The Lord of the Rings

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    Human nature Combined with Order and Chaos in Lord of the Flies In every individual, there is a savage beast lurking inside, waiting to unleash itself at the breaking point. In the novel, the boys turned to savagery in their time of desolation. This aftermath is from the manifestation in humans, and how humans are selfish and narcissistic animals. With most people, fighting fire with fire is the natural instinct to resolve an issue, which is traced back to one’s barbarous thoughts, that live…

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    Evil In Lord Of The Flies

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    In the book, Lord of the Flies, William Golding is trying various allegories to prove whether a man is inherently born evil or with virtuous qualities. Through the lens of psychology, the author is trying to prove that man is inherently born evil. He proves this by comparing the virtuous people with individuals who lack essential traits of civilization. In the end, it can easily be interpreted that a virtuous person can drift to the wrong path. For example Ralph, who, in the commencement of the…

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    Saved by the Naval Officer Unlike every Nicholas Sparks book,not every book ends with a happily ever after and every problem resolved. In William Golding's book, Lord of the Flies, he left plenty of unresolved conflicts. By analyzing the last chapter of the book, he leaves the reader at a state of “What just happened?”, but also needing to hear why he ended it the book the way he did. Although it had enough details and made plenty of sense, the book's suspense level was at a maximum and he just…

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    want to know how a book ends. That is the author's point though; to leave a reader pondering and wanting more. In other cases authors tell the readers exactly what happens without any questions unanswered. That also works for many readers. However, in Lord of the Flies by William Golding, the book ends in such a manner that completes the story and gives the reader an acceptable ending through the use of the naval officer and the ship out in the bay. To begin, Mr. Golding tells the story in an…

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    millions of years, advancing from an early hominid to the modern image of man. The human race has come considerably far, and what helped them get this far were their complex brains, utilitarian inventions, and communicative societies. In the novel Lord of the Flies by William Golding, a group of English schoolboys are stranded on a deserted island in the middle of the ocean. As time passes, the boys are faced with a myriad of issues including rescue, food, power, society, and a beast. Society,…

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    William Golding’s Lord of the Flies makes use of a moral allegory to display his belief that man is naturally bad, using Jack to represent evil. During a meeting, while Piggy has the conch, Jack begins speaking out of turn. While arguing the necessity of rules, Jack says “Bollocks to the rules! We’re strong--we hunt! If there’s a beast, we’ll hunt it down! We’ll close in and beat and beat and beat--!” (Golding 91). Now separated from civilization and society, and therefor from the rules that…

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    During the course of this book there are many cases where the characters have been shown progressively becoming more savage. Some of the most convincing cases of developing savagery happen during the hunts. During the first chapter of the book the first hunt takes place, this was the most civilized hunt when the boys still carried their innocence. “They knew very well why he hadn’t: because of the enormity of the knife descending and cutting into living flesh; because of the unbearable blood”…

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    Have you ever been thought of less than or looked down on? Lord of these flies by William Golding is a book on how a plane crashes and only kids surviving are left with no adults or authority, as they try to survive they change in ways that are not good. Piggy, one of the characters is the main one who gets bullied or looked down on. The entire time he gets run over and told what to do while they treat him not like a Person. Piggy, who is made fun of for being fat ,poor eyesight gets hurt by…

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    Derrick Robie's Crimes

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    William Golding's fictional novel Lord of the Flies and Maria Mauro’s article “Children Who Murder: Jordan Brown, Eric Smith and Others: Jordan Brown: Too Young to Kill?” depict the horrific behavior of children in order to show the world that society must require consequences to deter such atrocities from happening. Mauro discusses a 13 year-old named Eric Smith, who murdered 4-year-old Derrick Robie in a park in Steuben County, New York. Eric dropped two big rocks on Derrick's head which…

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    While reading “The Lord of the Flies” by William Golding, I paid most of my attention to Simon. Simon is viewed as a much more confusing kid in the beginning. Simon starts getting more involved and not really known as the weird gay kid anymore. He had hung around with Ralph and Piggy helping out them while the others didn’t care. The author made Simon a much more like Christ-figure within the story; during Chapter 7 he tells Ralph that he will get back home.His visions become worse; he starts…

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