The Lord of the Flies
Question: Describe at least one important object in the written text. Explain why that object is important.
One of the most important symbols in The Lord of the Flies by William Golding is the object that gives the story its name, the pig’s head. The description that Golding gives off the butchered animal head on a spear gives the audience a grotesque and for some even a terrifying feeling. In the story the head was depicted as “dim-eyed, grinning faintly with blood-blackening between the teeth” and also stated that the head was covered with a “black mob of flies”. With this detailed and frightening depiction of the pig’s head, the reader is given a very strong impression that the object represents something undoubtedly evil. When Simon begins to converse with the pig’s head we quickly …show more content…
Oh, you knew didn’t you? I’m part of you!”.This quote clearly shows the audience that the evil that was causing a decline in the society created by the boys is present within human nature.
The evil that we now know is in the boys has more and more of an affect on them as they spend more time on the island. This decline was depicted to the audience by Piggy’s glasses. In The Lord of the Flies, Piggy represents the civilised lives that the boys came from and interestingly when Piggy loses his way of seeing, the other boys lose their vision of civilisation. When the story begins, Piggy can see clearly with both lenses of his glasses intact, and the boys are still