LOTF ESSAY By: Chase Louis A group of boys crash on a desert island and have to choose to live like a savage or be civilized until their rescue. To have civilization you need a good leader and being and good leader is knowing what's right and what's wrong to do or how to act when it comes to behavior. Ralph is a good leader because he is keeping his group under control. He also knows what is right and what is wrong. To be a good leader you have to make sure that you have a firm set of rules and a way to keep in contact with the group. “We can use the conch to call for a meeting between the boys Piggy explained”. Ralph is showing that he is a good leader by taking Piggy’s advice Ralph is showing leaderism by finding
A leader must possess leadership skills, whether good or evil. In Lord of the Flies, Ralph possesses three good leadership skills. Three leadership skills a leader needs to have is responsibility, determination, and initiative.
Hannah Mary Tabbs was an African American woman involved in a famous murderer in Philadelphia in the late 1800s. She and her accomplice George Wilson, murdered and dismembered the body of Wakefield Gaines. The torso of Gaines was discovered in William B. Mann’s ice pond, several towns away. The remaining body parts were never found. Tabbs was known for her fierce temper and the black community feared her.
German journalist John Zenger once stated, “Great leaders are not defined by the absence of weakness, but rather by the presence of clear strengths”. When one is forced into a situation where a leader is necessary, a person that displays the fundamental attributes will successfully guide the society. Throughout the novel Lord of the Flies, the boys on the island represent various aspects of leadership, characterized by differing strengths. However, the protagonist’s, Ralph, leadership undoubtedly triumph over the other boys because his attributes allow him to be a powerful leader on the island. Throughout William Golding’s novel, he clearly depicts Ralph as an effective leader through his desire for the survival of all of the boys, his adamant
Ralph is regarded as a democratic and charismatic leader. He would base any decision on majority votes and he is all about getting a job done effectively and efficiently. For example, he would crack his head to build shelter and figure out ways to get themselves for being rescued. Eventually, majority of the group members become undisciplined and disobey Ralph’s commands and leave to join jack’s group. Consequently, Ralph, piggy and the twins are left on their own to be hunted by Jack’s tribe. Ralph is also a sensible leader; he only keens on being rescued rather than spending unnecessary time to go for hunting. As the novel progresses, Ralph witnesses the beating of Robert and finds it bizarre in chapter 7. Ralph is forced to hunt a boar for
In the 16-century on November 1519, Cortes and his men arrived in Tenochtitlan. Hernan Cortés and his army came to South America (Tenochtitlan) to claim new land for Spain. The Aztecs are Native American people who took over Northern Mexico at the tome of the Spanish conquest, early 16th century. The Aztecs had a nomadic culture and eventually settled on many small islands in Lake Texcoco in 1325 where they founded the town known as Tenochtitlan, which is now a modern day Mexico City. The Aztecs created an empire between the 15th century that was soon surpassed in size in the Americas only by that of the Incas.
The existence of mankind on earth relies on various factors. The basic needs for us humans to survive are food, water, shelter etc. These though, are only the physical needs of man. Humans also have social and mental needs. These needs require us humans to have law and order to be able to coexist peacefully with ourselves, nature and the environment. The only way that law and order can be achieved in human society is by a higher authority, or some form of government and/or leader. William Golding tries to touch on some of these aspects of our civilization through the various characters he creates in his novel, Lord of the Flies. Leadership plays a very important role in the novel as it does in real life for us, because the characters need
Leadership is a very important characteristic which consists of several unique qualities. It can be found in families, among friends, at work, and within everyday activities. Good leadership can be very productive and can create a positive atmosphere. There are several qualities that one possesses to be a great leader. In the book, Lord of the Flies, by William Golding, Ralph is the best leader. Throughout the novel Ralph shows initiative, determination, and responsibility in a way that makes him the best leader
To begin, the message shown in the events leading up to the conclusion is to “Never give up”. This is the message because the boys are living fine with each other, but then Jack and his tribe become savages. Jack becomes very violent because he “hurled his spear at Ralph” and some of the other boys become very violent as well (181). Roger becomes violent when he drops a rock on Piggy, causing him to fall “forty feet and [land] on his back”, and he sends a spear towards Ralph, who is trying to get away from them (181). When Piggy gets hit by the rock, the conch does as well and it shatters. Because the conch was a symbol of civilization, with it gone, they all act savage. Never give up is the message because the
A leader is someone who has determination. They are willing to do anything to benefit other people in order to help lead them to greatness. When I think of a leader, the people that come to my mind are those who have helped change the world. This includes George Washington, or Martin Luther King. Jr. I definitely do not think about Ralph from Lord of the Flies when I think of a leader. Some people may argue that Ralph kept the group together and knew what was best for the young boys. However, I am aware that Ralph had good ideas. For instance, the signal fire which, in the end, helped the boys get rescued was a good idea. Despite this, Ralph did not do an altogether good job at holding the group together. By the end of the novel, one boy went missing, two of his friends were murdered, and Jack's tribe had almost accomplished their goal of hunting Ralph down and placing his head on a stick.
