Tuesday, September 3, 2019
Comparing Ralph and Jack to Show How the Characters Change in Lord of t
Comparing Ralph and Jack to Show How the Characters Change in Lord of the Flies    Golding uses many techniques to change his characters as they progress  throughout the novel. The main character Ralph is a prime example of  this developing character.    Both of the boys arrive on the island with a certain manner. They are  sensible and being from well brought up families and homes, soon start  to work together in harmony on the island.    The first time we encounter Ralph is at the beginning of the novel  where he is described as "The boy with fair hairà ¢Ã¢â ¬Ã ¦[He had] taken off  his school sweater...[His] grey shirt tuck to his back and his hair  was plastered to his forehead." The fact he has fair hair and also the  quote "built like a boxer" suggest he could be a heroic figure. This  emphasised by Golding when he clearly shows Ralph to be from a public  school as he "has taken off his school sweater."    We can see that Ralph is still clearly a child at this point in the  novel, he "stands on his head" and uses juvenile language such as  "Whacko" and "Wizard"    When the voice of piggy shouts out, he stops and waits. This shows us  an insight that he is willing to wait for this unknown person, but he  "jerks up his stockings" Golding uses this to show us that he is  impatient too.    Later on in the chapter we see Ralph being "offhand" and "obviously  uninterested" towardsPiggy. We feel sympathetic to Piggy as he is seen  as an outcast from the very beginning.    We can see that Piggy is knowledgeable as he spots the conch, and  knows what it is. Although Piggy found it, Ralph is the person who  swims down to the bottom of the lagoon and collects it from the reeds,  showing us that he is clearly strong and fit, as he can swim.    T...              ...e and ape-like" and finally his painted face, hiding all  innocents and his sinister side. Near the end of the novel, he feels  no shame about the deaths of Simon and Piggy, nor his attempts to kill  Ralph. In the novel Jack and his tribe represent anarchy and the  downward spiral of civilisation. This is most seen when the conch,  which throughout the novel is the symbol of humanity and civilisation,  is smashed.    Both Ralph and Jack have changed throughout the novel. Golding  presents both of them as young innocent children at the beginning.  They are almost unrecognisable by the end. They have changed both  physical and mentally. There is an intervention at the end: the Naval  officer, jokes about them "having a war or something?" and this of  course is exactly what is happening.    The moral of the novel is with out intervention, which will win, good  or evil?                        
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