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Key points

The front cover of a book with the title Lord of the Flies by William Golding. The image shows a pair of glasses with one lens smashed, lying next to a large shell that is broken in half.
  • William Golding鈥檚 novel, Lord of the Flies, was published in 1954.

  • A group of boys are stranded on a deserted island after their plane crashes. There are no adults and the boys struggle to live in harmony. They end up fighting for control and, ultimately, survival.

  • The novel was inspired by Golding鈥檚 time in the British Navy during World War Two, and his job as a schoolteacher.

  • The novel explores themes of violence, power and human nature.

The front cover of a book with the title Lord of the Flies by William Golding. The image shows a pair of glasses with one lens smashed, lying next to a large shell that is broken in half.
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Did you know?

Golding took some of his ideas for Lord of the Flies from another novel called The Coral Island by R.M. Ballantyne.

In The Coral Island, the main characters, also called Jack and Ralph, live and work together in harmony. Golding didn鈥檛 think this was realistic and wanted to write a more truthful adventure story.

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Plot

A timeline showing the 10 key moments from Lord of the Flies by William Golding. Image one shows a plane crashed on a deserted, tropical island. Image two shows Ralph 鈥 a blonde boy with blue eyes, wearing ripped shorts and holding a large shell up to his ear. Piggy sits next to him wearing glasses. Image three shows Jack dressed in his choir uniform. Image four shows two palm trees on fire. Image five shows three small boys, cowering in the dark. Image five shows Ralph and Jack standing back to back. Jack is holding a spear. Image seven shows a pig鈥檚 head on a stick. There are flies buzzing around it. Image eight shows a figure with black hair lying face-down on a beach, near the sea. Image nine shows a large, smashed seashell lying next to a pair of broken glasses. Image ten shows a naval officer standing on a beach. Next to him is the silhouette of a child on their knees, crying.

After their plane is shot down, a group of English schoolboys are stranded on a deserted island in the Pacific Ocean. There are no adults to look after the boys, who range from six to 12 years old.

At first, they work together to survive. They vote that Ralph, one of the older boys, should be 鈥榗hief鈥 and choose Jack to oversee hunting. They create and follow rules, hold meetings and use a to show whose turn it is to speak.

They create a signal fire, using a boy called Piggy鈥檚 glasses, but it burns out of control. Jack becomes obsessed with hunting the pigs on the island and his group of hunters fail to keep the signal fire going when a ship goes past.

The smaller boys become increasingly frightened by the idea that there is a "beastie" on the island. One night, a dead parachutist gets caught in a tree and the boys think that it is the beast coming to attack them.

Jack and Ralph argue. Jack leaves the group and the hunters follow him. They kill a pig, leaving the head as an offering to the beast.

A quiet boy called Simon has a strange vision where he thinks the pig鈥檚 head is talking to him. He faints. When he appears out of the shadows, covered in blood, the boys kill him in a wild frenzy.

Jack鈥檚 hunters attack Ralph and his group, smashing the conch, killing Piggy and setting fire to the island. Ralph narrowly misses being killed by the hunters鈥 spears and runs to the beach where he is surprised by a naval officer.

A passing naval ship had seen the fire on the island and launched a boat to investigate. The officer assumes that the boys have been up to "fun and games". The boys stop fighting and begin to cry. They have been rescued.

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Characters

A black and white picture of Ralph and Piggy from the 1963 film version. Ralph looks serious and one of the lenses in Piggy's glasses is smashed.
Image caption,
Ralph and Piggy from the 1963 film

Ralph

Ralph is the .

He is chosen by the boys to be their leader and tries to create a fair society with clear rules. He is reasonable and decisive.

Ralph is handsome, athletic and one of the oldest, which means the other boys look up to him.

A black and white picture of Ralph and Piggy from the 1963 film version. Ralph looks serious and one of the lenses in Piggy's glasses is smashed.
Image caption,
Ralph and Piggy from the 1963 film

Piggy

Piggy becomes Ralph鈥檚 most loyal friend and follower. He wears glasses, suffers from asthma and is overweight. He is clever but most of the other boys can鈥檛 see his strengths and don鈥檛 respect him.

He has been brought up by his auntie and comes from a lower social class than the other boys.

Jack

Jack is the .

He is strong-willed, cruel and proud. He is used to being in charge as he is the Head Boy of his school and leads the boys鈥 choir.

Jack wants power and becomes obsessed with hunting and violence.

Simon

Simon is a shy boy and often spends time alone. He has fainting fits and experiences hallucinations.

Simon stands up for others and bravely tries to find out more about the mysterious beast. He is the only one who understands that the beast is not real.

Other characters

Other important character are Roger, Sam and Eric, and The Littluns.

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Themes

Themes are the main ideas that appear repeatedly in a novel. Some of the important themes in Lord of the Flies are:

  • Violence
  • Power
  • Human nature

Violence

An illustration of a pig's head on a stick with flies buzzing around it.

Away from and free from rules, the boys quickly begin to turn to violence and cruelty.

Under Jack鈥檚 leadership, they hunt and kill pigs. By the end of the novel, they are hunting and killing each other. They chant:

Kill the beast! Cut his throat! Spill his blood!