Piggy urges Ralph to use what power he has left by calling a meeting: “’What’s grown-ups going to say?’ cried Piggy again…The sound of mock hunting, hysterical laughter, and real terror came from the beach. ‘Blow the conch, Ralph...You got to be tough now. Make ‘em do what you want.’ Ralph answered in the cautious voice of one who rehearses a theorem. ‘If I blow the conch and they don’t come back; then we’ve had it. We shan’t keep the fire going. We’ll be like animals. We’ll never be rescued.’” In this situation, Piggy is still worried about the punishment of his previous life. He is the closest thing to an adult on the island, and Ralph is the only one who advocates listening to him, illustrating Ralph’s connection to the rules of traditional civilization, which the other boys despise and want to escape through the island. After showing blatant disregard to their “chief’s” rules, they decide to escape the constraints of Ralph’s assemblies and embrace their inner savagery with Jack. Piggy urges Ralph to blow the conch, the symbol of his power throughout the book, but Ralph understands that his form of leadership is becoming the less desirable option to the boys: if he calls an assembly and the other boys do not respond, its power, and his civilization, will have completely disintegrated. Ralph constantly emphasizes their responsibilities on the island—specifically, tending to the signal fire.
In Harper Lee’s To Kill a Mockingbird, empathy is shown to change the thinking of the characters, giving them a more brave outlook in multiple situations. Empathy helps the characters feel for the people who surround them, and by doing so they are able to do courageous, unexpected things. The most prominent example of this is the “doomed” court case against Atticus and Tom Robinson.
As the days go by, the will to be free of all rules is starting to present itself as the civilized way of life begins to deplete and some of the boys start avoiding the rules. The rules that have been obeyed before, start to become irrelevant as Jack and his hunters forget to keep the fire going, they forget to put fresh water in the coconut shells and the littluns go to the washroom near the fruits but the conch’s power still prevails in bringing them together. The descent into chaos is manifested when Jack gets mad and says, “Conch, Conch, we don’t need the conch anymore. We know who ought to say things. [...] It's time some people knew they've got to keep quiet and leave deciding things to the rest of us.” (p.101-102) Jack is the first of the boys to descend into savagery and to ignore the rules of the conch. Nevertheless, most of the boys don’t take too long to accompany Jack and to descend into brutality themselves. This is emphasized when Jack and his tribe kill Piggy and break the conch.”The rock struck Piggy a glancing blow from chin to knee; the conch exploded into a thousand white fragments and ceased to exist.”(p.181) Piggy was the only one left that abided the rules of the conch and was trying to lead the boys away from inhumanity and back to the well moralized boys they were when they first arrived on
Piggy wilted. Ralph took the the conch from him and looked round the circle of boys. " I think this quote shows how if there is not a clear leader who makes sure that everyone abides by; or laws enforced, their will be people out of line, in a society. Here, Jack is upset that Ralph was voted as chief.
Ralph is an insufficient leader, which causes his society to greatly decline. Ralph creates the policy of only speaking when one holds the conch in their hands; only Ralph is allowed to interrupt since he is the leader. The boys are at the top of a mountain, defeated, because their fire didn’t stay lit. When Piggy tries to explain why it didn’t work, Jack interrupts him.
The discovery of the conch led to Ralph taking on the role of leadership. From the very beginning of the novel when Ralph meets Piggy and they find the conch, Ralph decides that he should be the one to blow the conch. “Ralph took the shell from Piggy” (Golding 16) without asking and proceed to attempt at blowing the conch. Ralph does not give Piggy a chance to try new things. Piggy had explained to Ralph how he was unable to blow the conch back home because his auntie did not allow him to on account of his asthma. In this instance Ralph was being a poor leader by not encouraging Piggy to try new things and reach out of his comfort zone. When Ralph does not have the shell in the beginning of the novel he is not responsible, but when he does obtain the shell he gains the leadership qualities that he needs to lead the group of boys. When Ralph exclaims "Seems to me we ought to have a chief to decide things" (Golding 22) to the boys, is when Ralph decides that he is going to be taking on responsibility as leader to keep the island in order. What Ralph signs up to do is proven to be a much harder task than he perceives later on in the novel.