Innocence In Lord Of The Flies

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Humans have created an overall understanding with one another to be civil and have implemented the knowledge of certain things being good and other things being bad. We all adopt the mentality of being what is established as normal and are somewhat inculcated into acting similar to everyone else. Thus, humans all impugn the harsh reality that we are still animals and our instincts are nowhere near gone, just taught to be subdued. Nevertheless, when impressionable, little British boys get stranded on an island with no standard of life, they will succumb to their true nature. Ultimately, William Goldman’s novel, Lord of The Flies, portrays that any individual is never truly innocent; at their core, they are always savage and primitive. …show more content…

“ ‘They hate you, Ralph. They’re going to do you.’ ‘They’re going to hunt you tomorrow’ ” (Golding 188). The urge to expurgate Ralph’s sense of logic and ties to innocence caused Jack to desire committing such a horrific act. Eventually, Jack seems to break through his outer shell and embraces himself, which is now a primitive savage, free of any inkling of the innocence that society made him believe he possessed. Jack is not the only one breaking free of his innocent facade, all of the other boys’ innocence seems to diminish …show more content…

“Roger, with a sense of delirious abandonment, leaned all his weight on the lever” (Goldman 180). Instead of throwing stones at Henry for mere entertainment, he upgrades to a boulder that ultimately sends corpulent Piggy falling to his death. This is the third murder committed on the island by the boys. First was the little boy who was killed in the recklessness of building the first signal fire, where the boys turned a blind eye and disavowed that it was their fault. Next was Simon, where all of the boys too overcome by savagery in that moment, clawed and bit at him until he was no longer alive. Lastly, is Piggy’s murder. The boys showed no sympathy for the littlun that burned to death, having the characteristic of innocence would at least make them feel guilt. The next two were murders and the boys all had a part to play in it somehow. Being alone with just themselves forced them to find who they truly are in order to survive, which meant no rules or innocence, just survival of the

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