Day 1
Where are we? What are we doing here? How did we get here? So many questions are going through my mind. I don’t know the date, or time and I really couldn’t care less to be honest, but I guess I should wright the year at least in case one day some one finds this and discovers I’m a great journalist and wants to read my collection of events on this island. The year is 1951 for you.
This is ridiculous we were on a plane, a school trip coming from England. The plane caught on fire and smashed into the ground fast. I survived as did the rest of the choirboys and so far we are aware there are no adults around or at least I can’t see any.
The choirboys and I assembled and walked around aimlessly for few minutes, trying to put pieces together until we heard this loud, irritating noise. We thought nothing but to follow it. We followed it into a clearing there we found a met 2
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I’m just Jack, ordinary Jack. I don’t understand why Ralph had to be leader, he probably couldn’t even lead a group of bugs. I’m a much better leader and shouldn’t just be in charge of just the choirboys its like he tried to win me over or something because he felt the need to give me leadership over my choir, its not like I didn’t already have that. Ralph is always insisting on us building a signal fire, whereas we need food and need to go out hunting. Who cares about a fire? Anyways Ralph, Simon and I went off to explore the island and try to discover whether it is uninhabited or not. On our way back to the lagoon I found a small pig tangled in the creepers, I raised my knife but couldn’t quite kill it, but next time there will be no mercy. When we got back ralph still had this idea of a signal fire and we all raced to the top of the mountain collecting firewood and no one but me thought to use piggy’s glasses lens to magnify the light and get the fire started. Like everyone is so dumb or
Character Description- gives the reader the perspective of the lives of the "New People"; the artist
Humans have a monster inside of them that is subdued by society, and if society is taken away, then that “monster” will consume them. This is true for most people, but not all humans are like that. One of the most notable humans to over come the “monster” is Simon, a character from the book “Lord of the Flies” by William Golding. The story is set on an island in the Pacific Ocean. A plane full of British schoolboys crash lands on an island and they’re stranded there with no adults, no society, and no rules. Simon is one of the few characters that stay sensible and good throughout the story. He has a sixth sense about things happening around him, he is kindhearted, and he faints a lot which give the appearance of him being weak.
Lord of the Flies is a novel written in 1954 by William Golding. A plane carrying a group of British citizens trying to escape the nuclear war gets shot down and lands on a deserted tropical island. The only survivors are children ranging from the age of six to twelve-year-olds. The younger children are nick named “littluns” and the older children are nick named “biguns”. At first, they celebrate their freedom from the war but then they begin to realize there aren't any adults to supervise them, they don't have food, they don't have shelter, and they are stranded on a deserted tropical island. One of the characters Piggy is classified as smart but is fat chubby and has asthma so he isn't capable of much things. “ “My auntie told me not to
“We saw—” “—the beast—” Published in 1954, Lord of the Flies is set in “...the near future.”
The novel, Lord of the Flies by William Golding, is a story about a group of British school boys that get stuck on an island after they crash on a plane. They are forced to use the resources around them and have to trust each other, and it works out for a while, but while you read on, you begin to recognize a strain between the two main characters, Jack and Ralph, which really spins out of control at the end. William Golding uses British school boys for this novel because those kind of boys are well mannered and don’t seem like the kind of people to turn into uncultured savages. They are expected to have manners and common etiquette. He uses an example of social commentary by using the little ‘uns in the book as not being able to take care of themselves, and that is supposed to represent the society that we live in, that we can’t take care of ourselves without help. Foreshadowing is subtle, uses unimportant details to lead up to the climaxes of the novel, and is the basis of good vs. evil during the novel.
