"Ralf is a serious acquaintance of the end of innocence, the darkness of the human heart, and the pig scorpion, crying in the air" (Golding 225). In Lord of the Flies of William Golding, he shows that there is a possibility that good will be bad, with the theme of order and chaos. The first is the beginning of the island boys, the collapse of society, and the tragedy of their civilization. These boys are victims of a deteriorated civilization and have turned them into a ruthless and more beastic personality without any law, order or control.
The Lord of Fry liberates individuals from chaotic tyranny. When people handle rules, there is no confusion. In the king of the fly, shells mean society and order. The book starts with Ralph and piglets blowing snails. And I will call other boys to order and unite. Skinner explained this through people who are completely dominated by the environment. The shellfish resembles a school bell, and the boy came here after instinctively hearing the noise. I agree that people are truly under the control of the environment.
In this book "Lord of the fly", order and chaos continue to separate. Orders are traditionally represented by huts and shells, chaos represented by hunter's spears and jungle. However, after careful consideration, these examples do not support these examples, but they are subdivided into them. They hid it around, but the sow fought a different spear at her side. The rear ass blocked her and a sharp cross cut was torture. She had to make the wrong tree and deepen the spear; after that, any hunter could easily follow her through vivid blood ....
Symbol of snail in William Golding's "Lord of the fly" In William Golding's "Flying King", the conch represents a force and order. Power is expressed by the fact that you must hold it for talking and instructions are displayed by the meeting or assembly held by them convene in the past. The power of the shellfish started from page 22. Because the children voted to be a chief because Ralph had a snail. "He has a shell." "Ralph. Ralph!" "Let him be the chief of the trumpet." On page 22 of this excerpt, the skill of power, responsibility and leadership seems to come from a conch And it seems.