Lord of the Flies

What does Golding mean when he says "Ralph wept for the end of innocence, the darkness of man's heart, and the fall through the air of the true, wise friend called Piggy" ?

I read the book and I just dont understand that meaning

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Golding ends this story with a "deus ex machina ending". That is "the God in the machine" abrupt conclusion to the story. Ralph has pushed all his anxieties deep inside of him just trying to be a good leader and then simply survive himself. This is the first time Ralph can begin putting all the hellish events in some kind of context. He knows his childhood has been lost, his innocence destroyed by the emotional and physical violence of power and politics. Ralph realizes just how dark mans' heart is. Given a choice between good and evil, man will naturally gravitate to evil. Ralph finally realizes how much of a friend the fat marginalized boy Piggy was to him.