Isolation In Lord Of The Flies, By William Golding

664 Words2 Pages

When you feel differently than most of society or isolated from most of society is it easy to be forgotten. Sometimes you have to make a choice, the choice of being a conformist but being unhappy, or doing what you want and being isolated. Robinson Crusoe was pressured by his father and by society to live a normal life, and when he didn't, it could be viewed as the beginning of his demise. Robinson Crusoe had all of the resources to live a regular and successful life. It would not have been perfect, but he wouldn't have been a low class citizen and he would have had a very secure and reliable career. But instead of listening to his fathers explicit warmings to not go out to sea and be in the middle class he let his desire outweigh his parents advice. This aspect of the story is very parallelable to …show more content…

Typically the character will overestimate their own capabilities to overcome a certain situation and it,always results in them getting punished by the gods. This exact thing happened to Robinson and he was too blind to realize. In The Life and Adventures of Robinson Crusoe as a result of him not listening to his father, he ends up feeling isolated. Isolation is one of the most common themes in the the book and it is also a common theme in Lord of the Flies. Here is one of the quotes that represents isolation. "How infinitely good that providence is, which has fettled in its government of mankind such narrow bounds to his fight and knowledge of things; and thought he walks in the midst of so many thousand dangers, the fight of which, if discovered to him, would distract his mind, and sink his spirits, he is kept serene and calm, by having the events of the things hid from his eyes, And knowing nothing of the dangers which surround him."(155) At this point in the story, Even though Robinson Crusoe is on the island, he is partially unaware to the extent of

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