Allegory In Lord Of The Flies Quote Analysis

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The Lord of the Flies by William Golding is about a group of british boys that crash land on an island. In the beginning, it starts out as a boy named Ralph that plays the protagonist. He accommodates with a boy that goes by the name of Piggy and together they find a seashell and use it to see if anyone else is on the island with them. They meet up with a group of boys and together they establish rules and order with one another by the use of a conch and picking a leader. The novel Lord of the Flies is an allegory because it shows a hidden meaning. It shows which the characters, events or images act as symbols. In the book Lord of the Flies, a plane crashes into an island that is carrying a group of British schoolboys. Without any adults around, …show more content…

They find a seashell called a conch. Later in the chapter, the boys learn to blow the conch to see if other people are on the island. When the group of boys meet up and establish order, they use the conch to call meetings. All of the boys agree on a rule that no one can speak unless they are holding the conch. The conch symbolizes order. It gives all of the boys a chance to speak when they are holding it. The conch helps Ralph get elected because the shell represents law and order. “But there was a stillness about Ralph as he sat that marked him out: there was his size, and attractive appearance; and the most obscurely, yet most powerfully, there was the conch. The being that had blown that, had sat waiting for them on the platform with the delicate thing balanced on his knees, was set apart” (pg. 22). This quote shows how Ralph and the conch are linked to all of the …show more content…

At first, the beast is nothing more than a product of the littluns’ imagination. The biguns and the others didn’t believe that this littlun saw a “beastie”, but later in the novel, everyone gets afraid of the great unknown. The smaller boys get afraid of being in the dark, because they are not able to see if their is a beast or not. Then, momentarily after Ralph says that, a dead parachuting man that the boys take as a sign from the adult world. “You’re not wanted….on this island!... So don’t try [to take] it on… or else… we shall do you. See? Jack and Roger and Maice and Robert and Bill and Piggy and Ralph.”(pg. 131) The boys think that the beast is just confined to the island. The group pictures this beast in their minds and it dwells as a figment of their imagination. “Kill the beast! Smash his throat! Spill his blood!”(pg. 138) You Can’t defeat a “nothing,” but you can hunt and kill a “something.” These boys are so certain that their is a beast. And are determined to kill

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