Jack sees that the boys are terrified of the beast and uses their fear to his advantage. He makes the rule that the only place where they will have a fire is on the mountain. Ralph then speaks on their fear. He admits that he is frightened himself, but their fear is unfounded. Jack stands up, takes the conch, and yells at the littluns for screaming like babies and not hunting or building or helping.
In Lord of the Flies by William Golding, Piggy dies after he asks whether it is better to have rules or hunt and kill. After asking this question, Roger rolls a boulder onto him. Simon dies after his conversation with the Lord of the Flies, when he finds out the beast is inside all the boys.
Shortly after he declares this at his meeting, he and his hunters kill a pig. They sharpen a stick at both ends: one end to stick into the ground and the other to stick into the head of the killed pig. This is the gift he leaves for the beast. Jack suggests a way to keep the beast happy. What is it? In The Lord of the Flies, Simon learns that the beast the children on the island fear is actually a dead paratrooper and his parachute.
When he tries to bring his new knowledge to the other boys, he is murdered by them in a ritualistic style. The next morning, the news of the monster has the boys in a state of uproar as they gather on the beach.
Jack seizes the conch shell and blows into it clumsily, calling for an assembly. Jack tells the others that there is definitely a beast on the mountain and goes on to claim that Ralph is a coward who should be removed from his leadership role. The other boys, however, refuse to vote Ralph out of power. Enraged, Jack storms away from the group, saying that he is leaving and that anyone who likes is welcome to join him.
Deeply troubled, Ralph does not know what to do. Piggy, meanwhile, is thrilled to see Jack go, and Simon suggests that they all return to the mountain to search for the beast. The other boys are too afraid to act on his suggestion, however. Ralph slips into a depression, but Piggy cheers him up with an idea: they should build a new signal fire, on the beach rather than on the mountain.
Piggy tries to convince Ralph that they are better off without the deserters. Along another stretch of sand, Jack gathers his new tribe and declares himself the chief. The hunters steal burning sticks from the fire on the beach.
The sight mesmerizes him, and it even seems as if the head comes to life. Terrified and troubled by the apparition, Simon collapses in a faint. Answer and Explanation: In Chapter 7 of Lord of the Flies, Simon goes off alone to alert Piggy that they would be returning after dark. He lets Ralph know that this is what. What Simon means? Simon symbolizes goodness.
He is a gentle-hearted person. He takes the time to feed the littluns. He symbolizes the Christ figure in his goodness. What is Simon's peaceful place? Golding reveals Simon's place in the jungle as a contrast between light and dark.
The boy wades through the shade of the jungle, where "the air was dark too, and the creepers dropped their ropes like the rigging of foundered ships" to a place "where more sunshine fell" Why does Jack paint his face? Initially, Jack paints his face in order to hide himself better from the pigs he's hunting. He concludes that the pigs can't smell him, but they can clearly see him as he stalks them, and so he needs a sort of camouflage.
Later, the mask takes on added significance because it hides Jack from the other boys as well. How does Ralph change in Chapter 7? In Chapter 7 of William Golding's Lord of the Flies, Ralph becomes increasingly homesick and aware of the increasing chaos among the boys he is supposed to be leading.
After unsuccessfully searching for a beast, the boys divert themselves by hunting, again unsuccessfully, a pig. Evening is coming and he watches the birds and butterflies. Then he sits back in the small space and stays there by himself as night falls, just thinking. More time has passed. Ralph, Simon, and Piggy are trying to build shelters and keep the signal fire going.
Jack goes off to hunt again and meanwhile, back at the lagoon, Ralph, Simon and Piggy are swimming along with a boy named Maurice. As Ralph despairs, Simon tries to convince him to go on being chief. Simon walks along with Jack and Ralph while they search for the beast, feeling doubtful that there is such a creature as the one Sam and Eric described. While the boys discuss the beast they have seen, Simon says that they should go up the mountain and face it.
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