Helping the Boys Live on the Island The boys are on an island by themselves, with no adults. How will they maintain order? In Lord of the Flies by William Golding the audience hears about how a plane filled with boys survives after evacuating from England during World War II. The plane ends up crashing on an abandoned island and the boys set up a democratic government. The boys are peaceful until Jack decides he wants power and rebels against what Ralph decides. Jack does not let Piggy or the other boys talk when they have the conch which is the symbol of freedom to speech. Later into the story, Jack rises to power and separates from Ralph’s group. Jack brings many of the boys with him and forces others to join him. The boys in Lord of the Flies have a government but none that is suitable for their needs, so an oligarchy would better suit their needs. In the first place, all the boys value life in the beginning when they first crash. The boys are civilized until they elect a leader and have the conch to speak. When some of the boys …show more content…
The conch shell is used as permission to talk. If Jack, Ralph, Piggy, or any others have the conch they can speak. Jack and Ralph are selfish with the conch.. The person with the conch would be told to shut up or laughed at. The narrator says, “the small boy [holds] out his hands for the conch and the assembly [shouts] with laughter” (Golding 35). Even have the boys had a right to speak they did not really have that right.. The only ones that could speak without getting told to shut up or laughed at are Jack and Ralph. Jack, Ralph, and Roger were the ones who determine who could speak. Even when Ralph and Piggy just met Jack, Jack would not let Piggy speak. He would say mean words like “you're talking too much ... Shut up Fatty” (Golding 21). Jack is rude and careless with the younger children and Piggy. Jack did not give much of freedom to speak throughout the