Analysis of The Lord of the Flies

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Child supervision and discipline are both key elements in the lives of growing children. Parents who guide their children with vigor and determination help to form and to mold their future development and perspectives. When children are left alone without these precautionary measures pursued by their parents, especially in groups, situations can turn out of hand as demonstrated in The Lord of the Flies; a novel in which a group of children are stranded on a island with no adults to fend for themselves. The novel concludes with the death of a innocent character, one who is not all for the power and rankings: Piggy, Ralph, Piggy’s only one true friend on the island wept for his death as he learned that innocents cannot serve as protection, all humans possess a certain evil within them, and all relationships come to an end.
Piggy kept to his own drama, he did not start trouble with others. In fact, the closest Piggy came to starting drama was voicing his own opinions on what to do to survive on the island. Piggy was unliked by other characters and was simply judged by his appearance instead of the wittiness and brains he possessed. However the group underestimated him, Piggy was vital to everyone's survival. Although others refused to listen to him, they did love to listen to Ralph, who voiced many of Piggy’s ideas as his own. Piggy being this soft-spoken, quiet, unpopular character held a certain innocence to his name. Piggy soon learned however, that this innocence did him no good as he was squished by a boulder thrown down by the other children. This teaches that something as innocent as the life of a baby foal, can be ended quickly by the strike of a mountain lion.
Even the most beautiful butterfly can turn to a monster as it ...

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...ed toward the forest, and began to pick his way over the tumbled scar." (Golding 2.38) And with that, Piggy upheld a parent-like position, not to all the boys, but at least to Ralph. For if he not kept Ralph in line, much worse crimes could have happened on the island. Although Piggy represented a semi-parent-like figure in the novel, he did not have quite a stern personality, furthur proving his innocence. However his impeccable personality did not help him throughtout the story as the end result was his death from the changed children of the island. The boys who were once as immaculate as Piggy, turned to barbaric and undomesticated savages who murdered their own without and defense or trial, including Piggy. His death concluded the story, as Ralph begins to regret his harsh words and actions he had once shown Piggy, for they cannot be taken back, for he has died.

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