousand white fragments…” Piggy falls forty feet to his death on the rocks below. Jack feels no sympathy and warns Ralph that that’s what he’ll get. The tribe charges and Ralph is running, crashing through the forest. The pursuit does not last long and Jack orders the crowd back to the fort. Ralph is free, for the time being. Night falls and Ralph stays close to Castle Rock. Samneric, now savages, have been stationed as guards. Ralph crosses the bridge and scales the tower to talk to them. They tell Ralph that Jack and the tribe are going to hunt him tomorrow. The plan is that the kids will make a line stretching from one shore of the island to the other and they will slowly advance until they find him.
When Ralph asks what they will do when he is caught, the twins reply, ” ?Roger has sharpened a stick at both ends,’ ” but Ralph does not attach meaning to this. He tells Samneric that he plans to hide in the thicket near Castle Rock, thinking that Jack will not look so close to the fort. Ralph wakes up the next morning and the twins have been forced to confess where Ralph is hiding. The tribe tries to roll another boulder from the castle to land in Ralph’s thicket, but they just barely miss him. A savage tries to crawl through the branches to see if Ralph is still there and gets the business end of a spear. They set the thicket on fire and Ralph runs into the forest as the line of savages spreads out to begin the sweep of the island. Deciding that the best option is to hide, Ralph finds the place where Simon used to stay and hunkers down. As the line of savages advances the entire island behind them is burning, but they only seek to catch and kill Ralph.
The line reaches his hiding spot and Roger peeks under to look. Ralph charges him and runs to the beach, the tribe pursuing. He runs past the burning shelters right into a Navy officer. Ironically, the massive fire and smoke enabled the ship to see them. As the boys gather around, the officer comments on how it must be all be fun and games. Some of the boys are crying, realizing what they’ve done. The officer sees the spears and asks, ” ?We saw your smoke. What have been doing? Having a war or something?’ ” He learns that two children have been killed and they are taken off the island to the waiting cruiser. As they are taken away, “…Ralph wept for the end of innocence, the darkness of man’s heart, and the fall through the air of the true, wise friend called Piggy.” Discussion of Theme Lord of the Flies has more than one “theme,” or meaning, but the overall and most important one is that the conditions of life within society are closely related to the moral integrity of its individual members.
In Golding’s own The theme is an attempt to trace the defects of society back to the defects of human nature. The moral is that the shape of a society must depend on the ethical nature of the individual and not on any political system however apparently logical or respectable. The whole book is symbolic in nature except the rescue in the end where adult life appears, dignified and capable, but in reality enmeshed in the same evil as the symbolic life of the children on the island. The officer, having interrupted a man-hunt, prepares to take the children off the island in a cruiser which will presently be hunting its enemy in the same implacable way. And who will rescue the adult and his In the novel, Golding seems to show the reader that this “ethical nature” is not inherent in mankind. Indeed, there is a certain capacity for evil that resides in man; his morality is simply superficial.
Nonetheless, it is this moral integrity that must prevail in order for him to be ethical and thus for society to be maintained. Without this suppression society caves in upon itself (as seen in the book), lawlessness reins and life becomes a free-for-all. Although this is the main idea of the story, others exist underneath it. The most prominent of these, probably, is the fact that often times people single out another person, or another group of people to look down upon in order to feel secure. Piggy’s character personifies this societal flaw, as he is always shunned and made fun of. Discussion of Symbolism First, it must be understood that the boys’ lives on the island represent a world-wide society. Although one cannot be sure of Golding’s motives for choosing the island setting, it was probably because it works best to have the characters isolated, where the laws of their governments cannot reach them. Also, why did Golding choose children instead of adolescents, or even adults? Most likely because children have not yet been fully conditioned by society to understand right from wrong, and thus in this ignorance, most of them are guided by their instinct and what is inherent within them.
If older, more knowledgeable characters were chosen, the events of the novel may not occur With that being said, here is a list of the symbols used in the novel and their significance to the theme, and each other: The Beast as a Symbol The Beast is the evil that resides within man. The children were all aware that such a beast exists, but none of them realized (except Simon) that it lies within them. Manifested in three forms throughout the story, the Beast constantly plagues the littluns?the least conditioned by society. Ralph represents law, order, organized society and moral integrity. Throughout the novel he is constantly making commonsense rules for the boys to follow. As chief, he knows right from wrong. At the end of the novel he too realizes that man is not a kind creature by nature. Anarchy finally hunts down society in the end, but Golding does not let us know Jack (and his tribe) represent anarchy.
Jack did not have the integrity to keep the Beast at bay. He is the perpetrator of all three deaths that occur on the island and wishes to spend his time hunting (killing) instead of helping Ralph with rescue Piggy symbolizes knowledge and morality. Without Piggy to help Ralph it is very possible that Ralph may have lost sight of things and given in to the Beast. Jack, who, throughout the novel systematically removes the forces opposing him, is scornfully afraid of Piggy and eventually kills him to eliminate his moral influence on the group, which conflicts with his plan to rule with a triibalistic, survivalist moraliy. The Conch as a Symbol The Conch is a symbol of the high hand of authority. Used to call meetings, it is magical to the boys, who for the most part respect it.
In the end, when it is destroyed, authority on the island is gone and Ralph is left to fend for himself. The Signal Fire as a Symbol The Signal Fire is a representation of commonsense and rescue from immorality. When the signal fire can no longer be lit, because Jack stole Piggy’s specs that light it, its beacon of hope and knowledge is no longer present to guide Ralph who must then be constantly reminded by Piggy about what is right. Piggy’s Specs as a Symbol Piggy’s Specs although not a clear symbol in the novel, their being first broken, then stolen by Jack, shows a slow and inescapable descent into anarchy and evil. The Lord of the Flies as a The Lord of the Flies represents the Beast’s danger and power. According to E. L. Epstein, “…?lord of the flies’ is a translation of the Hebrew Ba’alzevuv (Beelzebub in Greek).
It has been suggested that is was a mistranslation of a mistransliterated word…for the Devil…” In the story the panic and decay that takes place is symbolized by this pig’s head. In its ?talk’ with Simon it explains what the Beast really is.