What Is There Freedom In Lord Of The Flies

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Most people think they want to be free and not have any rules, but really they don’t. In the book Lord of the Flies, by William Golding, it shows you that humans must have security, freedom, rules, and a government, to live in a safe environment, and a functioning community.
First, in the beginning of the book the conch represented the rules, Ralph being the leader represented a government, the boys not having adults represented freedom, and all of them working together represented security. So at the beginning of the novel they were perfectly fine, but soon everything started to fall apart. A boulder pushes Piggy to his death, and he lets go of the conch so it shatters. Then, everyone except Piggy, Sam and Eric, and some littluns joined Jack’s tribe, and Jack wouldn’t lead them as well as Ralph. They stopped working together and they were in either Jack’s tribe, or Ralph’s tribe so there was no security because they were all enemies now. The only thing left is that there is no adults and that is what causes all of the problems, and why there is no control.
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I think it symbolized ourselves and how we should be afraid of ourselves because of what we are capable of. The boys had fear, and they needed adults, which is why they turned into monsters. If you thought there was a monster under your bed, and you were afraid of it, the reasonable thing to do is act tough and act like you can handle it. I think that is what the boys did in this situation with the beast. When the little boy with the “mulberry-colored birthmark” told the older boys about “the snake-thing”, they acted carelessly, but truly they were afraid he was telling the truth, so they acted tough like they could handle anything, and that started affecting them, making them believe they were stronger and they didn’t care, which eventually turned into a reality even if they weren’t the strongest. And in reality the beast is within

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