was roughly boat-shaped” (Golding 27). Golding uses this symbolic reference to show that the island symbolizes seclusion. Like a boat, the island needs a captain. The boys are in their own world and Golding creates a sense of urgency for one of the boys to step up and take charge of their “ship.” Golding also uses the conch, an instrument used to call meetings and establish order, as a major symbol of power. Piggy has the conch and tries to use it to voice his opinion, but “the conch doesn’t count on top of the mountain” (Golding 43). The immature boys have a faulty sense of structure and organization because they are altering the rules to accommodate their personal needs. This selfishness is one of the defects of their society and human nature. In the case of the boys’ society, their selfishness ultimately led to their society’s destruction. Later on in the novel, a huge rock rolled by some of the other savage-like boys strikes Piggy and “the conch explod[es] into a thousand white fragments and cease[s] to exist” (Golding 209). The conch’s destruction symbolically illustrates the end of the boys’ structured society and the beginning of mass chaos. William Golding uses symbols to portray the complex situation the boys are in on the island and to address the true nature of human kind.
was roughly boat-shaped” (Golding 27). Golding uses this symbolic reference to show that the island symbolizes seclusion. Like a boat, the island needs a captain. The boys are in their own world and Golding creates a sense of urgency for one of the boys to step up and take charge of their “ship.” Golding also uses the conch, an instrument used to call meetings and establish order, as a major symbol of power. Piggy has the conch and tries to use it to voice his opinion, but “the conch doesn’t count on top of the mountain” (Golding 43). The immature boys have a faulty sense of structure and organization because they are altering the rules to accommodate their personal needs. This selfishness is one of the defects of their society and human nature. In the case of the boys’ society, their selfishness ultimately led to their society’s destruction. Later on in the novel, a huge rock rolled by some of the other savage-like boys strikes Piggy and “the conch explod[es] into a thousand white fragments and cease[s] to exist” (Golding 209). The conch’s destruction symbolically illustrates the end of the boys’ structured society and the beginning of mass chaos. William Golding uses symbols to portray the complex situation the boys are in on the island and to address the true nature of human kind.