What makes simon different from the other boys
Here, on the one side we have Jack , a follower of Beelzebub and on the other side; to represent the good of man we have Simon. Even from his physical appearance he seems to be Jesus. He is a small, thin boy with a pointed chin and very bright eyes. He has long, coarse, black hair over a low, broad forehead. Like Jesus he goes barefooted. Apart from his physical appearance , his manners too speak volume that he is a mystic. He is vastly different from all other boys and his behaviour is really intriguing to us.
He is very cooperative to everyone. He is the only boy who helps Ralph in building shelters. He loves his fellows. For example, he shows his love for Ralph by stroking arm.
He picks fruit for the littluns who cannot reach it. He is also very sympathetic to Piggy. His compassion extends even to the dead as he frees the parachutist from the rocks. Simon is a very bold and fearless boy. At many critical moments he attracts our attention due to his bravery. For example, when Ralph, Jack and Roger are hunting for the beast and their expedition is delayed, it is he who volunteers to go back through the forest alone to Piggy and the littluns without experiencing the least sensation of fear.
It is as if "good" is being destroyed. He actually dies as he is trying to explain the "beast" to the other boys. Simon dies after his conversation with the Lord of the Flies, when he finds out the beast is inside all the boys.
Excited by their hunt, the other boys kill Simon as he tries to explain his finding. The other boy who dies on the island is the boy with the mulberry birthmark. Simon is very in touch with the nature around him and his quite intuitive about things. He knows that some of the boys will not make it off the island. In chapter 7 we see that Ralph sees the ocean as a barrier to them being rescued. He sees it as a physical wall to anyone coming to rescue them.
The Lord of the Flies refers to Simon as a "silly little boy" and tells him that he better run off and play with the others before they begin thinking that he is batty. The Lord of the Flies proceeds to tell Simon that he is the beast and says, "Fancy thinking the Beast was something you could hunt and kill! Also at the beginning Simon is portrayed as a shy and nervous boy, but as they are left to survive and fend for themselves on the island he starts to brake apart from his foretold qualities, but also keeps many.
Simon becomes more at home and comfortable on the island as the novel progresses. As Ralph and Jack argue , each boy tries to give voice to his basic conception of human purpose: Ralph advocates building huts, while Jack champions hunting.
Jack , drawn to the exhilaration of hunting by his bloodlust and desire for power, has no interest in building huts and no concern for what Ralph thinks. How is Simon different from Ralph and Jack? Category: movies fantasy movies. Why is Ralph so angry? What 2 animals is Jack compared to while hunting? Why can't Jack get the pig on his spear? Why does Jack start his own tribe? Do the boys get rescued from the island? Why is Ralph chosen to be the chief?
Why does Jack think he should be the chief? Who is the first boy to die on the island? Why does Jack hate Ralph? What is the beast? For him, the staked sow's eyes are "dim with the infinite cynicism of adult life," a view of adults not defined by the civilized politeness and capability the boys imagine.
Yet Simon soldiers on in his quest to discover the identity of the beast on the mountaintop because he sees the need for the boys to face their fears, to understand the true identity of the false beast on the mountain, and to get on with the business of facing the beast within themselves.
By courageously seeking to confront the figure on the mountaintop, Simon fulfills his destiny of revelation. He doesn't get to share his revelation with the other boys because they are not ready to accept or understand it. Instead he dies as a result of being made the scapegoat for the boys' unshakeable fear. When Simon's body is carried off by the tide, covered in the jellyfish-like phosphorescent creatures who have come in with the tide, Golding shifts the focus from Simon's body's movements to the much larger progressions of the sun, moon, and earth because Simon represented a knowledge as fundamental as the elements.
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