In the book Lord of the Flies Simon has changed from being a sensible, skittish, weak boy to a distorted, brave, helpful boy. In the begging of the book Simon is introduced as the weak boy who isn’t strong enough to hold up his own weight. After Ralph blows the conch for the very first time a new group of boys arrives called the Choir this is were Simon faints Merridew the Choir leader says, “he always throwing a faint”(20), Merridew is talking about Simon. Another time when Simon comes off being weak and afraid is when he admits to believing in a beast and says, “maybe, maybe there is a beast”(88). Although Simon is weak and afraid he is very sensible and is able to keep a sense of hope Simon tells Ralph that, “you’ll get back to where you came from”(111). Another sensible thing that Simon said was how the beast is in every one although this seemed weird at the time as the book went on Simons theory became more true almost everyone resorted into being a beast who murdered people.…
Of all the boys, only the mystic Simon has the courage to discover the true identity of the beast sighted on the mountain. After witnessing the death of the sow and the gift made of her head to the beast, Simon begins to hallucinate, and the staked sow's head becomes the Lord of the Flies, imparting to Simon what he has already suspected: The beast is not an animal on the loose but is hidden in each boy's psyche. Weakened by his horrific vision, Simon loses…
Throughout the first three chapters of Lord of the Flies, the boys gather together, and start to get organized. Ralph and Piggy are the first boys to meet up and by finding a conch shell they are able to use it as a symbol to gather the rest of the boys together. After electing Ralph as the leader, him, Simon, and Jack set off in an attempt to scope out the island and what it has to offer. Jack and his choirboys are elected as the hunters and designated to keep the watch fire on top of the mountain blazing as a symbol. Jack lets a pig escape so he sets off in an attempt to find more food, while Ralph and Simon work on shelters for the group to sleep in. After weeks of living together and competing with each others every move, Jack and Ralph accept that they mutually dislike each other, and although they try to rectify the hostility…
The only boy on the island that understands the truth about humans, tries to save them from their self-destruction. Throughout the book, Simon represents a Jesus-like figure. He helped Ralph with the shelters, handed ʻlittlunsʼ food and was very perceptive about the true meanings of the world. When the boys believed in the beast, he was the only one who knew the truth, ʻmaybe there is no beast . . . maybe itʼs only usʼ (Golding pg 111). Simonʼs death represents the idea that goodness is weaker than evil. The murder of Simon is the point of no return for civilisation on the island and shows that even decent people like Ralph and Piggy are capable of committing heinous crimes. His death unlike Jesus did not lead them to salvation but lead them to destruction and a deeper inner evil. After Simons death, Jack the leader of his tribe, became merciless and cruel. Jack often used other characters fears to control the people on the island. ʻMy hunters will protect you from the beastʼ (Golding pg 185). Jack is the first of the boys to succumb to his inner evil and become a savage. This is ironic because at the beginning of the novel he says, ʻWeʼve got to have rules and obey them. After all, weʼre not savages. Weʼre English.ʼ (Golding pg 55). He uses the fear and evil within all the characters to force them to follow under his dictatorship. Throughout the book Jack has a crazy obsession with hunting, the more times he kills the less civilised he would become. Jack is the one responsible for sending the boys on the island into this deep dark evil that they cannot seem to escape from. As Jack becomes more evil as the book progresses, Golding makes him the representation of the evil in every man. Lord of the Flies is a deep and meaningful novel, with a pessimistic view on human life. Golding uses the characters for his novel, the setting of the island and the symbolism throughout the book to show the potential for destruction and chaos in the world. The idea that evil is…
He was a unique child who believed that both good and evil resided within each person. Through the story Simon acted as the Christ figure. Simon was epileptic and had E.S.P. Simon foresaw the fate of Ralph and his own. ?You?ll get back all right. I think so, anyway.? (Page 121). Simon viewed his fate and witnessed the killing of the sow. Prior to one of his seizure?s he saw his death. The Lord of the Flies spoke to him and said, ??we shall do you. See? Jack and Roger and Maurice and Robert and Bill and Piggy and Ralph?? (Page 159). Shortly before his death he came to the realization that the beast was not a creature but something that was within Jack and the hunters. He believed that he should tell the truth despite the consequences. In turn he was sacrificed for the continuation for the evil on the…
