Lord of The Flies is a novel by William Golding about boys who land on an uninhabited island. The book mainly focuses on Ralph, the boy with the fair hair who goes on to lead the rest of the boys as chief. Throughout the book, they encounter challenges such as the spreading fear of a beast on the island, conflict inside the tribe, and getting rescued. Lord of the Flies brings up many questions about human nature and what is inside of us from birth. Subsequently, Lord of The Flies is a novel that suggests that there is evil inside everyone as the boys break their one symbol of unity and civility, break down into savage frenzies, and the representation of the devil within the novel directly tells one of the boys that they are a part of him. …show more content…
Ralph finds a conch shell at the beginning of the book and it resembles order, peace, and civility. Him and the other boys use this shell to unite everyone and let people talk without interruption. However, as tensions arise between Ralph and another boy named Jack, the reign of the conch eventually ends. Along with Piggy, the most sensible of the boys, the conch gets intentionally smashed under a rock: “The rock struck Piggy a glancing blow from chin to knee; the conch exploded into a thousand white fragments and ceased to exist” (Golding 181). Piggy dies and so does the conch, showing the lack of civility after the conflicts among themselves. Another example of the evil inside of people is when the boys get thrown into a killing frenzy, eventually murdering a boy. Simon was a boy who, after venturing around the island, knew that the beast was inside of them all along. Attempting to tell the others, he comes across the frenzied boys which resulted in his death. As the others didn’t care one bit, “Simon’s dead body moved out toward the open sea” (Golding 154), showing just how savage the boys were in ruthlessly killing one of their