Essay On The Relationship Between Jack And Ralph In Lord Of The Flies

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Ralph, Jack and all the other British school boys’ are finally rescued and realize their days of innocence are over. It seems as though all of their conflicts are resolved once they make contact with the Naval Officer. When the Naval Officer arrives, the boys’ melt into a puddle of depression. The school boys’ have been too engaged in prior conflict to consider being saved. They are convinced everything is much better than before. Every mind is caught analyzing their actions’ towards others. By analyzing the condition of Piggy’s glasses at the end of Lord of the Flies, one can see that the glasses have diminished; much like the boys’ relationships and conflicts. Once Ralph realizes there is a Naval Officer to the boys’ rescue, he gets unfathomably …show more content…

Jack still would like to think that he is the better leader because he was more aggressive than Ralph. He would like to think that he is the better leader because he put priorities before play. Although unsaid, both boys suffer from this conflict at the end of the story. When the officer asks who is in charge, Ralph is quick to say he is. Jack does not speak up because he is fearful that problems with start between him and Ralph. Ralph had little to no control over most of the boys’ towards the end of the story. Jack would believe he was the leader because he had more children on his side by the end. This conflict is unresolved because the boys cannot settle on which was …show more content…

The boys’ were too traumatized to be able to process their experiences on the island into full words. The boys’ felt after being on this island for so long, they had lost all sense of innocence. Jack and Ralph still were dealing with conflicts, because they both thought they were the better leader. William Golding ended this novel on a satisfying note. Jack, Ralph and the British school boys’ finally got rescued and Ralph was present when they did. William Golding accurately depicted how people would have felt if they had been on an island after a plane crash. Golding made it feel as though the book was written from a personal story. The novel was satisfyingly ended, resolved conflicts that were ongoing throughout the book, and revealed the boys’ true

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