Summary of lord of the flies

Lord of the  Flies  Summary
During an unnamed time  of war, a plane  carrying a group of  British  schoolboys is shot down over the Pacific. The pilot of  the plane  is killed, but many  of the  boys survive  the crash and find themselves deserted on an uninhabited island, where  they  are  alone without  adult  supervision. The  first  two boys introduced are  the  main protagonists of  the story:  Ralph is among the  oldest of the  boys, handsome  and confident, whilePiggy , as he  is derisively called, is a  pudgy asthmatic boy  with glasses who nevertheless possesses a keen intelligence.  Ralph finds a  conch shell, and when he  blows it  the other boys gather together. Among these  boys is  Jack Merridew , an aggressive  boy  who marches at  the head of his choir. Ralph, whom the  other boys choose as chief, leads Jack  and another boy,  Simon , on an expedition to explore the island. On their expedition they  determine that they  are,  in fact, on a deserted island and decide that  they  need to find food. The  three  boys find a pig, which Jack  prepares to kill but  finally  balks before he  can actually stab it. When the boys return from their expedition, Ralph  calls a meeting and attempts to set rules of order for the  island. Jack  agrees with Ralph, for the  existence  of rules means the existence  of punishment for those  who break  them, but Piggy  reprimands Jack  for his lack  of concern over long-term  issues of  survival. Ralph proposes that  they  build a fire  on the mountain which could signal their presence  to any  passing ships. The  boys start building the  fire,  but the  younger boys lose interest when the task  proves too  difficult  for them. Piggy  proves essential  to the  process: the boys use his glasses to start the  fire. After they  start the  fire, Piggy  loses his  temper and criticizes the  other boys for  not building shelters first. He  worries that  they  still  do not know how many  boys there  are, and  he  believes that  one  of them is already  missing. While  Jack  tries to hunt  pigs,  Ralph orchestrates the building of  shelters for the boys. The smallest boys have  not helped at all, while the  boys in Jack's choir, whose  duty is to hunt for food, have  spent the  day  swimming. Jack  tells  Ralph that he feels as  if  he  is being hunted himself when he  hunts  for pigs. When Simon, the  only boy  who has consistently  helped Ralph, leaves presumably to take  a bath, Ralph and Jack  go to find him at the bathing pool. But  Simon instead is walking around the  jungle alone. He  finds a serene  open space  with aromatic  bushes and flowers. The  boys  soon settle  into a daily  pattern on the  island. The  youngest of  the boys, known generally as the  "littluns,"  spend most of  the day  searching for fruit  to eat. When the  boys play, they  still obey  some  sense of decency  toward one  another, despite  the lack  of parental authority. Jack continues to hunt, while  Piggy, who  is accepted as an outsider among the  boys, considers building a sundial. A ship passes by  the island but does not stop, perhaps because  the fire  has burned out. Piggy  blames Jack  for letting the  fire  die, for he  and his  hunters have  been preoccupied with killing a pig at  the expense of their duty, and Jack  punches Piggy, breaking one lens of his glasses. Jack  and the hunters chant, "Kill the  pig. Cut her throat. Bash her in"  in celebration of the  kill, and they  perform a dance  in which  Maurice others pretend to attack  him. pretends to be  a pig and the Ralph becomes  concerned by  the behavior of  Jack  and the hunters and begins to appreciate Piggy's maturity. He  calls an assembly  in which he  criticizes the  boys for  not assisting with thefire  or the  building of  the  shelters. He  insists  that  the  fire  is the  most important  thing on the island, for  it  is their one chance  for rescue, and declares that  the only  place  where  they  should have  a fire  is on  the mountaintop. Ralph admits  that he is frightened but says that  there  is no legitimate  reason to be  afraid. Jack  then yells at  the littluns for their fear and  for not helping with hunting or building  shelters. He  proclaims that there  is no  beast on  the island, as some  of the boys believe, but then  a littlun, Phil,  tells that  he  had a nightmare  and  when he  awoke  saw something moving among the trees. Simon says that Phil probably saw Simon, for  he  was walking in the  jungle  that  night. But the  littluns begin to worry  about the  beast, which they conceive  as a ghost  or a squid. Piggy  and Ralph fight once  more, and when  Ralph attempts to assert the  rules of  order, Jack  asks rhetorically  whether anyone  cares about  the rules. Ralph in turn insists that the  rules are all that they  have. Jack  then decides to lead an expedition to hunt the beast, leaving only  Ralph, Piggy  and Simon behind. Piggy  warns Ralph that  if  Jack  becomes chief, the boys will never  be  rescued. That night, during an aerial  battle, a pilot  parachutes down the  island. The  pilot dies, possibly on impact. The  next morning, as  the twins  Sam  and  Eric are adding kindling to the  fire, they spot  the pilot  and mistake  him for  the beast. They  scramble down the mountain and wake  up Ralph. Jack  calls for  a hunt, but  Piggy  insists  that  they  should stay  together, for  the beast may not come  near them. Jack  claims that  the conch is  now  irrelevant. He  takes  a swing at  Ralph when Ralph accuses Jack  of not  wanting to be rescued. Ralph decides to join the hunters on their expedition to find the beast, despite  his wish to rekindle  the fire  on the mountain.  