Theme Of Innocence In Lord Of The Flies

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Innocence lost
There have been Monsters lurking in the corrupted minds of children since the beginning of their life when they could imagine them. These imaginations have been taking credit from the fear of the real monsters. Lord of the Flies by William Golding is a novel that illuminates the natural horror of humanity, and how it corrupts us and our children. William Golding created Lord of the flies as a novel to be symbolic, not as one whole but as in tiny metaphors and symbols that represent certain aspects of the young boys’ lives. “Everything is a symbol of something it seems, until something is proven otherwise” (Foster 112). The Conch shell, Piggy’s glasses, The island, and most importantly the Beast. When first stranded on the island the young boys, some as young as six have fear and despair come over them. A natural feeling all humans experience especially young ones that have just witnessed death for the first time and …show more content…

Ralph was so concerned with keeping the community together and trying to get everyone to focus on getting rescued that he was missing on what the other boys had discovered. Savagery, they had indulged in it and were free to do as they please, Jack was the leader of the savage hunters and soon Ralph the original “chief” had to join in the game of killing the pig. “There is no good without free will. Without the ability to freely choose-or-regret-the good, an individual possesses no control over his own soul. And without control, there is no possibility of attaining grace”(Foster 112). The free will of Jack and the other boys capturing and slaughtering the pig creates great excitement for them. Their blood lust is so strong that the thought of killing one of the other boys for fun is seen to be more thrilling than the civilized notion of how savage that way of think truly

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