In the midst of a raging war, a plane evacuating a group of English boys from Britain is shot down over a deserted tropical island. Marooned, the boys set about electing a leader and finding a way to be rescued. They choose Ralph as their leader; Ralph appoints Jack as the leader of the hunters. Ralph, Jack, and Simon set off on an expedition to explore the island. When they return, Ralph declares that they must light a signal fire that passing ships might see. The boys begin to do so, using the lens from Piggy's eyeglasses as a means of igniting dead wood. But they are more interested in playing than in paying close attention to their duties, and the fire quickly ignites the forest. A large swath of dead wood burns out of control. One of the youngest boys disappears, presumably having burned to death.
At
first, the boys enjoy their life without grownups. They splash in the lagoon and
play games, though Ralph complains that they should be maintaining the signal
fire and building huts for shelter. The hunters have trouble catching a pig, but
Jack becomes increasingly preoccupied with the act of hunting. One day, a ship
passes by on the horizon, and Ralph and Piggy notice to their horror that the
signal fire has burned out; it was the hunters' responsibility to maintain it.
Furious, Ralph accosts Jack, but the hunter has just returned with his first
kill, and all the boys seem gripped with a strange frenzy, dancing about and
reenacting the chase in a kind of wild dance. When Piggy criticizes him, Jack
hits him across the face.
Ralph
blows the conch shell used to summon the boys and gives the group a furious
speech in an attempt to restore order. But beyond the more immediate problems of
the signal fire and the difficulties of hunting creeps a larger, more insidious
problem: a growing fear among the boys. The littlest boys (known as "littluns")
have been troubled by nightmares from the beginning, and more and more boys are
coming to accept that there is some sort of beast or monster lurking on the
island. At the meeting, the older boys try to convince them to think rationally:
if there were a monster, where would it hide during the daytime? One of the
littluns suggests that it hides in the sea, a proposition that terrifies the
whole group.
Not
long after the meeting, an aircraft battle takes place high above the island.
The boys are sleeping, so they do not notice the flashing lights and explosions
in the clouds. A parachutist drifts to earth on the signal fire mountain. He is
dead. Sam
and Eric, the twins responsible for watching the fire at night, have
fallen asleep, and so they do not see him land. But when they wake up, they see
the enormous silhouette of his parachute and hear the strange flapping noises it
makes. Thinking the beast is at hand, they rush back to the camp in terror and
report that the beast has attacked them.
The
boys organize a hunting expedition to search for monsters. Jack and Ralph, who
are increasingly at odds, travel up the mountain. They see the silhouette of the
parachute from a distance; they think that it looks like a huge, deformed ape.
The group holds a meeting, at which Jack and Ralph tell the others of the
sighting. Jack says that Ralph is a coward and that he should be removed from
office, but the other boys refuse to vote him out of power. Jack angrily runs
away down the beach, inviting all the hunters to join him. Ralph rallies the
remaining boys to build a new signal fire, on the beach this time instead of on
the "monster's" mountain. They obey, but before they have finished the
task, most of them have slipped away to join Jack.
Jack
declares himself the leader of this new tribe, and they hunt and very violently
kill a sow to solemnize the occasion. They then decapitate the sow and place its
head on a sharpened stake in the jungle as an offering to the beast.
Encountering the bloody, fly-covered head, Simon has a terrible vision, during
which it seems to him that the head is speaking. The voice, which he imagines to
belong to the Lord
of the Flies, says that Simon will never escape him, for he exists
within all men. Simon faints; when he wakes up, he travels to the mountain,
where he sees the dead parachutist. Understanding then that the monster does not
exist externally, but rather within each individual boy, Simon travels to the
beach to tell the others what he has seen. But they are in the midst of a
chaotic revelry--even Ralph and Piggy have joined Jack's feast--and when they
see Simon's shadowy figure emerge from the jungle, they fall upon him and kill
him with their bare hands and teeth.
The
following morning, Ralph and Piggy discuss what they have done; Jack's hunters
come to attack them and their few followers, and steal Piggy's glasses in order
to make a new fire. Ralph's group travels to Castle Rock in an attempt to make
Jack see reason. But Jack has Sam and Eric tied up and fights with Ralph. In the
ensuing battle, one boy, Roger,
rolls a boulder down from the mountain, crushing Piggy and shattering the conch
shell. Ralph barely manages to escape a torrent of spears.
All
night and throughout the following day, Ralph hides and is hunted like an
animal. Jack has the other boys ignite the forest in order to smoke him out of
his hiding place. Ralph discovers and destroys the sow's head in the forest;
eventually, however, he is forced out onto the beach, where the other boys will
kill him. Ralph collapses in exhaustion, but when he looks up, he sees a naval
officer standing over him, his ship summoned by the blazing fire now raging in
the jungle. Ralph is saved; but thinking about what has happened on the island,
he begins to weep.
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