Lord of the Flies
is rightly acknowledged to be Golding’s masterpiece because of the barrage of
pertinent questions it raises regarding human nature and its potential for
physical and psychological savagery. The novel displays an astute perspective
as it comments on man’s innate capacity for cruelty. It tackles the popular
stereotype of “the innocent child” and demonstrates how even children
assimilate the legacy of our inherent predilection for evil. Golding’s dystopic
vision of human nature and its atavistic potential for barbarity garnered a
great deal of negative publicity as it dealt with a topic that had hitherto
been sidelined in mainstream culture.
Golding raises a multitude of crucial issues that try to
throw light on the cardinal motives that govern human conscience. The novel
disputes the romantic ideal of human nobility in the face of adversity. Earlier
works like R.M. Ballantyne’s The Coral
Island (1858) has a very similar plot but its perspective focuses on the
innocence of youth and the superiority of Western culture.
However, Golding inverts this popular image when he depicts a
chilling scenario where marooned British boys enforce their sadistic and
perverse fantasies on their hapless victims. The novel problematizes
dichotomous concepts like individual will and herd mentality; morality and
savagery; the will to dominate and the urge to follow. The dialectical debate
that the work provokes with its emphasis on man’s regression into savagery
ensures its place among modern classics.
Allegory
Allegory is a popular literary device that is used to convey
a secondary level of signification other than the primary level of meaning,
through symbolic figures or events. The two levels combine to create a deeper
level of signification that the author wishes to impart. Often in an allegory,
the primary level of meaning is literal and can be understood directly without
any other reference. The secondary level of signification is often hidden and
only a close perusal of the characters or action will reveal its latent possibilities.
Edmund Spenser’s The Faerie Queene,
John Bunyan’s The Pilgrim’s Progress
and George Orwell’s Animal Farm are
some among the famous allegories in literature.
Allegory is often used by writers to enrich their literary cosmos by
making it multidimensional. This device is also used to project the author’s
moral or political perspective in a veiled manner. Characters in allegory generally become
personifications of abstract ideals like virtues and vices, moral perspectives,
religious tenets and so on. Imagery is highly relevant in an allegory as it
serves to heighten the allegorical significance of a particular situation or
event. Most religious texts offer ample examples for allegory as they often
emphasise a latent level of meaning as well.
Lord of the Flies
as an Allegory
In Lord of the Flies,
Golding projects his own allegorical vision of the modern world. The novel’s
backdrop is a world that is in the dreadful grip of a nuclear war. The boys are
marooned on the island in the process of their evacuation from a war-ridden
place. The war ravaged background allegorically signifies a world of horror and
destruction that the children are familiar with. In the course of the novel,
Golding depicts how such savagery finds its reverberations deep in the psyche
of young children as well. However as L. L. Dickinson aptly suggests, “The
novel does not imply that children, without the disciplined control of adults,
will turn into savages; on the contrary, it dramatizes the real nature of all
humans. The nightmare world, which quickly develops on the island, parallels
the destruction of the outside world through atomic warfare”. As the novel
begins, the island is endowed with an Edenic grace which slowly metamorphoses
into a sinister atmosphere that forms the ideal setting for the brutality
espoused by the boys. However, Golding does not animate Nature and depicts
clearly how it is overshadowed by the savagery of the boys. The benign and
idyllic natural setting is corrupted into a harsh and unforgiving landscape by
the evil inside the boys.
Golding’s microcosm of the island closely mirrors the adult
world wherein war and terror have destroyed the remnants of human kindness. As
the novel ends, Ralph is saved by a Naval officer who is at once amused by the
“fun and games” (LF 228) of the boys and preoccupied by the blatant reality of
the adult world where warfare is an everyday normal occurrence. He is lost in
the quagmire of his own sinister reality that he does not notice the
viciousness of the young boys that he had rescued. Rather than assessing the
truth of their situation, he seeks to bury it in references to the idyllic
adventures like that essayed in The Coral
Island (LF 230). Golding here presents a character who refuses to recognise
the allegorical representation of his own war-torn world that is reflected in
the children’s island. This gesture of the officer can be symbolically taken as
a rejection of a reality that one is not comfortable with.
The various characters in the novel also become allegorical
agents representing particular human traits. Ralph, the protagonist symbolises
order and democracy. From the very outset, he thinks about escape routes and
building shelters. He stands for the higher instinct of fair play and tries to
sustain communal harmony. He is also an idealist who does not understand the
baser instincts of the other boys. As Ralph’s influence wanes in the narrative,
there is a concomitant change in the perspective of the boys as well. Their
whole attitude becomes more bestial and harsh as they gradually come under the
influence of Jack, the antagonist of the narrative. He represents the
destructive principle and stands for the innate savage in every human being.