“We hold these truths to be sacred and undeniable; that all men are created equal and independent, that from that equal creation they derive rights inherent and inalienable, among which are the preservation of life, and liberty, and the pursuit of happiness”. This famous phrase that derives from the Declaration of Independence brought forth notion that of all of humanity is to be acknowledged as equal and are guaranteed rights of life which are to be upheld by the society in which they are apart of. A similar philosophy, along with others, is represented as characters in William Golding's novel Lord of the Flies. Jack, Ralph, and Piggy are three characters created by Golding to
Dear Diary, I’ve had to leave my parents because of the war. On the way to safety our plane was shot down. We have landed on an island and have a small group of boys stranded here. Oh how rude of me?! I’m Noah just in case any nutter would find this out here in the middle of nowhere. In case you’d need a description of me I am about 4’8, have brown hair, green eyes, and weigh 93 lbs. When the plane was shot down I went unconscious, after a while I woke to the sound of a high pitched noise. That I later figured out was the conch that Ralph and Piggy have found. After our first meeting we explored some of the island, but I wasn’t allowed to go cause I’m just a littlun even though I’m 8 and a half years old! The older boys went out and caught a pig for us. Jack is the leader of the hunters I like him a lot. He is very deft. I think Ralph is batty to be our leader, but that’s just me. The plane that crashed on the island is known as the scar of the island, because before anyone had been here it had no damage done to it. We have taken a unwanted jeopardy by being stuck here. This is all I have to say for now. I just hope I’ll get back to mum and dad soon…
In the book Lord of the Flies, Ralph and Simon seem to be good characters. But there is a notable difference between the two mention characters in their goodness. Ralph and Simon were the “good guys” compared to Jack and his cronies. Ralph and him were against Jack ruling because they knew how bad Jack was.
In the story “Lord of the Flies” by William Golding, he shows how the boys lost all innocence and civilization. The boys went from having innocent child minds to taking lives of other people, acting savage, and losing all civilization due to problems on the island. The boys had forgotten where they came from and became savage in order to survive; it was the need of survival that caused the loss of innocence among the boys.
In the novel Lord of the Flies, by William Golding, a group of English boys in their adolescence are stranded on an island. They crash-land while being evacuated because of an atomic war, so the boys must learn to cooperate with each other in order to survive. The boys are civil at first, but the bonds of civilization unfold as the rapacity for power and immediate desires become more important than civility and rescue. The conflict between Ralph, the protagonist, and Jack, the antagonist, represents the conflict between the impulse to civilization and the impulse to savagery, respectively. In Lord of the Flies, Golding uses Ralph and Jack’s struggle for power to show that greed and lust for power can corrupt the best
We crashed yesterday. We came upon an island, the choir boys and I. We wandered through the forest. Good lord, the stench of this place. As I scratch this on a piece of bark I found on the overgrown forest floor, I try to not think of England, lest I become homesick. The other choir boys still recognize me as their leader, even when there are no adults around.
William Golding’s Lord of the Flies repeatedly contrasts with the morality-driven views of the controversial philosopher Frederick Nietzsche. Golding’s allegorical novel tells the story of a group of young boys who remain stranded on an island and left to their own instincts. Golding and Nietzsche would argue the issues the boys face are based on the morality and nature of man. Ralph, the protagonist, is delegated power by the other boys, while Jack, the antagonist, quickly becomes jealous of Ralph’s power. In Lord of the Flies, the conch, the masks, and the “lord of the flies” represent civilization, freedom and evil respectively. Golding supports a Judeo-Christian order, in
When a group of children become stranded on a deserted island, the rules of society no longer apply to them. Without the supervision of their parents or of the law, the primitive nature of the boys surfaces. Consequently, the boys live without luxury that could have been obtained had they maintained a society on the island. Instead, these young boys take advantage of their freedom, and life as they knew it deteriorates. Lord of the Flies is influenced by the author's life and experiences. Golding's outlook on life changes, due to his heavy involvement in W.W.II, to his current philosophy that "The shape of society must depend on the ethical nature of the individual, and not on any political system
Finally, I am finished with middle school. Anxiously thinking about the first day of high school, I knew that it would be hectic and wild, but I was ecstatic. Of course, the night before I could not sleep. I lay awake dreaming about how my first day at John Paul II will go. How will it be meeting new people and seeing old friends from last year? Will high school be hard? Will I get lost? I kept thinking about the unknown and worst possible outcomes. My first day of high school was unexpected.
Could civilization live a normal and stable life, without any rules and orders to obey? Could you picture, New York City, with no laws to follow and everyone doing as they please? Just imagine the disasters that we will experience. In the novel, Lord of the Flies, written by William Golding, we see how each individual character reacts differently to the exposure of complete freedom from an organized society. Also, awe see how this separation from a structural society causes chaos among all these different characters.