The scar, is the mark that the airplane made when it crashed on the island.
The airplane crashing into the island was what created the scar. :)
When Lord of the flies begins, Ralph and Piggy are standing on a strip of land on the island called "the scar." The scar is the burnt, treeless strip of land created when the plane crashed.
The scar is where the plane crassed on the island.
In chapter 9 of "Lord of the Flies," the blue and white scar is a trail left by a fallen airplane that crashed on the island. The scar symbolizes destruction, the intrusion of civilization into the untouched island, and the boys' connection to the outside adult world.
The scar in the jungle was caused by the impact of the 'passenger tube' containing the boys, which crashed on the island and was shortly afterwards dragged out to sea by a storm. The 'scar' symbolises the damage inflicted on the natural world by mankind and foreshadows the destruction of the entire island by fire at the end of the book.
The scar is the dent that the plane made on the island when it crashed into the island.
In "Lord of the Flies", the scar refers to the gash left on the island from the plane crash. It symbolizes the violent disruption caused by the boys' arrival and their descent into savagery. The scar serves as a reminder of the destructive potential of human nature.
It is where the plane crashed
It is where the plane crashed
The scar in "Lord of the Flies" refers to the strip of land left scarred by the crashed plane. Golding chooses this word to symbolize how the intrusion of civilization has disrupted the natural beauty and harmony of the island, hinting at the destruction and chaos to come as the boys' society unravels.
its represents the beginning of the destruction by man on the island The scar is a gash in the jungle cause by the "passenger tube" of the airplane when it crashed onto the island. The "passenger tube" was carried out to sea by the storm which was occurring at the time, leaving the gash behind. The choice of the word scar implies an injury probably symbolising the effect of humans on the previously uninhabited pristine island.
In "Lord of the Flies" by William Golding, the evidence of the plane wreck is mentioned in the form of scattered debris, such as luggage, airplane parts, and parachutist bodies. The boys initially discover the wreckage on the island, which serves as a reminder of the civilization they left behind and their isolation from it. The remnants of the plane symbolize the boys' loss of connection to the adult world and their descent into savagery.