Rhetorical Device Analysis The book Lord of the Flies is an amazing novel written by William Golding about a group of boys who have to survive alone on an island due to a plane crash. The boys gather on the island and make a plan to be rescued. They establish rules and vote for a chief, Ralph, one of the older boys on the island, wins to the other candidate Jack. After weeks of being on the island, the boys start becoming unproductive and miss the chance of being saved by a ship. Ralph calls another meeting to reinforce the rules they made for survival, such as keeping the fire burning. Jack rebels against the rules and influences many other boys to follow. During Jack’s speech, he uses ethos, pathos, and logos to try and persuade his audience. …show more content…
At first, Jack makes fun of them for being afraid and crying all the time, instead of them helping on the island, then he states that fear can’t hurt them. The littluns are still frightened so Jack reassures them there is no beast,“Well then-I’ve been all over this island. By myself. If there were a beast I’d have seen it.” (Golding 83). Jack uses ethos by reassuring that since he is a hunter, he would be the one to know if there was a beast on the island. Jack expressing that he is a hunter implies that he wants the group to think that he is strong and