Lord of the flies how old is simon




















Simon in this version of the story never has any encounter with the "Lord of the Flies", and Ralph has no part in his death. Simon does not faint when the boys first gather, and rather than drawing a derisive remark from Jack for doing so, Jack makes no remarks about Simon at all. Ralph gets along with Simon, but Simon roams freely between the two camps and from the beginning of the film will disappear on his own for long periods of time.

On one such occasion, well after dark, he finds Captain Benson, the airline pilot, dead in the cave where many of the boys believe "The Monster" lives.

Simon takes off running for Jack's bonfire at the beach, waving a glowstick in an effort to draw attention so he can relay his discovery. Instead, Jack hysterically assumes the monster is approaching, orders his Hunters to attack, and Simon is dead before anyone realizes the mistake. After his encounter with "The Lord of the Flies" which was in reality a hallucination caused by his epilepsy He went to find the rest of the boys.

Simon, walking in front of Ralph, felt a flicker of incredulity—a beast with claws that scratched, that sat on a mountain-top, that left no tracks and yet was not fast enough to catch Samneric. However Simon thought of the beast, there rose before his inward sight the picture of a human, at once heroic and sick.

Simon, from his little leafy meditation cave, gets it: the island is changing them. Being afraid of the beast turns them into beasts. If you're having trouble understanding this, let's literalize it for you: he's basically saying that being afraid of an enemy makes you do such horrific things that you turn into the enemy yourself.

And by "you," we mean "nations" and "governments. It should. It's the same kind of argument that some people make today about the War on Terror. But Simon's freaky wisdom doesn't mean he's immune to the island's effects. Hallucinating and probably dehydrated that "swollen tongue" is a good giveaway [8. And that means Simon is even wiser than we thought, because all of the head's lines are actually his own, like this:. I'm part of you? Close, close, close. I'm the reason why it's no go?

Begin typing your search term above and press enter to search. Press ESC to cancel. Ben Davis May 13, What is Simon like at the beginning of Lord of the Flies? Simon in Lord of the Flies. Simon frequently goes off on his own to a private place on the island.

Here he can think things through and come to reasoned conclusions. The other boys find this odd. He went on among the creepers until he reached the great mat that was woven by the open space and crawled inside.

Beyond the screen of leaves the sunlight pelted down and the butterflies danced in the middle their unending dance. Simon has gone to his secret place but on this occasion it seems much less comfortable and more threatening.



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