1.
Lord of the Flies
takes place on a mysterious island when the boys’ plane crashes onto it. They
were heading towards England for boarding school when a storm turned for the
worst and took down their plane. The boys are only in their adolescence stage of
their life, so when the only adult they had (the pilot) dies from the crash,
they are left to their own devices. There were four characters that stood out to
me in the book: Ralph, Jack, Piggy and Simon. Each of these characters was a
symbol for what power/chaos could do to you. Ralph and Jack fight over who
should be the leader of the boys, since they are the older ones. They decide to
vote for chief and Ralph only loses the votes of Jack’s fellow choirboys. Ralph
and Jack have different strategies of “surviving”. Ralph wants to immediately
start building a fire signal to get off the island, where as Jack wants to
immerse himself in the wild. The group of boys are so young and inexperienced
though that many accidents and mistakes occur. “The Beast” (a sighting the
younger boys believe the saw) is also a prominent source of troubles for the
boys. It causes much controversy and arguments about what to do with it if it
even existed. These misfortunes led Jack and Ralph to have a showdown, both
declaring themselves a better leader. Due to their differing opinions, Ralph and
Piggy go off one way and Jack plus all the other boys make their own tribe. Jack
and “his tribe” don’t want to go back home and believe that surviving in the
wild is more enjoyable and liberating. They have let go of any rules of
civilization and do as their animalistic instincts please. Ralph and Piggy
realize this and know that Jack and his boys are going to come after them for
vengeance (for not joining his tribe). Jack raids Ralph’s campsite for Piggy’s
glass (their only tool for fire) and in the process of trying to get them, kill
Piggy. They show no remorse for Piggy’s tragic demise, reinforcing the fact that
these boys have let chaos take them over. Ralph knows he’s next and makes a plan
to fight them off as long as possible. But during his plan, while running from
Jack and his tribe along the shoreline, a sailor finds them. Once the boys get a
sight of civilization (the sailor in uniform), they sober up. Jack and his boys
stop hollering and feel a bit out of place and ashamed for their barbaric
appearance. Ralph breaks down into tears of relief; he knows that he will be
rescued now.
2.
The theme Golding was
trying to achieve is that without the rules and structure of society, you enter
into a world of chaos and anarchy. The
boys turned from innocent, proper English school boys to wild savages due to the
absence of civilization.
3.
Golding’s tone was
rather somber, but neutral. Golding never
hinted that he agreed more with Ralph on one thing and with Jack on another; he
remained an impartial observer. It was also somewhat informative. Not informative in a way to teach you facts
and equations, more like a lecture from a mother to a child. He was teaching us a lesson from a story.
“He lost himself in a maze of
thoughts that were rendered vague by his lack of words to express them. Frowning, he tried again.
This meeting must not be fun, but
business.”
“But a came down from the world of grown-ups,
though at the time there was no child awake to read it. There was a sudden bright explosion and
corkscrew trail across the sky; then darkness again and
stars.”
“Even if he shut his eyes the sow’s head
remained like an after-image. The
half-shut eyes were dim with infinite cynicism of adult life. They assured Simon that everything was a bad
business."
4.
Symbolism – Lord of the Flies was filled with
symbols. The sow’s head symbolized the
devil; the passing of Simon represented the death of innocence and civility in
the boys, etc.
Descriptive Paragraphs – Golding also
used long, graphic paragraphs for what was going on. He put the reader in the character’s shoes, so
you could visualize what they were doing, what they were feeling,
etc.
Allegories – This was obviously the
biggest literary device Golding used in his novel. Every single one of his character represented
something: Ralph stood for the good and civilization they all yearned for, Jack
represented the evil that resulted from lack of society, Simon signified the
innocence and good in people and so on and so
forth.
Metaphors - Golding often uses metaphor
in this book. In fact, all symbolism is a type of metaphor since they compare
two unlike things. Other metaphors in the book was when Golding described the
choir boy at the beginning of the book as a dark creature crawling along the
sand.
Syntax – Golding write in simple, easy
to read sentences. They are filled with
description and action, but they are not difficult to read.
“’I ought
to be chief,’ said Jack with simple arrogance, ‘because I’m chapter chorister
and head boy. I can sing C sharp.”
“Ralph stirred uneasily. Simon, sitting between
the twins and Piggy, wiped his mouth and shoved his piece of meat over the rocks
to Piggy, who grabbed it. The twins giggled and Simon lowered his face in
shame.”
“It was dark; there was that -- that bloody
dance. There was lightning and thunder and rain. We were
scared!”
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