The Lord Jehovah is an invisible but strong, taboo for an old life. If parents and school, police and law, around children are protected. (Page 62). "Fly King" written by William Golding is a book showing that anything can happen without restrictions (laws, regulations). If it is just a child, not a parent, the world may be seriously damaged. If you are trapped in the island and you are 12 years old, you will be asked this question.
However, in literature and life, this is the process of growth. This is the main theme of the fly. The theme of literature is the core theme or concept of the whole story. In the flies of the Lord, innocent loss is strongly depicted by several events that change life. Despite the young age, boys' experiences made them older than them. The loss of an innocent theme has been revealed in many respects in the novel. As the story began, the boy's plane collided against an uninhabited tropical island, leaving a huge "scar" in the wilderness of the past. It foretells the transformation of men from civilized boys to malicious barbarians and will soon lose all previous innocence. Just as the crashing plane wakes up and has left its destruction, the behavior of the boy will soon leave permanent wounds in their soul and eventually end their innocence.
In this course we will explore some of the main uses of symbolism of William Golding's classic novel The Lord of the Flies. The symbol reinforces the theme of the author by communicating information to the reader. In Lord of the Flies, the golding uses the islands, the sea, the shell of shells, the eyeglasses of piglets and the king of fly as a symbol. Cross and bones. Yin and Yang. Smiley face When listening to these explanations, you may suddenly see an image. It is also possible that the meaning associated with them usually comes to mind. This is how the symbol works. They are not mere arbitrary objects and designs, they represent a larger idea, ideal, or concept. The same applies to literature. The author uses symbolism to convey important ideas and information in text. In William Golding's classic novel Lord of the Flies, symbolic images and objects are more important than the appearance of their surfaces.