Words alone signify little but in the context of sentences they convey much more. The savagery of the boys is alluded to in the following sentences, and I quote... "Between the flashes of lightning the air was dark and terrible; and the boys followed him clamorously." "Piggy and Ralph, under the threat of the sky, found themselves eager to take a place in this demented but partly secure society." "At once the crowd surged after it, poured down the rock, leapt on to the beast, screamed, struck, bit, tore. there were no words, and no movements but the tearing of teeth and claws." Three single words that suggest the savagery of the boys might be; demented, screamed and bit.
Wiki User
∙ 14y agoThe boys in "Lord of the Flies" showed savageness through their descent into violence, chaos, and brutality as they abandoned societal norms and morals. They resorted to hunting each other, forming tribes based on power and fear, and indulging in destructive impulses without regard for consequences. This savageness was fueled by their fear, isolation, and loss of civilization's restraints.
Wiki User
∙ 14y agoChapter nine of Lord of the Flies is called A View to a Death. If you wish to know something more about this chapter you need to be a little more specific when asking your next question.
Sam and Eric are both young boys on the island in "Lord of the Flies," but their exact ages are not specified in the book. They are among the younger boys in the group.
The little kids in the book "Lord of the Flies" were called "littluns." They were the youngest boys on the island who often played and were not actively involved in the power struggles and conflicts of the older boys.
Read the book really....
The book you are referring to is likely "Lord of the Flies" by William Golding. In the novel, a group of boys get stranded on a deserted island and attempt to govern themselves, but their society quickly deteriorates into chaos and violence.
"Lord of the Flies" is a book expressing a metaphor of how chaotic society is and can be when authority is ignored. Ralph is one of the boys who remains civilized in the book, and his main fear is of what the boys are going to turn into and do without authority. He knows chaos will corrupt the society of the boys on the island and he fears this.
The boys use Piggy's glasses to start a fire in the book, "Lord of the Flies." Ralph moved the glasses around until an image of the sun shined on the rotten wood, and smoke began to swirl up.
Lord of the Flies is a book. There were boys in the book. They split up into two different groups in the book. One group of the boys in the book go to Castle Rock to use it as a hide out.
The name of the book is "Lord of the Flies" by William Golding. It tells the story of a group of boys stranded on an uninhabited island and their descent into savagery.
Lord of the Flies documents the progression of "innocent" boys into savagery.
The word "interminable" appears on page 5 of the book "Lord of the Flies." It is used to describe the stretch of time the boys spend marooned on the island.
On the Island
The smaller boys in 'Lord of the Flies' are known as "littluns." They are the younger boys who are not part of the older boys' group.