Two separate illustrations of an animal head and a fire on a mountain

Lord of the Flies

by William Golding

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Did all the boys in Lord of the Flies believe they saw a beast near the pink granite?

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Not all the boys believed they saw a beast near the pink granite. Samneric were the first to claim they saw the beast, mistaking a dead paratrooper for it. Most boys, including Ralph and Piggy, believed their account, while Simon doubted it, understanding the "beast" as the inherent evil within each boy. Simon recognized that the beast was not a physical entity, setting him apart from the others.

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No. Initially, Samneric are the first biguns to see the beast on the top of the mountain while they are attempting to maintain the signal fire in chapter six. They accidentally mistake the corpse of a dead paratrooper for the beast and run down the side of the mountain to inform the others about the beast. While the majority of the boys believe Samneric, Piggy and Simon have their doubts.

In the next chapter, Ralph, Roger, and Jack climb the mountain in the evening and also mistake the dead paratrooper for the beast. When they arrive back at the base camp, they confirm Samneric's findings, and Jack quits Ralph's tribe after Ralph tells him that his hunters are no match for the beast. Even though Piggy is stunned, he believes Ralph and thinks that a beast does exist. The other biguns and littluns also believe the five boys,...

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who claim to have seen the beast. However, Simon is the only boy who understands that the beast is the inherent wickedness inside each boy and is not a physical creature that can be hunted or killed. Simon stands alone and does not believe the five biguns.

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I believe the incident you're referring to in Lord of the Flies is the time Samneric were supposed to be tending the fire on the mountain but fell asleep, only to wake up to a strange sight.  They saw something moving, and they heard a kind of whooshing sound.  They were too frightened to investigate; they simply ran down the mountain to the beach to let the others know what they had seen.  By now, the beast had fangs and had chased them the entire way--pure figments of their imagination, but believable because of their scrapes and cuts (which they got as they tore through the brush on their way to the beach).  The twins believed they had seen the beast, and the young boys believed their story.  In fact, of course, this was the dead parachutist whom Simon will later release from his entangled chute.   With the vivid imaginations of young children, especially after the series of events which has happened to them on this island, they did believe they had seen the beast.  We know better, though, and Simon will also soon learn the truth.

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