He is power hungry and uses the fear of the beast to gain control His savage ways take over and lead to the decline of civilization and morality on the island
When Jack slashes the green buds, the reader learns that he is motivated by a desire for power and control. This violent act symbolizes Jack's impulsive and destructive tendencies, foreshadowing his descent into savagery and eventual conflict with Ralph's more civil leadership style in "Lord of the Flies."
He has a knife
In lord of the flies, ben is a follower of jack...or a choir boy.
In "Lord of the Flies," what is important to Jack is power, control, and dominance over the other boys on the island.
Jack never died
It is the pig's head cut off by jack, transformed from a loving pig to a creepy horror. The flies were buzzing around the head, making the pigs head the Lord of the Flies. In other interpretations, Jack is considered to be the Lord of the Flies. The beast is also thought to be the Lord of the Flies.
no, the lord of the flies is in jack; in fact it is in all of the boys. This is because the lord of the flies is an allegorical representation of the devil, and uncivilized nature within all human beings. Thus, the lord of the flies; (or balzeebub, a form of the devil in Arabic) exists within all human beings. This is what william golding was trying to get across to the reader
The lord of the flies is the head of the pig that Jack and his 'tribe' killed, they left it on a stake as an offering to the beast (ie)
Jack and Ralph.
Jack
in the forest
NO