When they reach the other side  of the  island, Jack  expresses  his wish to build a fort near the  sea. The  hunters, while  searching for the  beast, find a  boar that attacks Jack, but Jack  stabs  it  and it runs away. The  hunters go into a frenzy, lapsing into their "kill the  pig"  chant once  again. Ralph realizes that  Piggy  remains with the littluns back  on the other side  of the  island, and Simon offers to go back  and tell Piggy  that  the other boys will not be back  that  night. Ralph  realizes that  Jack hates him and confronts him about that  fact. Jack  mocks Ralph for not  wanting to hunt, claiming that  it  stems from cowardice, but when the boys see  what they  believe  to be  the beast they  run away. Ralph returns to the shelters to find Piggy and tells him that they  saw  the beast, but Piggy remains skeptical. Ralph  dismisses the hunters as boys with sticks, but  Jack  accuses him of calling his hunters cowards. Jack  attempts to assert control  over the other  boys, calling for Ralph's removal  as chief, but when Ralph retains  the  support  of the  other boys Jack  runs away, crying. Piggy  suggests  that, if  the beast prevents them from getting to the mountaintop, they should build a fire  on the  beach, and reassures them that they  will survive  if  they  behave  with common sense. Simon leaves to sit  in the  open space  that  he  found earlier.  Jack  claims that  he will be the  chief of the  hunters and that  they  will go to the  castle  rock  where  they  plan to build a fort  and have  a feast. The  hunters kill a pig,  and Jack  smears the  blood over Maurice's face. They  then cut off the  head and leave  it  on a stake  as an offering for the  beast. Jack  brings several hunters back  to the  shelters, where  he  invites the  other boys to join his tribe  and offers them meat and the  opportunity  to hunt  and have  fun. All of  the boys, except for Ralph  and Piggy, join Jack. Meanwhile, Simon finds the  pig's head that  the hunters had left. He  dubs it The  Lord  of  the Flies because  of the  insects that swarm around it. He  believes that  it  speaks to him, telling him how foolish he  is and that the  other boys think  he  is insane. The  pig's head claims that  it  is the beast, and it  mocks the idea that  the beast could be hunted and killed. Simon falls down and loses consciousness. After he  regains  consciousness and wanders around, he  sees the dead pilot that the boys perceived to be the  beast and realizes what it actually  is. He  rushes down the  mountain to alert the  other boys about  what he has found. Ralph and Piggy, who are playing at  the lagoon alone, decide to find the other boys to make  sure that  nothing unfortunate happens while  they  are pretending to be hunters. When they  find Jack, Ralph and Jack  argue  over who will  be  chief.  When Piggy  claims that  he  gets to speak  because he  has the  conch,  Jack  tells him that the  conch does not  count on his side  of the  island. The  boys panic when Ralph warns them that a storm is coming. As the  storm begins,  Simon rushes from the forest, telling about  the  dead body  on the  mountain. Under the impression that  he  is the beast, the  boys descend on Simon and kill him. Back  on the other side  of  the island, Ralph and Piggy  discuss Simon's death. They  both took  part in the  murder, but  they  attempt to justify  their behavior as  motivated by  fear and instinct. The only four boys who are  not part of  Jack's tribe are  Ralph and Piggy and the  twins, Sam and Eric, who help tend to the  fire. At Castle  Rock, Jack  rules over the boys with the trappings of  an idol. He  has kept one  boy  tied  up, and he  instills fear in  the other boys by warning them  about the beast and the intruders. When Bill  asks Jack  how  they  will start a  fire, Jack  claims that  they  will steal the  fire  from the  other boys. Meanwhile, Ralph, Piggy  and the twins work on keeping the fire  going but  find that  it  is too difficult  to do by themselves. They  return to  the shelters to sleep. During the  night, the hunters attack  the four boys,  who fight them off but  suffer considerable injuries. Piggy learns the  purpose  of the  attack: they  came  to steal his glasses. After the attack, the four boys decide to go to the  castle  rock  to appeal to Jack  as civilized people. They  groom themselves to appear presentable  and dress themselves  in normal schoolboy clothes.  When they  reach  Castle  Rock, Ralph summons the  other boys with the conch. Jack arrives from hunting and tells Ralph and Piggy  to leave  them  alone.  When  Jack  refuses to listen to Ralph's appeals to justice, Ralph calls the boys  painted fools. Jack  takes  Sam and Eric as prisoners and orders them to be  tied up. Piggy asks Jack  and his  hunters  whether it  is better to be  a pack  of painted Indians or sensible  like  Ralph, but  Roger tips a rock  over on Piggy, causing him to fall  down  the mountain to the  beach. The  impact kills him and, to the delight of Jack, shatters the conch  shell. Jack  declares himself  chief and hurls his spear at Ralph, who runs away. Ralph hides near Castle  Rock, where  he  can see  the  other boys, whom he  no longer recognizes as civilized English boys but  as savages. He  crawls to the  entrance  of Jack's camp, where  Sam and Eric are  now  stationed as guards, and they  give  him some  meat and urge  him to leave.  While Ralph hides, he  realizes that  the other boys are rolling rocks down the mountain. Ralph evades the other boys who are  hunting for  him, then realizes that  they  are setting the  forest on fire in order to smoke  him out-and thus  will destroy whatever fruit  is left  on the island. Running for his life, Ralph finally  collapses on the  beach, where  a naval officer has arrived with his ship. He  thinks that  the  boys have  only been playing games, and he  scolds them for not behaving in a more  organized and responsible manner as is the British custom. As the boys prepare  to leave  the  island for  home, Ralph weeps  for the  death of  Piggy  and for  the end of the boys' innocence.