What Is The Loss Of Innocence In Lord Of The Flies

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Pages: 3

William Golding’s novel, The Lord of the Flies, is about a plane full of young British boys’ plane crashing on an empty island, and at first they try to work together to survive, but soon it all goes haywire. When they got onto the island, the boys elected Ralph as leader, and they were all innocent. The group broke apart because part of the boys were savages, while the others had still held onto their innocence. From the beginning, Piggy knew best, and he was the most adult. Through the book, all of the boys lose their innocence, to the point that a littun can’t even remember their name by the end of the novel. When the boys first crashed onto the island, they elected Ralph as their chief, and everyone worked together to try and survive. All of the boys on the island were age twelve or under, and they all had believed that they would …show more content…
This scene shows that time on the island hasn’t only caused them to be physically unwell, but mentally unwell too. When the boys are trying to kill Ralph, they run down the beach, and see a Naval officer, and they all start crying. “Ralph wept for the end of innocence, the darkness of a man’s heart, and the fall through the air of the true, wise friend called Piggy,”(Golding, 202). All of the boys missed their home, and their families, but most of all they missed being innocent. William Golding had many recurring themes in the novel, Lord of the Flies, and one of the most important was the loss of innocence. All of the boys lost a certain amount of innocence, and one even forgot their name. When they got onto the island, the boys elected Ralph as leader, and they were all innocent. The group broke apart because part of the boys were savages, while the others had still held onto their innocence. From the beginning, Piggy knew best, and he was the most adult. Through the book, all of the boys lose their