Jack: The hero of most fly king, Jack Meridoff, is a "fly of the Lord" which is a demonic character in the story. Jack is inherently evil and has no emotions against any creature. His appearance and action threatened others at their first encounter. A top savage man, Jack, hopes for hunting and killing more, but the main reason why the boy broke. Some say that Jack represents evil of human nature, but in the end Jack is mostly a hero. With his totalitarian leadership, he was able to organize the boys into a useful and productive society. From the beginning of the novel, Jack threatened the other boys with burning red hair.
Jack is the most experienced man in Jack's transfiguration novel "The Lord of the Flies" at William Golding's Lord of the Flies. Jack started the novel as a somewhat arrogant choir and he cries when he was not the leader chosen on the island. Jack gradually became a vicious murderer who does not respect his life. - Simon William Golding in William Golding's "Fly King" states at the beginning of the novel, "Christian figure, human lover, foresightful person". He was a child Jack desperately told in Chapter 1. Since then, we have seen him alone than the company, because his shame makes it hard for him to bravely talk publicly. But his feelings for other boys have never been weakened.
In this article we will focus on two novels, "The Lord of the Flies" by William Golding and "Wuthering Heights" by Emily Bryan. I will focus on the ongoing conflict between the Jay of the Lord's fly and the leader of the island and the conflict with Edgarrington on Heathcliff of "Wuthering Heights" and Catherine Ensche. Two authors show how to use different programs to express emotional and behavioral differences between barbarous behavior and civilized behavior.
Ralph and Jack of "Flying King" compared Ralph and Jack of William Golding 's novel "The Lord of the Flies". Ralf is an excellent leader, is responsible and represents all good things. Jack is a destructive hunter, selfish, and evil. These two heroes can be compared by actions as a leader, their character, and the behavior they symbolize in the story. - True depiction of the children in "Fly King" In the novel by William Golding "The Lord of the Flies" you can see the child's reaction to a situation. If you have the opportunity, children will choose to play and play, not bored with boredom. In addition, when children are not seeing them by other adults, they look to other children. Finally, when a child does not have the authority of an adult, they will be biased toward barbarity.