While we would like to think that we come from a society that is civil and reasonable, we must know on some deeper level that we would be no different from these boys if we were in the same predicament. That we are savages at heart is a bitter pill to swallow but it perhaps the knowledge of this fact that keeps us from becoming the savages that hunt, destroy, and kill. Golding has placed us in the hearts and minds of thee boys that are victims to their own humanity and he leaves us with the lesson and the warning that we should never forget. The saddest lesson of all is that the more civilized things must be taught while the savage inclinations are woven into our DNA.
Works Cited
Baker, James. "An Interview with William Golding." Twentieth Century Literature. 28:2 (1982): 135.
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