Insert Creative Title Here In the dystopian novel Lord of the Flies by William Golding, shows the importance of civilization and the dangers of evil inside all of us. There are difficult factors within ourselves we have to face. Everyone has the ability of good and evil, anyone can be tempted to cross each line when pressured by a situation; this reveals itself in the novel through major characters such as Jack, Ralph and Piggy. Early in the novel the boys are struggling with good and evil, maily Jack. Jack is the first to show signs of savage-like behavior with his impulsive need to hunt and kill. “But I shall! Next time! I’ve got to get a barb on this spear! We wounded a pig and the spear fell out. If we could only make barbs-” (Golding 51). Ralph is trying to tell Jack about the shelters but Jack is concerned about everyone wanting meat. He went off to hunt by himself but didn’t catch anything. He’s explaining to Ralph that he will get a kill by making barbs, showing his obsession with killing and crossing that line to evil. Jack uses being in charge of hunting and killing as a role of leadership to make himself to make himself feel better. …show more content…
Piggy finds himself eager to be apart of the other boys. “Kill the beast! Cut his throat! Spill his blood!” (152). Piggy and Ralph are caught up in the other boys’ actions with the tribe dance, they lose it. After the night of Simon’s murder, Piggy tells Ralph it is an accident. Piggy was reassuring himself because he does not think he is capable of murder. Piggy gets corrupted by the way the other boys are acting, they have gone