Lord of the Flies is a novel about young English boys that have been deserted on an unin-hibited Island due to a plane crash. While the boys are all under the age of thirteen, the reader would assume that innocence is prevalent throughout the novel. Although, the circumstances of the situation bring the boys and the reader to realization that innocence has disappeared in this situation. As soon as the boys are faced with the obstacle of surviving with limited supplies is when innocence takes a quick turn for the young boys. The boys did not land on the island with their innocence already being taken away from them, but through the tragedy innocence was quickly left behind in a struggle for survival and power. While it can be said that innocence has been taken away from the boys very early on in the text, it does not mean that innocence does not prevail at points throughout. The novel is still centered around school boys, so the innocence shines through occasionally. The reason the inno-cence is taken away from the boys so quickly and drastically is because the boys are left to sur-vive on their own somehow. In the first chapter of the novel the boys are faced with how they will live on the island. They decide that they will need a chief to help have some order among the boys. This is the first sign to the boys and the reader, that their innocent days as …show more content…
When discussing the innocence in relation to Lord of the Flies the criminal-ity aspect of innocence is not at play, but more so dealing with sin, guilt, or moral wrong. All of the boys all on the island that are involved in the murder of Simon are guilty of these aspects of innocence. Murder is a form of moral wrong in almost all circumstances. The boys landed on the island “unacquainted with evil,”