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Pat Conroy Lord Of Discipline Analysis

Decent Essays

In The Lords of Discipline, Pat Conroy accurately shows how the misuse of power and idealistic beliefs of acceptance can be catastrophic and even deadly. “My entrance to this marsh-haunted city is always filled with troubled meditations on both my education and my solitude during a four- year residence at the Institute. The city of Charleston, in the green feathery modesty of its palms, in the certitude of its style, in the economy and stringency of its lines, and the serenity of its mansions South of Broad Street, is a feast for the human eyes. But to me, Charleston is a dark city, a melancholy city, whose severe covenants and secrets are a powerful and beguiling as its elegance, whose demons dance their alley dances and compose their malign hymns to the side of the moon I cannot see. I studied those demons closely once, and they helped Kill off the boy in me”, (Conroy, 1). The Lords of Discipline is a well written story about Will McLean idealistic journey from a naive boy to the eye opening harsh reality of evil that was occurring in Charleston, South …show more content…

In fact, he allowed “The Ten” to operate in his home to conduct the tortures and humiliating acts on the cadets. The Ten is a group of upper class cadets who have the responsibility of protecting and preserving the purity and integrity of the institution. In other words, The Ten was tasked with the brutalization, derogation, and the sadistic demoralization of the weak cadet’s rights, self esteem and honor. In Will’s senior year he was chosen to be one of the student officers that supervise the new cadets or “plebs”. Knowing what he went through his first year, he was very reluctant because he did not want to engage in the cruelty. However, he accepted and he was placed in charge of the institute’s first and only black student, Pearce. He knew from the start that Pearce would be the target of racial

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