Loss Of Innocence In Lord Of The Flies Essay

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Without authority and rules man will slowly lose their innocence to be able to survive. Throughout Lord of the Flies William Golding evaluates how if you leave children alone without rules innocence will be replaced with violence. In Lord of the Flies, Golding examines the loss of innocence in man. This exploration is seen in the characters including Jack, Ralph and the hunter’s throughout the novel and shows the violence created from these characters losing their innocence. Loss of innocence in man is first shown with Jack. In the beginning of the book Lord of the Flies, the book takes place during what most people believe World War three and a plane carrying a group of British schoolboys crashes over the Pacific ocean onto an island. The …show more content…

Golding describes Ralph at the end when they were finally rescued said, “Ralph wept for the end of innocence, the darkness in man's heart, and the fall through the air of the true, a wise friend called Piggy” (202). Ralph thought by not joining the Hunter’s he could be the same boy that came onto the island some time ago but with the need to survive Ralph had to leave who he was behind and fight for his life. Ralph also loses a piece of his innocence when he realizes the true weight of leadership on an island without adults to make sure they could be rescued. As a result of Ralph having to fight to survive and take on the role as leader he lost his innocence. Although this is in a different way than the hunter’s because they felt the need to kill, they were not just killing to survive and provide food anymore. Nevertheless, none of the boys left the island the same way they came on. Either by their own free will or because they simply could not survive as British

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