Diction In Lord Of The Flies Chapter 6 Essay

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Fear is a present topic in Lord of the Flies and the acrostic, False-Evidence-Appearing-Real, directly relates to chapter 9. In Lord of the Flies, by William Golding, a group of young boys were stranded on an island. At first they incorporated the civilization that they grew up with into their lives, but as time progressed they began to accept a savage lifestyle that came with consequences. In chapter 9, while the biguns and littluns gathered in a group, chanting and dancing, Simon came down the mountain after finding out the beast was actually a dead man in a parachute. Because it was dark and Simon was unrecognizable, the boys feared him to be the beast and killed him. If the boys had not been so afraid of the beast then they would not have been prompted to kill Simon. In chapter 9 of Lord of the Flies, William Golding employs diction, repetition, and animal imagery to convey the theme that fear can cause savagery to develop in anyone. …show more content…

Examples of Goldings diction in chapter 9 are descriptive words like “terror,” “urgent,” and ”desire” and sounds like “shattered,” “screaming,” and “gigantic whip” (Golding 175). These words all have negative diction. By using “terror” instead of “afraid” and “shattered” instead of “broke”, Golding could provoke an uneasy, fearful, and savage feeling in the reader and dictate the readers emotions. By using negative diction, Golding is able to create an intense energy that the theme of fear causing savagery to develop in anyone thrives off

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