Brutality And Evil In Lord Of The Flies Essay

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Robert Louis Stevenson once said, “In each of us, two natures are at war – the good and the evil. All our lives the fight goes on between them, and one of them must conquer.”. This internal conflict couldn't be more evident than in the novel Lord of the Flies by William Golding, as he uses a group of boys stranded on an island, liberated from authority, as they fight between their good and bad sides. In this novel, William Golding demonstrates how all human beings have a natural capacity for brutality and evil. One way that William Golding conveys that all human beings have a natural capacity for brutality and evil is through the character of Jack. During an assembly, Ralph addresses the growing fear of the beast among the boys and the need to …show more content…

The boys have savagely massacred Simon in a frenzy as they attack his body with their “teeth” and “claws” in a tearing motion. There was no thought of what the beast could be or if what they were attacking was the beast as they were overwhelmed with the feeling of mass panic and fear. Instead of using critical thinking as they would've previously done in civilization, "the crowd surged” onto Simon, attacking him with “no words” as they let their inner savagery annihilate any goodness left in them, giving in to brutality as it is their human nature. After Jack invites all the boys in Ralph's group to come and have a feast, everyone starts eating. While Jack starts to brag about his effective leadership he gets his hunters to do their tribal dance which units the boys as they go around in circles and chant, this convinces many of the littluns in Ralph's group to join Jack’s tribe and also join in on the dance. As Piggy and Ralph looked upon the tribe in envy “Found themselves eager to take a place in this demented but partly secure society. the chant rose a tone of agony ‘Kill the beast! Cut his throat, Spil his blood’(Golding,

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