Ralph was elected because he he had more votes and was with Piggy when he found the conch shell. Jack is the savage one out of the group, but that is part of mankind Piggy being the most intelligent one of them all if it wasn't for Piggy they wouldn't have shelter that they’re able to stay dry and to the wind with nor would they be able to start a fire and wouldn't have found/have found the conch shell. Ralph, Piggy Jack Ralph was elected to be the leader of the group because he was the most popular one of them all Piggy wasn't the most liked he was the most intelligent one of the whole group he knew what everyone did not know or understand how to do it jack he was a savage he liked to torture stuff and he thought it was fun to do so but it was bad whenever they killed Simon and Piggy. In the novel the, Lord Of The Flies, written By William Golding Ralph represent order, Jack …show more content…
Because if humans didn’t have intelligence the world would be a big mess up because nothing would get done and everyone would be retarded and there would be more stuff going wrong than right. “The booing rose and died again as Piggy lifted the white, magic shell” (Golding). Piggy has picked up the conch to try to make the boys quite down. Piggy is the smart one of the bunch he knows how to try and quite everyone down because if everyone is talking no one can hear nothing but voices, but can not understand nothing and if he didn’t stop them from talking nothing would get done. His glasses help them start a fire and helped them all services and the shelters that he thought of and showed them how to build them and make them livable and he is the one that was walking and he found a shell on the beach and he called it a “conch shell. “Each one of the boys represent a part of society because of their actions and
Then the fact that Jack was leading a dictatorship. Also that Ralph’s style of leadership is better then Jack’s. There are various types of leaderships evident in Lord of the Flies, Ralph’s being a democratic leadership. Ralph felt that getting rescued was the most important thing on the island. We can see this with his persistence in always keeping
The boys could have easily chosen Jack instead of Ralph, especially given the fact that Jack had previous experience as a leader; he is first seen surrounded by a group of faithful followers, his choir group, that continue to obey him on the island. Even Piggy, who showed support towards Ralph from the beginning, is intimidated by Jack's authoritative demeanor. However, Jack is missing that key characteristic that made Ralph so appealing: the symbol of power and strength. Any sense of leadership that Jack held was overshadowed by the image of Ralph standing confidently with the conch shell in hand. Ultimately, the young boys identified Ralph as their leader based on the power they believed he symbolized.
To survive, rescue is the first thing that pops into mind, not constant brawling. The Lord of the Flies is a novel about a group of boys who were involved in a plane crash. The crash had no adult survivors, so its up to the boys to form some sort of government and find a way to get off of the island. William Golding uses Piggy’s glasses, darkness, and a creature named the beast to convey the boys to savagery, and lead the fight for power. Piggy’s glasses are mentioned all throughout the novel, a symbol of clarity, keeping Piggy from digressing to the savagery the others had due to him seeing more clearly, but others seem to be far more primitive.
A group of boys crash landed on an island, no adults just them. Sounds like fun right? That's what they thought, they discovered many hardships. They elect a leader, Ralph who with the help of piggy, the more realistic and intelligent one of the group. Piggy makes the rules and is always the one to come up with a logical and realistic plan.
Piggy was being resourceful and found a way to bring all the children to one place with the noise from the conch and the help of Ralph. Piggy was able to bring all of the children with into an area that allows them to talk
This displays how Piggy is sagacious and knowledgeable, by giving accommodating propositions in a time of desperate need when the rest of the boys are quite lost and do not quite know what to do, for he is the only one smart enough to dare and bring up such an idea. Suggesting rational solutions and helping the boys find a way by using his intellectuality, to create smoke, exhibits his insightful collaboration in order to get rescued. Another example that demonstrates Piggy is incisive is when he declares, “You have doctors for everything, even the inside of your mind. You don’t really mean that we got to be frightened all the time of nothing? Life…is scientific, that’s what it is.
