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    A dragon and a demon, what could they possibly have in common? Actually more than you think. They are both enemies to all, terrorizing the people everywhere they go. Hearing their names can make the hairs on the back of your neck on edge. Grendel and Smaug are creatures alike, but like most of you thought, they have their differences. Smaug and Grendel's similarities are uncanny, from their hatred for all things good to their strength. The most undeniable thing they have in common is their…

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    Body Paragraph 1 TS- Golding’s writing foreshadows the savagery of Idi Amin through the behavior of the antagonist Jack in his novel, Lord of the Flies. MI1- Firstly, one of the greatest similarities that Idi Amin and Jack share is that they seized power “Illegally”. S1- Jack began to become popular among the other boys on the island due to his ethic to exclude work from their time on the island, because of this he gained strength in numbers, later making him the undeclared leader. S2- Just as…

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    In Lord of the Flies, William Golding expresses mankind’s essential illness as the takeover of fear over a person’s personality and decision making. The boys in the novel let their fear of a fictitious “beast” figure dominate their lives on the island in which they inhabit, leading to their eventual demise into savagery. One of the boys, Simon, states “...maybe there is a beast...What I mean is...maybe it’s only us.” He then “became inarticulate in his effort to express mankind's essential…

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    In the novel, The Lord of the Flies, the author uses symbolism to tell the story. Symbolism means that you use symbols to represent ideas. Because of the symbolism in the Lord of the Flies, it is rarely clear the reason why the story is written, and it was often confusing. The three main symbols the author uses are the conch, the beast, and fire. The conch in the book represents power. Whenever it was mentioned, it showed that whoever had possession of it, had influence and control over the…

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    During the twentieth century, author William Golding produced one of the most groundbreaking novels of the era, “Lord of the Flies,” confronting the psychological aftermath of World War Two. Published in 1954, in the midst of crisis among the nation, Golding sets “Lord of the Flies” in the backdrop of an atomic war, in which a group of young boys deserted on an island, due to a plane crash, fear an imaginative creature they call “the beast.” Symbolizing fear, war and savagery of human nature,…

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    Can you imagine being stranded on an island alone only with a group of kids and no adults? What would you do if you were in that situation? Do you think you would stay calm and in control? Well, in The Lord of the Flies this is the reality of a group of boys, fighting for their lives and dealing with insanity. Their inner beast showed then and it was inevitable. What do you think? Do you think that there is a beast in all of us? Or do you think you could have kept yourself under control?…

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    The Beast The human mind can be used to create art, compose music and solve problems. It can also be used to cause arguments, create weapons, and support wars. In his book, Lord of the Flies, William Golding describes his experience with World War II. In the book, a plane carrying several boys who are trying to escape the war crashes on an island, and the boys struggle to find and kill the “beast.” The beast represents the loss of humanity, triggered by human fears, individual savagery, and…

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    The first six chapters of William Golding's Lord of The Flies investigates the distribution of leadership throughout the batch of boys stuck on the island. The main leaders, Ralph and Jack, are both goal oriented, decisive, and empowering. Although they both are capable to lead, their points of view on the situation at hand are conflicting to one another. Ralph is focused on shelter and rescue while Jack is looking to hunt and play rather than finding a way off the island and back to…

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    Everyone has a personal fear, whether it’s make believe or real. In the book,The Lord of the Flies a group of boys was mistakenly dropped on an isolated island off of an airplane left with no source of authority at all. While they all battled through man versus self conflicts in the book, along came a thing in the that they all feared. They called it a beast. Just about all of the boys believed that this “beast” was a real “snake like” thing, but only one came to a realization of what it really…

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    In The Lord of the Flies, by William Golding, the character of the Beast embodies the basic human emotion of fear, and how it starts to develop into bigger extremes of fear over time. As fear builds up, savagery also begins to take hold of the boys. As the boys grow more vicious, the the beast becomes more real. The Beast develops first within the imagination of the boys, then it takes on physical shape, until finally, it becomes idolized as a totemic, god type figure. In the beginning of…

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