He is disrespected and ignored by the other boys, even though he is one of the most wise, logical, and intellectual boys on the island. When Jack proves his savagery and how oppressive he can be by killing the sow and placing its head on a stick, Simon wants to prove that the beast does not exist, so he sets off to prove that the beast is nothing. In his efforts of coming back and telling the group that there is no beast, he is mistaken as the beast and brutally killed. “Kill the beast! Cut his throat! Spill his blood!”(152) At this point the boys are rapidly losing their…
The movie, “Lord of the Flies”, portrays how man is naturally good, but can be persuaded in negative ways by someone bad. Jack’s cold, brutish behavior largely impacted all the others. From the beginning of the movie, Jack’s insensitive actions foreshadowed his behavior for the rest of the movie, such as when Simon fainted, and Jack said that he is fine and acted like it didn’t matter. Throughout the film, the other boys on the island were consistently being influenced by Jack’s uncompassionate characteristics. Although Ralph was voted as the captain for the whole group, most of the boys ended up being on Jack’s side and followed his bad habits. Even though Piggy was on Ralph’s side, he was also influenced by Jack. One night, Simon was killed because the boy’s because they thought that he was the beast. When the boy’s all found out, Piggy didn’t believe that what they did was murder, when it really was. In the end of the movie, after Ralph fought with Jack about getting Piggy’s glasses back because they were stolen, one of Jack’s members rolled a boulder and it fell on Piggy, leading to his tragic death.…
He stumbles upon a pig head on a stake, which had been left by Jack and the few hunters that had joined him as an offering to the beast. Swarmed by flies, the dead pig head had seemed to put Simon in a trance, and it spoke to him in the voice of a school teacher; it said that the only beast was within the boys. This pig’s head becomes the Lord of the Flies, and enters Simon’s head with fear and mockery, yet revealing the truth. Simon is a symbol of innocence and reason, for he comes about the so-called beast in the night. He discovers its true identity to be a dead pilot being carried by a parachute. During Simon’s discovery, Jack and his tribe were hosting a feast, having invited the rest of the boys who had not joined Jack. Perhaps the most important event of this story occurs at this event. Dark clouds appear, rolling thunder and scars of white and blue lightning sound and appear through them. Rain starts to pour while Simon is rushing back to the feast with his news of the so-called beast. As he appears from the woods out onto the beach, the boys panic, disoriented by their fear and the storm around him. They circle around Simon, Ralph and Piggy included, chanting and yelling with spears thrusting towards Simon. They were caught by darkness, and killed Simon, thinking that he was the beast. Simon’s body was carried by the tide out to sea, and with him the truth of their circumstances; savagery has claimed its first…
William Golding’s novel, Lord of the Flies, tells a story about a group of English schoolboys that are taken from their society to be put somewhere out of harms way. Unfortunately, the plane is shot down and crash lands on a deserted island. On this island there are no adults to show them how things work like they are used to from their former lives. Although, they try to keep order, chaos takes over, and the society comes crumbling down. The only thing that kept them fighting was the thought of a beast. Simon was the only character that could look past a physical beast and see that the beast was the darkness of man’s heart.…
Throughout the course of William Golding’s Lord of the Flies, the characters of the boys changes drastically. In the beginning, the boys are very disorganized and overwhelmed. Overtime, that disorder is changed into the organization of two separate groups of boys that have completely different ideas of how to run the island. This causes tension and hatred between the boys. In the scene of Simon’s death, Golding uses leery imagery, distinctive and violent diction, and dark figurative language to show the boys’ dynamic transformation from lost and naive school boys to savage and ruthless beasts.…
