Thursday, January 23, 2020

Essay --

When a baby is first born, it is often regarded as a pure spirit. It is a brand new life and cannot take corruption. As time goes on, the baby grows and matures into a child. As the baby matures, it forms an understanding of the world and develops its own personality. The baby grows into a child and inevitably let’s goes of its innocence that it once had. Just like a baby, the island in the Lord of the Flies changes throughout the book as well. It starts off as a beautiful untouched place and slowly transforms into an evil. In the Lord of the Flies, by William Golding there are many religious allegories present. The most prevalent biblical allegory is the basic setting of the book which takes place on an isolated island. The tropical setting of the island, where a group of boys land after their plane crashes can easily be compared to the illustrious Garden of Eden. The setting, the absence of an adult figure, and the gradual degradation of the characters serve as evidence to why the island is actually a biblical metaphor to the Garden of Eden and a growing baby. The physical feature...

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