Human Beings are Evil: Golding's Lord of the Flies

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Humankind’s Greatest Faults

Although humankind attempts its best at preventing evil actions, eventually evil rises above all else. While humans are living ordinary lives and living in ignorance, evil is always scheming and waiting to slide up behind the turned backs of society as depicted in William Golding’s Lord of the Flies. One could argue that this is not the case and that good deeds always overshadow evil and that evil is just an occasional blip. However, what one’s opinion of society does not outshine the cold hard facts of humankind’s natural tendencies; specifically, how things are never as they seem, how easily humans can betray their emotions and how humans choose to ignore difficult situations in the search for an easy answer. Despite one’s best efforts, evilness will always prevail over goodness when it comes to humankind.

Heat in the cold, light in the darkness, survival at it’s best, everything that fire represents or perhaps nothing for nothing is ever like what it first appears. On the island, fire stood for hope and rescue to some but for others it stood for fear, power and death. Fire is two-sided. At first, for the boys, the fire on the mountain made them feel powerful that something was being done and with that, it made them feel as though they could conquer an important task. But, as quickly as the fire and pride built up, it caused the boys to feel vulnerable by lighting the entire forest on fire. This made them feel like the very thing they created to stand above rose up to be bigger then them, leaving them confused and weak. It was a reality check that they are not in control and that their actions could have greater consequences then they had ever imagined. Also, in the process of lighting ...

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...f evil. He proves that when society turns a blind eye, which they often will do, evil has the chance to slide in and take it’s place, leaving it too late to realize the full consequences of their actions, leaving it too late to return to a sense of freedom and bliss. Therefore, the easiest answer and the easiest reaction is not the correct and most beneficial.

Humankind will forever allow evil to prevail over good, consciously or not. As assumed in Lord of the Flies by William Golding, humankind will always just see first impressions, they will typically go against their beliefs when challenged and will search constantly for the easy solution, all of which allows the evil in humans to gain power. Whether humans are good or evil will forever remain one of man’s greatest questions; just remember, “Our greatest evils flow from ourselves.” (Jean Jacques Rousseau).

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