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∙ 6y agoProbably because it is a pivotal moment in the novel. Up until that point Jack and his choir had been merely boys playing at being hunters, filled with schoolboy bluster but shying away from actually stabbing a living thing. However there is a revealing passage about Jack in the section relating to the killing of the sow.... 'His mind was crowded with memories; memories of the knowledge that had come to them when they closed in on the struggling pig, knowledge that they had outwitted a living thing, imposed their will upon it, taken away its life like a long satisfying drink.' From this point onwards Jack no longer has any qualms about killing. Indeed the implication of the passage I've just quoted is that once he'd tasted the power of taking another life, he craved more of that same power.
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∙ 14y agoThe killing of the sow in "Lord of the Flies" is a savage act committed by the boys, symbolizing the loss of civilization and the descent into savagery. It portrays a stark contrast to the other killings in the book, as it is a premeditated and ritualistic act that showcases the boys' growing depravity and descent into darkness.
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∙ 11y agoThe killing of the sow represents the increase of savagery and the decline civilization. This sow then becomes refered to as the Lord of the Flies, as the rotting head of the pig is mounted upon a stick and manifested with flies. I would suggest reading up on this on sparknotes. I read this book 2 years ago in my grade 10 English class and also feel that this sow ( a pig) is connected with the character piggy, which both represent innocence and civilization, the killing of the sow and later piggy are points in which both innocence and civilization are discarded. This reoccuring theme of civilization vs. savagery can also be refered to as chaos vs. order. And it is also remember to remember another theme, the lost of innocence. Hope this helps! Best of luck!
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∙ 14y agoThe pig that Jack kills and decapitates.
Simon is in his special place, hidden beneath the mat of creepers, when Jack's tribe kill the sow and leave her guts and head as offerings to the beast.
read it and you'll find out
In "Lord of the Flies" by William Golding, the Lord of the Flies is a pig's head on a stick that is placed as an offering to a fictitious beast. It represents the evil and savagery within the boys on the island. The rotting head is described as grotesque and symbolic of the darker sides of human nature.
The boys in "Lord of the Flies" place the sow's head on a stick as an offering to the "beast." They believe it will appease the unseen monster they fear and leave it as a sacrifice to ensure their safety.
In chapter 8 of "Lord of the Flies," the boys hunt and kill a sow. They cut off its head and place it on a stick as an offering to the Beast. This act symbolizes the boys' descent into savagery and their increasing detachment from civilized society.
They didn't do anything with it. They just let it spill onto the ground.
In Lord of the Flies, the boys are scared of the beast. However it is clear that they themselves are the beast. They begin to lose their civilization and become savages. For example when they are dancing and re-enacting the kill of the sow, they lose control and hurt Maurice.
In "Lord of the Flies" by William Golding, the Lord of the Flies is knocked to the ground by Simon, one of the main characters in the novel. Simon is horrified by the hallucination he experiences and accidentally stumbles into the sow's head on a stick, causing it to fall to the ground.
The loving sow was transformed to a horrific face, and demonstrates the change of the boys. At first they were innocent, but changed into killers after time on the island. Lord of the Flies is the translation of Beelzebub.
Jack leaves the guts of the sow and its head, mounted on a stick, as an offering for the beast.
because the " lord of the flies" is the sow's head, and not truly a lord, the quotations show that it is just a name given by SSimon. also, the quotations are simply to show that it is all in Simon's head and that he is simply imagining the conversation.
Ralph's only weapon is a spear that once held the Lord of the Flies (the sow's head).