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Lord of the Flies

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Lord of the Flies

Character Analyses

Ralph

Ralph represents leadership, the properly socialized and civilized young man. He is attractive, charismatic, and decently intelligent. He demonstrates obvious common sense. Ralph is the one who conceives the meeting place, the fire, and the huts. He synthesizes and applies Piggy’s intellectualism, and he recognizes the false fears and superstitions as barriers to their survival. He is a diplomat and a natural leader.

Ralph’s capacity for leadership is evident from the very beginning (he is the only elected leader of the boys). During the crisis caused by the sight of the dead paratrooper on the mountain, Ralph is able to proceed with both sense and caution. He works vigilantly to keep the group’s focus on the hope for rescue. When the time comes to investigate the castle rock, Ralph takes the lead alone, despite his fear of the so-called beast. Even in this tense moment, politeness is his default. When Simon mumbles that he doesn’t believe in the beast, Ralph “answered him politely, as if agreeing about the weather.” British culture is famed for civilized reserve in emotional times. By the standards of the society he’s left behind, Ralph is a gentleman.

Having started with a schoolboy’s romantic attitude toward anticipated “adventures” on the island, Ralph eventually loses his excitement about their independence and longs for the comfort of the familiar. He indulges in images of home, recollections of the peaceful life of cereal and cream and children's books he had once known. He fantasizes about bathing and grooming. Ralph’s earlier life had been civilized, and he brought to the island innocent expectations and confidence until certain experiences informed his naivetй and destroyed his innocence. As he gains experience with the assemblies, the forum for civilized discourse, he loses faith in them. “Don’t we love meetings?” Ralph says bitterly, frustrated that only a few of the boys actually follow through on their plans.

Over time, Ralph starts to lose his power of organized thought, such as when he struggles to develop

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