Savagery, uncivilized, and hypocritical children have clouded their judgment when trying to figure out if there is a real beastie. A monstrous figure frightens the juvenile boys that landed on this forsaken island. In the Lord of the Flies, these English boys are all alone to defend for themselves, thats when it all unravels. This mythical monster sooner called the “beast” is symbolized a fear of a mistaken beast, as the darkness of war, and the evilness of humanity waiting to be unleashed. The littluns fear a “beastie.” They have this idea of a creature that taunts them throughout the book. “The younger children first, then gradually the older ones…” (Doc A) This mythical assumption grows aching and antagonizing their brains. The scrawny mulberry-marked boy wanted to have a choice of words, and in document B Piggy sequels “Let him have the conch!” Ralph finally hands over the conch. The birth marked boy wanted to just see if there was a plan to get rid of the “snake-thing.” The group of boys giggled at the fact this boy with the …show more content…
This novel isn’t focused on war but on the evil dictatorship that comes from within war. In document C Golding states “The war produced one notable effect on me. It scared me stiff.” Throughout this book the boys veer of into separate groups and become exclusive in there own separate groups. The conception Golding was trying to address in the novel was that war came between the separate groups, there disputes. Them being all alone on a deserted island was like war. The crash left them stranded and alone. They had to hunt, and use there resources on the island to survive. The character Jack is a good example of a dictatorship. He was very obvious in his actions, and the most of the boys didn’t agree with what he did throughout this book. Somehow the “beastie” brought out everyone’s war side, the side that tends to stay hidden with in us but can be exerted by just one