His ruthless and megalomaniacal quest for power indicates the base excesses of
human nature. It can be argued that Jack embodies the pleasure principle or Id
whereas Ralph stands for the reality principle or Ego. Simon and Piggy both
become symbols of the morality principle or Super Ego as they worry constantly
about the rules governing the society of boys.
Simon is also an allegorical representation of Christ as he
is the saviour figure in the narrative and yearns for peace and harmony. He
represents an innate spirituality that often finds a resonance in the
tranquillity offered by Nature. Like Christ, he too is killed by the others for
attempting to convey the truth. Piggy is the intellectual of the group who
symbolises the rational and logical self. He is a pragmatist who tries to
logically analyse the plight of the boys. When he is cruelly murdered by Roger,
Golding demonstrates how our innate savagery strangles the voice of reason.
Roger, Jack’s close associate, is a sadistic and perverse boy who represents
the most malevolent aspects of human nature. Jack’s rule offers Roger the
chance to unleash his demonic nature and he readily pounces on the chance.
Samneric (Sam and Eric), the identical twins become the
allegorical representation of civilized society. They try to behave civilly
under the leadership of Ralph but when faced with Jack’s unmitigated savagery,
they shift their loyalties. The big boys in the group, along with Samneric
stand for crowd mentality. They shift their loyalties in relation to the
undercurrents of power. They are also indicative of the ruling class who change
their loyalties according to the changes at the power centre. The little boys
in the novel symbolically represent the masses who prefer being led. They do
not have a distinct perspective and are quickly swayed by the rhetoric of those
in power. Thus Golding’s novel teems with characters and settings that are
enriched by their allegorical dimensions.
Lord of the Flies
tries to hold a mirror to contemporary society which has degraded humanity to
the level of crass bestiality. Golding’s pessimistic cosmos is shaped by his
own disheartened vision of the modern, war-ridden world. Nevertheless, through
his creative cosmos, Golding tries to make the contemporary world aware of its
shortcomings. And as Dickinson rightly comments, “If Lord of the Flies “teaches” through its moral allegory, it is the
lesson of self-awareness” (26).
An Analysis of Major Themes, Motifs and Symbols
The Innate Savagery of Man
Perhaps the most important theme in Lord of the Flies is man’s innate savagery and the restraining
influence that culture plays in our lives. According to Golding, the novel
tries “to trace the defects of society back to the defects of human nature”.
Thus the essential tragedy is wrought not by the savagery of the boys but by
the flawed and yet fascinating human nature. Canonical literature has by and
large focused on the nobility of human endeavour and Golding disputes this
stereotype by emphasising the dichotomy between man’s savage instincts and the
refinement imposed by culture. The novel focuses on man’s overwhelming instinct
for barbarity when freed from the confines of civilization. Ralph, Piggy and
Simon symbolise the spirit of order, culture and democracy. Jack and Roger, on
the other hand, represent man’s primal urges. As the narrative progresses,
there is a marked shift in power politics and most of the boys choose to side
with Jack. They paint their bodies and hide the shame imposed by culture behind
their masks of bestiality. The temptation represented by Jack’s anarchic life
style proves too strong to be resisted and most of the boys join him despite
their moral qualms. Golding thus projects man’s nature as inherently evil and
susceptible to savage yearnings.
The novel also examines the ease with which the boys adapt to
their barbaric nature. The veneer of culture is cast aside once the world of
adult supervision seems like a distant mirage. The instinct for evil emerges as
a primal force that easily overpowers the voice of reason. The brutal murders
of Simon and Piggy hint at the hidden amorality that resides within the boys’
psyches. These murders fail to move their sympathies as they are visibly
excited and eagerly look forward to their next killing. Human morality is
posited as a “construct” that is nurtured by the codes of civilization. The
mythical Lord of the Flies becomes the most prominent symbol of savagery in the
novel. The beast is represented by the head of a sow which had been killed in
an extremely brutal manner. The intense bloodlust provoked by the violent
killing of the sow is manifested more aggressively in Simon’s murder. Ralph and
his ideal of culture becomes a threat to the savage world of the boys and it is
for this reason that they try to hunt him down like a pig. The conflict between
culture and nature reaches its pinnacle when Ralph is chased by the vicious
hunters who seek to assert their rule. Ralph’s rescue does not offer any solace
as he understands “the darkness of man’s heart” (LF 230) and realises that
there is no escape from it.
