Lord Of The Flies Fire Analysis

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The fire represents the path of which Ralph and Jack’s friendship and relationship turns bad because it is one of the few pieces of technologies on the island, which leads the boys to fight over it as it is one of, if not the most powerful thing on the island. Soon after the boys group up at the beginning of the book, they decide that starting a fire is a crucial step in a plan to being rescued. All of the boys agree on this. After Ralph, the “chief”, tells Jack and his hunters they need to keep the fire going in the event of a ship passing, Jack doesn’t listen and goes out into the forest to hunt. Ralph sees a ship passing by the island but realizes that Jack and his hunters didn’t keep the fire going, so he gets mad at them and says “you …show more content…

At first, they like each other and don’t see anything wrong with working with each other (they start the fire together and decide a course of action). As time goes by, they realize that they disagree on many things (main priorities) but end up apologizing to each other and attempt to fix up what happened. They soon realize that the whole thing was a mistake (again, main priorities are different) and that they are not happy because they want to do different things. So, they separate (split off into 2 different groups) and continue on doing what they choose, but the separation leaves their kids (meaning the other, younger boys) to choose what parent they like more and would like to live with. Ralph offers work and no play, which is not very appealing to them. Jack says if they join him they will have fun, food and will live a “luxurious” island life where there are no “rules! We’re strong - we hunt! If there’s a beast, we’ll hunt it down! We’ll close in and beat and beat and beat-!” (99) and will have everything they need, that is, everything an island can offer. Some of them go over to Jack, but some stay with Ralph. Then when Jack goes to steal the fire, more of the boys go over to him because they have fire, meaning warmth, and cooked food. Who wouldn’t go? The kids obviously would, because they are young and don’t know what is best, so they go with the “parent” that can offer more. As more and …show more content…

Ralph’s main priorities as “chief” include keeping the fire up and maintaining everyone on the island so they are as organized as possible, which may allow them to survive for a longer amount of time and/or increase their chances of rescue. On the other hand, Jack’s main priorities mainly include killing animals for meat. As chief, Jack letting the fire burn out shows Ralph that he can’t trust Jack and that Jack obviously wants to focus on different things other than the fire. The quote “How can you expect us to be rescued if you don’t put first things first and act proper?” (45) shows that Ralph’s idea and Jack’s plans of survival are completely different, Jack believing there is no chance that they will be rescued due to them being on an island in the middle of no-where, Ralph believing that they can increase the chance of survival by being organized. It also shows Ralph that Jack wants to be chief even though Ralph was chosen to lead the boys. It shows that Jack will be tough for Ralph to handle because he does what he wants, when he

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