Golding’s often allegorical fiction makes broad use of allusions to classical
literature,
mythology, and Christian symbolism. Although no distinct
thread unites his novels and his technique
varies, Golding deals principally with evil and emerges
with what has been characterized as a kind of
dark optimism. Golding uses characters to describe conflicts
and traits inherent in society and its
members. Golding feels that man is inherently evil, and
this evil must be confronted and controlled.
Society is both a victim and controller of this evil.
Although, like many authors, he utilizes his
personal history, Golding is unique in the way that he
uses the actual to build a structure of meaning.
The symbolism of his novels is often more important than
the action. Though the literal story in itself
is interesting, his characters, images, and settings
go beyond the merely literal, to represent universal
truths about human nature.
His novels are also, in some respects, close to actuality. There is a realism
in his rendering of
physical detail and in his dependence on his own experience
for documentation. For instance, Lord
of the Flies depends on his accurate observation and
recording, as well as his knowledge of the old
English Epic and experience of the terrors and tensions
of war. Golding can be said to be a writer of
myths. It is the pattern of myth that we find in his
manner of writing. For instance, as a young man, he
believed that man would be able to perfect himself by
improving society and eventually doing away
with all social evil, a view similar to H.G. Wells. Golding
inveighs against those who think that it is the
political or other systems that create evil. To him,
evil springs from the depths of man himself. It is the
wickedness in human beings that creates the evil systems,
or, that changes what, from the beginning,
is or could be good, into something unjust and destructive.