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Lord Of The Flies Inherently Evil

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Society molds the inherent human nature of civilization. Without civilization, humans are stripped of all education and instilled values. Human nature is then either characterized by good or evil. William Golding accurately presents humans in his novel Lord of the Flies as inherently evil, which is supported by novels that reveal human greed and deception such as Animal Farm and To Kill a Mockingbird. Golding portrays human nature as evil in Lord of the Flies. When Simon tried to tell the other boys about the beast, they mistook Simon as the beast and killed him with “the tearing of teeth and claws” (Golding 153). The boys do not use reason and instinctively attack Simon because of their savage nature. Golding’s portrayal of human nature as evil is accurate in real life. Roger picked up stones on the shore and “threw it at Henry. Threw it to miss” (Golding 62). Roger is tempted to harm others once he is away from civilization because violence is part of human nature. …show more content…

Since Jack’s tribe needed fire, Jack raided Ralph’s camp and “from his left hand dangled Piggy’s broken glasses” (Golding 168). Instead of asking Ralph for fire, Jack stole Piggy’s glasses because his selfishness made him want sole possession of all the resources on the island. When Boxer becomes weak from old age, he is sent into a large van with the words, “Horse Slaughterer and Glue Boiler, Willingdon. Dealer in Hides and Bone-Meal" (Orwell 122). Napoleon promised the animals who reached age 12 a retirement but instead sent Boxer to a horse slaughterer to make profit off his

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