Jack's Leadership In Lord Of The Flies

649 Words2 Pages

Sometimes, strong leadership does not mean being a morally good person. In William Golding’s Lord of the Flies, he explores the idea of people, children, in particular, going savage and whether children should be responsible for their actions. Once left without adult supervision, the stranded group of boys immediately vote Ralph as leader because he holds a conch shell. Jack, on the other hand, breaks away from this unjustness and creates a tribe of his own. Despite the fact that Ralph keeps hold of his moral compass, and his burning desire to be rescued, Jack is a better leader than Ralph. Ralph is the one who brought the group of boys together, but he can not manage to keep them that way. He blows on a conch shell and they come, meeting …show more content…

Being in his tribe was desirable, and in the words of one of the few who stuck with Ralph, “‘That’s where [the other boys have] gone. Jack’s party. [...] P’raps we should go too’” (Golding 148). Even though Ralph wrongly refuses to join Jack’s tribe, they have food and resources and community. Jack may make a cruel chief, but he has what it takes, unlike Ralph. Even the littluns agree, as one boy, Roger says, “‘He’s a proper chief, isn’t he?’” (Golding 159). No one wants to do what Ralph says, they argue and bicker and put up a fight when he tries to make them do things, even though he has their best intentions in mind. The children follow Jack, and do what he wants, because he makes them want …show more content…

It is clear, though, that Ralph is not the better leader, as he is weak and indecisive, and even though he has the right frame of mind, he simply can’t keep control of the boys. Good leaders take control, and “once they have made up their mind, they don't hesitate to commit--it's all hands on deck. They show great consistency with their decisions, rarely backing out or changing their minds” (“Leadership Skills”). Although Ralph wants to do the right thing, even he does not always follow his own rules, not to mention that he rarely enforces them, and no one takes him seriously. He is pressured to do risky things by Jack’s teasing, and gets easily fired up, but expects unreasonable things of people and snaps at them for not getting it done. Jack gives people what they want, but enforces rules all the

Open Document