Near the end of their time on the island, Piggy, Sam, and Eric are the only ones left with Ralph, and Jack, who appears as “a chief now in truth; and he made stabbing motions with his spear” (Golding 168). Jack starts to get violent, and what was fun when they first got to the island become attempts to kill. At this point, Jack has fully taken over, and the only thing left for him to do is kill Ralph. Lord of the Flies exemplifies how when one person has all of the power, there is always somebody else that wants it more than that person. Ralph is not against Jack, nor does he want to fight with him for the chief position, but ambition and violence overtakes Jack, and he turns into a dangerous savage.
The last significant symbol from the book was Piggy’s glasses. Used throughout the book to both help Piggy see and to light the fire, Piggy’s glasses played a very important role. During the course of Lord of the Flies, it was evident that Piggy was the most rational boy on the island, even though he was often ridiculed by his peers. Piggy saw clearly when others lost sight of themselves. The real downfall of the story began when Piggy’s glasses were stolen from him, when Jack Merridew and his tribe of savages attacked him.
Piggy and his glasses play very vital roles in the book. For example, without Piggy Ralph wouldn't have known how to blow the conch. Another way Piggy is vital is that his glasses are used to start the fires. The glasses can symbolize law and order which is what Piggy represents as well. Piggy is more of an intellectual person that is outcasted by the other boys because he can not do much of any physical work.
Have a meeting. They'll come when they hear us--’ He beamed at Ralph.(16)” Without the presence of the conch and the idea of how to use it, Ralph and Piggy would most likely have been alone and would not have found the other boys. Therefore, it is justifiable to say that Piggy is the cause of the evolution of the society. The conch to them signifies society and civilization and the absence of Piggy’s idea, would have resulted in further loss of civilization.
In the novel Lord of The Flies, author William Golding portrays three aspects about human nature: bad leadership can disembody a group’s oneness, lack of authority and civilization causes decrease in moral value, and a savage mentality influences unlawful acts. Since Ralph is voted leader, he gives off the impression that he has areas of weakness and there was an abundance of improvement to be made. His lacking of leadership skills is eventually revealed and creates a thought of doubt for the boys and himself. In his reign as leader his most prized possession became the conch, which represented the most powerful and authoritative individual within the group. Though the conch stands for authority and gives a sense of organization, individuals
Author, William Golding, in his novel, "Lord of the Flies," follows a group of British boys who are stranded on an uninhabited island and try to govern themselves. One of the boys, Piggy, is constantly bullied and considered a nuisance by the power-hungry boys on the island. Golding's use of an isolated setting in the midst of the other boys illustrates Piggy's struggle to liberate himself from their oppression. However the need to survive reveals Piggy's inventiveness and rational mindset.
Stuck on an island with kids and an unknown “beast” what is it? The story of Lord of the Flies occurs during World War 2 on a deserted island after a plane filled with children crashed and where a new beast takes over . What is the beast? The beast in Lord of the Flies is constantly changing from fear to war then to savagery. So what is the meaning of the beast in the Lord of the Flies?
The Lord Of The Flies by William Golding is a book about a plane full of boys crashing on an island. The boys are by themselves no adults so they have to survive on their own and establish their own government. Piggy is one of the first characters we meet as a boy with poor eyesight, a weight problem and asthma so the readers already like him even if no one else likes him. Piggy is the closest thing the boys have to an adult on the island. Throughout the story Piggy embraces the character traits of being intellectually intelligent, Mature and loyal.
William Golding’s fictional, British novel, Lord of the Flies, presents a character that serves a two-part function as a “scapegoat” and a certain commentary on life. During WWII, a group of British boys are being evacuated via plane when they crash and are stranded on an island without adults. As time progresses, the innate evilness of human nature begins to overcome the savage society of young boys while Piggy, an individual representation of brains without brawn, becomes an outlier as he tries to resist this gradual descent of civilness and ends up shouldering the blame for the wrongdoings of the savage tribe. Up until his untimely death, Piggy is portrayed as the most intellectual and most civil character in the group of stranded boys. Right from the beginning, Piggy realized that “[they] got to do something,” (8) and he recognized the shell Ralph had picked up as a conch.