The characters who resist violence, like Simon, Piggy and Ralph, become victims. It is only when the adults return that the violence stops.

An illustration of a pig's head on a stick with flies buzzing around it.

Human nature

In Lord of the Flies, Golding explores the idea that basic human nature is violent and selfish. He questions whether human beings would still behave in a civilised way without rules. For example:

  • Early in the novel, the boys play when they should be working and choose which rules to obey. As the novel continues, they give in to their fear of an imaginary monster, lose their self-control and increasingly turn to violence.

  • Before he is killed, Simon begins to understand that all humans have the potential to be violent. He hears the pig鈥檚 head, which the boys think is evil, say to him: "You knew, didn鈥檛 you? I鈥檓 part of you?"

  • The novel ends with Ralph realising humankind鈥檚 potential for violence too. When he sees the naval officer, Ralph weeps "for the end of innocence, the darkness of man's heart."

Power

An illustration of Ralph and Jack standing back to back. Ralph has blonde hair and a rip in his shorts. Jack is holding a spear. Behind them are rocks, palm trees and the sea.

The novel centres around the power struggle between Ralph and Jack. They have different leadership styles:

  • Ralph represents the kind of power that comes from a democracy when people vote freely to choose their leaders and rules.

  • Jack represents the kind of power that comes from dictatorship when one person takes complete power and keeps that power through fear and violence.

Piggy clearly identifies the choice the boys need to make:

Which is better鈥攖o have rules and agree, or to hunt and kill?
An illustration of Ralph and Jack standing back to back. Ralph has blonde hair and a rip in his shorts. Jack is holding a spear. Behind them are rocks, palm trees and the sea.

Did you know?

Lord of the Flies can be read as an allegory, which is a story with a hidden meaning. The main characters all represent something.

What do Ralph, Jack and Simon represent?

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Language

Writers choose words and phrases carefully when they write. Readers can look closely at texts to think about how and why the writer made these choices.

Symbolism

In Lord of the Flies, Golding uses to suggest deeper ideas to the reader. Symbols stand for something else beyond their literal meaning.

Piggy's glasses

Piggy's glasses help him to see. They are also a tool that can be used to start a fire.

What do Piggy's glasses symbolise?

A pair of glasses with one lens smashed

Fire

The boys use Piggy's glasses to create fire. They build a signal fire to catch the attention of passing ships, but it soon burns out of control.

What does fire symbolise?

A pile of logs on fire. The fire has caught a palm tree above it, which is on fire too.

The conch

The conch is a beautiful, spiralled shell which makes a loud sound when blown into. The boys use this sound to signal when to gather for a meeting.

What does the conch symbolise?

A conch shell that is broken in half
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Structure

Structure refers to how written text is organised 鈥 the way the story is ordered and shaped.

A naval officer stands on the beach in full uniform. Next to him is the silhouette of a child on his knees, crying. The background shows sand, the sea and the sun in a blue sky.

The ending

The novel ends with the boys hunting Ralph as the island burns. It is only the unexpected arrival of the naval officer that saves him.

Golding uses a series of contrasts to highlight the differences between the beginning and the ending of the novel. For example, at the start the island is "dazzling" and the lagoon is filled with "glittering" fish. At the end, it is a "burning wreckage", covered in "black smoke".

Golding also uses contrasts to show how the boys become more uncivilised and violent throughout the novel. For example, with Ralph:

BeginningEnd
"attractive", confident, oldest"filthy body, matted hair, and unwiped nose"
excited about 鈥渘o grown-ups!鈥crying "great, shuddering spasms of grief"
uninterested in Piggygrief-stricken after witnessing Piggy鈥檚 death
A naval officer stands on the beach in full uniform. Next to him is the silhouette of a child on his knees, crying. The background shows sand, the sea and the sun in a blue sky.

Does Lord of the Flies have a happy ending?

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Context

The in which a novel was written can sometimes tell you more about its themes, message and meaning.

World War Two

Lord of the Flies was published in 1954, less than 10 years after the end of World War Two. At the end of World War Two, were dropped for the first time by the Americans on the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Throughout the 1950s, when Golding was writing, people were terrified that another war would mean the whole world being destroyed by nuclear bombs.

This fear is reflected in Lord of the Flies as the fictional world is at war, which explains why the boys鈥 plane was shot down. Piggy even thinks an atomic bomb has gone off and they won鈥檛 be rescued at all.

You can learn more about what happened at Hiroshima and Nagasaki in this Bitesize History guide on World War Two.

A black a white photograph of William Golding. He has white hair and a beard and is wearing a smart jacket.
Image caption,
William Golding

William Golding

Golding served in the British Navy during the Second World War (1939-1945) and believed that wars were more about human nature than politics.

He also worked as a schoolteacher before and after his navy career, and noticed how cruel children could be to each other.

He brought these ideas together in Lord of the Flies to show how quickly human beings can turn to violence.

A black a white photograph of William Golding. He has white hair and a beard and is wearing a smart jacket.
Image caption,
William Golding
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