In both novels, the hero is separated from the real civilization of all forms. In "Flying King", boys found themselves on a desolated island without a human life due to an airplane accident, and on "roads" men and boys lived in the destroyed destroyed United States of America It is here because of an unnamed natural disaster. Because of the lack of resources and necessity, the hero must necessarily find a means to survive - mainly through hunting and construction of shelters, but in 'way' men and boys they The rest of the food you can find.
William Golding 's novel "Lord of the Flies" uses a group of British boys to hang on desert islands to explain the malicious nature of mankind. The Lie's fly deals with the changes the boys experience as they gradually adapt to social freedom. William Golding 's basic philosophy is that human beings were born to be evil, such as Simon' s death, boys 'beasts, and Ralph' s enthusiastic way of doing things. Throughout this story, Simon behaves as an image of Christ. Simon 's death symbolizes the loss of religious reasoning. When boys killed Simon, they released their brutal impulses and adopted a kind of cannibalism. Even after Simon Jake and his tribe died without any confession about what they did, it became a second nature to kill them. The circle has become a horseshoe shape. One got up from the forest. Dark, come indefinitely. A scream that raised a groan in front of a beast seems to be a pain
Human inner savageness, inhuman behavior of men to others was first recognized by Simon, the character of the novel The Lord of the Flies. When the boys discussed the possibilities of beasts on the island, Simon said "It might be us only" (Golding, 126). Other bad actions Exploring this theme before killing Simon, other boys sang: "Kill the beast! Please cut his throat! Sprinkle his blood!" (Goal Ding, 219) Emphasize the inhumane behavior of the other boys and explain it in cruel details to show how they become barbarians:
Climax Simon meets the king of the fly at the vacant land of the forest and recognizes that the beast exists in all the boys on the island, not the body. When Simon approaches other boys and tries to convey this message to them, they fall down on him and cruelly kill him.