-
Essay / Comparison of Lord of the Flies with The Adventure of...
In today's society, each of us has our own responsibilities and our own morality. The development of responsibility comes from our maturity. And our sense of morality comes from our experience and knowledge. These two skills develop with the help of parents or any adult, maturity teaches us the path to understanding things in society and leads to the decision to choose between good and evil. The events of Lord of the Flies can be easily compared to those of the book The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. In these two books, these are the two main characters who are not old enough to assume such responsibilities. Therefore, in both books, a change in society allowed the characters to experience and develop important life values. The characters in the story are led to freedom but discover the enormous responsibility they have: to take care of themselves and others around them. They are able to distinguish right from wrong. Self-taught sense of moral responsibility. Throughout the book, the characters confront the influence of society's values and ultimately make a decision. In today's society, each of us has our own responsibilities and our own morality. The development of responsibility comes from our maturity. And our sense of morality comes from our experience and knowledge. These two skills develop with the help of parents or any adult, maturity teaches us the path to understanding things in society and leads to the decision to choose between good and evil. The events of Lord of the Flies can be easily compared to those of the book The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. In these two books, these are the two main characters who are not old enough to take on such responsibility...... middle of paper ......because he knew he could do a better job. He knew that Ralph would care about other people's opinions unlike Jack, but when Jack took over and everyone left Ralph's group to join Jack, Piggy made the right decision and stayed with Ralph until the very end. “We will live alone, the four of us, four of us. There aren't enough of us to keep the fire going. » "We'll try." See? I turned it on. Piggy had confidence and hope and did everything Ralph told him to do because he knew Ralph was the best leader. Piggy and Finn have always tried to do what is right. Choosing between good and evil is a difficult decision and in both books they had to make so many decisions to succeed. Many moral responsibilities are also learned, this is the most important lesson of all is to trust your instincts as both characters in the book have developed.