The innocence of "Flying King" William Golding wrote the novel "Flying Flying King", "Following the defects of society to the defects of human nature". There is little knowledge about how to coexist in peace. In order to satisfy his premise, Golding tied a group of boys on the island, and they have to establish a government to survive. This story uses an important symbolic meaning to compare the life of the island with the whole world civilization.
William Golding's "Fly King" theme: Most people think that children are very valuable creatures. Some people think they are angels. However, in the wrong case, they may become savage beasts. Innocence leaves their body, they are no longer precious. The instinctive instinct survival begins, and they can become killers. In the book's flies, the theme is that children do not look innocent. At the beginning of the book, the boy seems to have peace and order.
The innocence of "Flying King" William Golding wrote the novel "Flying Flying King", "Following the defects of society to the defects of human nature". There is little knowledge about how to coexist in peace. In order to satisfy his premise, Golding tied a group of boys on the island, and they have to establish a government to survive. This story uses an important symbolic meaning to compare the life of the island with the whole world civilization.
The innocence of "Fly King" lost the innocence of "Flying King" and the boys who were innocent of the novel gradually lost. These boys were placed in a situation that they have only to grow and grow rapidly. They need to learn alone, to learn ways to survive each other, and to build an almost independent society. They learned slowly that they need to be leaders, but there is no adult before the role of authority.
At the end of the Lord's flies, Ralph screamed "innocent end" This lamentation follows one of the main concerns of the novel, the loss of sin. When these boys were abandoned for the first time on the island, they acted like children, alternating between enjoying freedom and expressing deep nostalgia and fear. By the end of the novel, however, they reflected adults' extreme behavior in autonomous counties. They did not hesitate, attack, torture, even regret even killing each other. The innocence of the boys lost on the island tells them to fall savage in parallel with their decline. And it reminds me of the biblical story of the fall of mankind from heaven.