In his own words, william Golding describes his novel, The Lord of the Flies as an attempt to trace out the foibles of human nature. As the story unfolds, a group of half- educated English Schoolboys reverting to savagery on a pacific island, the reader witnesses parables of the human situation.
Golding faces the problems of his story in an honest and assured manner, mixed with poetic imagination. The novel evolves a moral fable which as it descends,
leaves a bitter trait of fear, in humanity and death. It is also a novel of tragic force and deep moral power.
Golding faces the problems of his story in an honest and assured manner, mixed with poetic imagination. The novel evolves a moral fable which as it descends,
leaves a bitter trait of fear, in humanity and death. It is also a novel of tragic force and deep moral power.
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