Lord of the Flies: The Evil Within
Lord of the Flies
raises several pertinent questions regarding the nature of evil and its genesis
in the human psyche. Golding tries to analyse the crucial concept of evil
through a socio-political prism that disputes the idea of man’s innate
nobility. Though the beast of evil is titled as Lord of the Flies, Golding
makes it emphatically clear that man’s inherent affinity for evil is by no
means supernatural. The myth of the beast is carefully cultivated so as to
disguise the boys’ violent acts behind a mask of self-righteousness. Their
belief becomes stronger with each act of violence and the beast becomes a
receptacle to vent their pent up savagery. The symbol of beast regenerates into
a new God and gradually evolves into a totem of murder and mayhem. In the
novel, the instinct for evil is placed as one that governs man’s savage desires
and the boys’ self-induced paranoia only urges them further in their
repudiation of cultural norms.
Nevertheless, the pessimistic tone of the narrative is
tempered by the presence of characters like Ralph, Piggy and Simon who
symbolise man’s capacity to fight evil. They do not embrace their darker side
like the rest of the boys and assiduously cling to the societal and moral norms
that govern human behaviour in a civilized society. Though they constitute the
minority, they are steadfast in their adherence to rules and committed to the
concept of “what’s right’s right”. Ralph’s survival at the end of the narrative
also represents a victory; albeit a minor one.
Golding also examines the social evolution of evil as the
novel is set in the backdrop of a nuclear war which necessitates the evacuation
of the boys. The background of war and violence critiques the nature of evil
exhibited by the boys. Are they mimicking the actions and attitudes of the
adult world or are they conditioned by a world which advocates meaningless
violence? The ending of the narrative remains ambivalent as the Navy officer
who rescues Ralph and the boys seem to be preoccupied with the war raging on in
his world. As his eyes “rest on the trim cruiser in the distance”, the
narrative is again left open-ended. Though Ralph is given a brief respite from
the ordeals he faced on the island, there is no escape from the larger question
of violence as he is returning to a world ruined by the ravages of war.
Symbols of Civilization
The conch shell represents the spirit of democracy. It stands
for man’s reasoning faculty and functions as an ordering principle. When Ralph
and Piggy find the conch shell, they use it to summon the other boys and it
bestows a sense of legitimacy to their endeavours as only the boy who holds the
shell is given the privilege to speak. It becomes a symbol of democratic power
and it can be noticed that though Ralph is comfortable wielding its influence,
Jack is vexed by its presence right from the beginning. As the rift between the
boys becomes prominent, the conch shell also loses its significance. Ralph and
Piggy try to cling on to the vestiges of democratic ideals by insisting on the
shell’s significance but Jack and his group constantly derides its authority.
And when Piggy is brutally crushed by a rock, the conch is also destroyed,
thereby annihilating all traces of culture from the island. The destruction of
the conch shell heralds complete anarchy which is mirrored in the ensuing hunt
for Ralph.
The signal fire, like the conch shell is another symbol for the
values represented by civilization. In the beginning, the boys diligently
maintain the fire with an intention of attracting the attention of ships
passing by. The fire signifies their fervent desire to escape from the island
and return to civilization. However, as their innate savagery asserts itself,
the desire for a “return” vanishes gradually. Apart from Ralph and Piggy, all
the others are content enacting the roles of little savages and are no longer
interested in denouncing the nascent power of their bestiality. As the signal
fire peters out, it leaves chaos in its wake. Piggy’s glasses, which are used
to start the fire, become a symbol of rational thinking and scientific spirit.
The ability to start the fire bestows on it an additional potency; one that is
coveted by all the boys. The power politics in the narrative revolves around
the ownership of the glasses. While Ralph and Piggy harness this power to
appeal to the voice of reason, later Jack and his gang steal it in a blatant
display of the principle of the survival of the fittest.
Conclusion
As the principles of logic and order slowly crumble, the
island descends into a state of paranoia where the boys are driven by a savage
bloodlust. Fear becomes the predominant emotion in a society that is governed
by sheer force and ruthlessness. The fear of the unknown slowly manifests in a
blinding frenzy that spurs them to torture and murder their own friends.
Ralph’s impassioned “speech” on the importance of order becomes superfluous in
a society that is governed by Jack’s “silent” savagery. Instead of the rhetoric
of words, Jack prefers the brutishness of silent cruelty and the voice of
reason is forcibly silenced. Golding thus shows how dialogue becomes impotent
in a lawless society where the voice of reason is no longer heeded. And in the
anarchic universe of the boys, words become meaningless as it is the savagery
of action that proves more effective in the comprehension of the language of
fear.
Works Cited:
The above material has been
taken from epgp.inflibnet.ac.in
Baker, James R. Introduction.
Lord of the Flies. By William Golding.
New York: Penguin, 1983. Web. 18 Dec. 2014.
Dickinson, L.L. The Modern Allegories of William Golding.
Gainesville: U of South Florida P, 1990. Web. 20 Dec. 2014.
Golding, William. Lord of the Flies. 1954. London: Faber,
1999. Print.
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