Inner Evil in Lord of the Flies by William Golding

626 Words2 Pages

Inner Evil Throughout the novel Lord Of The Flies, the boys on the island are continuously faced with numerous fears. Subsequently there is nothing on the island which they fear more than the beast. The beast is not a tangible object that can be killed or destroyed by conventional means, but an idea symbolizing the primal savage instincts within all people. Its Golding’s intention to illustrate the innate evil inside man through his view of human nature, the actions of the Jack and his tribe, and the relationship between the beast and the school boys. Golding wanted to reveal to the reader his point of view and theory of human nature. He wanted to make it clear that each member of humankind has a dark side, which is portrayed throughout the book. Golding uses the boys fear of the beast as the scapegoat into their transformation as savages and ideal the inner evil. Their own imagination creates the beast, “a snake like creature in the trees”(Golding 124), and when a dead parachutist lands on the mountain they feel they have proof of the beast’s existence. The boys visualize the...

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