Also the time when the children were ferociously chanting in a circle around a fire late at night and “mistakenly” thought Simon was the beast, and brutally killed him without any hesitation. The image of Simon the author leaves us with is one of peacefulness and gentleness. Simon’s violent death is a result of his attempt to show compassion towards others by telling them what he has discovered about the beast on the mountain but he came back and ended up getting brutally murdered by his own. This is where they realized that they enjoyed the feeling when they killed someone. They loved the feeling so much they went off and smashed Piggy with a boulder and killed him instantly.…
In an imaginary conversation, the Lord of the Flies tells Simon that he is the beast and that he is the reason for the savagery in the boy’s, “Only me. And I’m the Beast. You knew, didn’t you? I’m part of you? Close, close, close! I’m the reason why it’s no go? Why things are what they are?’ ‘You know...you’ll only meet me down there—so don’t try to escape!’ ‘Jack...Roger..Maurice...Robert...Bill...Piggy...Ralph” (143). The Lord of the Flies provides a clear indication that he is the savage beast within the boy’s and that he, meaning the other boy’s will kill Simon,”You know...you’ll only meet me down there—so don’t try to escape! ‘Jack and Roger and Maurice and Robert and Bill and Piggy and Ralph” (143). Simon will soon realize what the Lord of the Flies met when the boy’s actually kill him, “The beast (Simon) was on its knees...was crying out against the abominable noise something about a body on the hill. The beast...fell over the steep edge of the rock to the sand by the water. At once the crowd surged after it, poured down the rock, leapt onto the beast, screamed, struck, bit, tore“ (152). The boy’s have become blinded by their own savagery and fear to notice that they are killing Simon. Due to their own savagery and fear they killed Simon. No one a part of civilization would be so scared of something that they are paranoid enough to…
In the midst of danger, one will make irrational decisions. On the island, the boys are faced with many types of fears. Once the boys hear that there is a “beastie” on the island, one of Jack’s first ideas is to hunt it down. When Ralph doesn’t agree that they should be out searching for the beast, conflicts arise among Jack and Ralph which result in the separation of group. Without Ralph and Piggy, Jack’s group eventually turn to savages and do as they please, not feeling guilty or caring for a thing that happens. The boys recite an incantation right before Simon stumbles upon the camp and is brutally murdered by the boys, thinking that Simon is the beast. “Kill the beast! Cut his throat! Spill his blood!” (Golding 152). The death of Simon is a major turning point in the story because it signifies the boys’ major deterioration in morality and how less and less careless they’ve gotten since the crash. Another type of fear the boys are faced with is the fear of Jack. As the novel advances, Jack becomes more and more of a ruthless tyrant. He uses Roger to torture Samneric and by that action, he shows that he is powerful and whoever doesn’t listen to Jack will be punished…
Unlike McMurphy, Simon does not revel his isolation and instead chooses to isolate himself further by wandering into the forest wilderness and away from the rest of the group. Simon’s seizures and shyness lead to the other older boys ignoring him when he does try to talk at their meetings, even though Simon has the most insightful thoughts out of any of them. In addition to being the most insightful, Simon also experiences an altered perception of reality when he imagines “. . . Lord of the Flies was expanding like a balloon. . . blackness within, a blackness that spread” (Golding,143-144).When Simon walks out of the forest with the body of the dead parachutist, the boys, in a social gathering of their own, immediately kill him. By not joining the other boys in the feast, Simon highlights his social isolation. This eventually leads to his death. All of the rest of the young boys, including Ralph and Piggy take part in the feast. The only boy missing is Simon, further exemplifying to what extent his social isolation reached. In this fatal feast, which Simon does not partake in, the others brutally murder him, mistaking him for the beast. Simon’s social ostracization and therefore isolation from the other boys eventually leads to his savage murder proving that when Simon is not part of the norm, because of his frequent…
Simon’s death is a tragic event in this novel . Piggy, Ralph, Sam and Eric all have in mutual reactions towards Simon’s death. They each handle the guilt towards Simon’s death in different ways. Also, they decide not to say his name aloud to one and other. Even though they all know that they and the rest of the boys murdered Simon they decide to say that they all left the “party” early. In addition Jack has his own thoughts on what has happened the previous night.…