Roger Lord Of The Flies Character Analysis Essay

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Within each of us lurks a beast waiting for the first opportunity to bare its ugly fangs. A vestige of ages past, when violence and destruction was man’s only language, the beast only needs a bit of chaos to resurface. William Golding’s novel, Lord of the Flies, is hinged on this idea. In the story, a group of English schoolboys are stranded on an island without a single adult. They try initially to keep a rough semblance of civilization in place, calling assemblies and lighting signal fires, but the beast is soon awoken from its primeval slumber to wreak terror among them. Golding makes it his duty to reveal the innate evil of the human soul in Lord of the Flies by not only displaying general chaos, but detailing specific instances where the violent nature of man bleeds through. The “darkness of man’s heart” (Golding 202) is demonstrated when Roger feels the sudden urge to throw rocks toward a younger boy, when the boys’ game of mock hunting turns a little too real, and when the little savages murder Simon in a passionate frenzy. …show more content…

His hold on civilization and the terms of nice society are the weakest and the first to decay. Roger’s inner beast stirs slowly at first when he, in only the fourth chapter,“stooped, picked up a stone, aimed, and threw it at Henry” (Golding 62). Fortunately for the younger boy, Roger was restrained by a lingering consciousness of the rules of civilized life and did not throw to hit. However, it is clear that the idea of hurting, of maiming Henry was fascinating to Roger. If the human soul is not wicked to begin with, then why would children who have no cause to hate each other desire to hurt one another? Later in the book, Roger’s sense of morals decomposes completely, leaving a sadistic savage in its place who tortures SamnEric and murders

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