What+is+the+truth+about+fear?

What is the "truth" about fear?

The truth of fear is encompassed in everyone, especially within the boys of __Lord of The Flies.__ Golding uses these boys to symbolize a significant characteristic within mankind, and this trait is portrayed throught the boy's actions, thoughts, and Golding's main message within the story. To begin, Jack, Ralph, Piggy, and other boys create fear within others and themselves through their actions. Piggy, an intelligent boy, was afraid that the idea of being civilized was being lost, and tryed to bring it back into the tribe with telling stories of his aunt and being hopeful of their rescue. The fear inside Piggy gave an idea of how Golding wants our civilization to last, and how it is being destroyed when the thought is not practiced. In addition to their actions, the boy's thoughts often brought the inner fright out of them, causing them to do terrible things. Jack, for example, was terrified of joining Ralph's tribe, so he and his crew would steal items from them and beat them up in order to show who's boss. When Ralph triumphed, Jack was put into even deeper despair, forcing him to commit trecherous acts. Furthermore, Golding's main message in the story reveals the real "truth" behind fear. William Golding wrote the novel with the intent to include certain elements of behavior through symbols scattered throughout the novel. With Piggy's glasses, he is able to see literally and figuratively, seeing how the beast represents potential evil within the other boys. This "evil" is only brought amongst certain conditions in which Jack becomes truly savage and Golding synthesizes this within the novel. In conclusion, Golding uses fear to interpret the evil within us, creating this image in the boys actions, thoughts, and Golding's own message described in __Lord of The Flies.__