During his time as a fish Wart learns about the errors of an absolute monarchy. The pike represents all the flaws of absolute power. This belief is show by White’s description of the pike, White says, “face ravaged by all the passions of an absolute monarch- by cruelty, sorrow, age, pride” (51). Also when, when Wart speaks to the pike, he says, “might is right” (48). By saying this, he is affirming the flawed thinking that follows absolute power. By meeting the pike, Wart is able to learn that it is not a good idea to have one person with all the power. Opposite to the fish, the ants show Wart the errors of a civilization in which everyone is equal to the point that they loose their individualism. Each ant lacks their own personal name, but is instead given a number. White also gives every ant impersonal and dead voices as if they are constantly just going through the motions. Even though in the ant’s society everyone is equal with exception to the queen, ant life is still monotonous and static. T.H. White highlights the dullness of their lives when he says, “Novelties did not happen to them” (128). T.H White saying this shows that their conversations and lives are the same day after day. The repetitiveness of their lives are highlighted when the constant instructional broadcasts received by Wart’s antennae make him feel sick because of their repetitiveness. The ant’s show Wart …show more content…
During one of Wart’s tutoring sessions, Merlin turns Wart into a goose and sends him off to live with other geese. During his time with the geese, Wart learns that life doesn’t life doesn’t have to be full of conflict. Wart has grown up in a world of fighting and violence, but the geese show him a model society that consist of peace. The geese government is opposite to that of the ants and fishes. Although the geese may be communal like that ants, the geese’s communal lifestyle doesn’t come with the loss of individuality. The geese also elect their leaders unlike the fish, because of this no one goose is able to gain to much power and become a tyrant like the _____ in the moat. Then, when Wart asks about war among geese, the concept is so foreign that Lyo-lyok can’t grasp the concept immediately. Then she says, “They do not fight each other” (169). Lyo-lyok saying this shows that the geese live in a society where there is no need to kill another for gain and that they all work together. After saying that Lyo-lyok also says, “what creature would be so low…. To murder other of is own blood” (169). This quote shows that the mere idea of killing another of the same species disgusts her. Through Ly-lyok’s disgust in the concept of killing a member of her species, the reader can infer that there is also no violence amongst other geese groups. Wart’s time with the Geese shows that there is an