Truths In Lord Of The Flies Quote Analysis

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Quotes and tie together Truths in Lord of the Flies from Historical Events Humans are known to make mistakes every once in awhile, but they can choose to learn from their mistakes or repeat them. In William Golding’s The Lord of the Flies, Ralph, Piggy, Jack, Simon, and a multitude of other young boys are deserted on an uninhabited island of paradise. They argued and fought each other, while not taking their situation as seriously as it was. Corruption formed between the opposing figures of authority, Jack and Ralph, and it resulted in most of the boys becoming brutal and relentless savages. With that ending, it is apparent that the boys made many mistakes along with the inevitable hardships the lack of civilization brought. Golding makes …show more content…

Within the book, the majority of the boys did not listen to Piggy for his foolish looks, yet he happened to be the wisest of them all. Later, Simon came to spread the news to Jack’s tribe of newly formed killers that there was no beast. Both Piggy and Simon were killed by the tribe. The question at hand is, why? Why would they destroy the greatest sources of knowledge they had? The incomplete but honest answer is fear. The other boys wanted to live in their utopia, where they could have fun on the island and have the thrill of chasing a beast that was in reality not physical but instead inside them. Piggy knew the way to have a functional and productive life; Simon knew that there was no physical beast. Children are often scared of the truth, but every human has fear on the inside. An example of a time in history that fear has conquered truth was when Jesus Christ was crucified over knowing what Christians believe to be the ultimate truth, that God is in fact real, and Jesus was the son of him. Jesus performed miracles, and that influenced people to believe that maybe, just maybe, their perfect beliefs were not as valid as they believed prior to him, or their world became too real. Humans can believe in something all they want, but until they see it before their eyes it is all a distant part of their lives. The fear arose from the people and that fear created hatred and denial, until they ended him. Fear came with denial, and denial came with rage. For example, when Simon spoke of Ralph getting back alright, Ralph just passed him off as crazy on page 86 of The Lord of the Flies, “"All the same. You'll get back all right. I think so, anyway."... When Simon was still silent Ralph said curtly, "You're batty."”. Piggy, Simon, and Jesus all were the light of truth, and the frightened offed them so they could stay in their bubbles of content. When the world becomes too real, people will do anything