Lord of the Flies - Simon's character.

Authors Avatar

Throughout the story Simon is kind and thoughtful. When Jack insults Piggy, Simon always tries to manipulate what Jack has said into a compliment. Simon also confronts Jack in acts of courage to help Piggy. One of these times is when Simon goes to Jack after Jack has taken Piggy’s specs, and he takes them off Jack and returns them to Piggy. He then defends Piggy, when Jack is trying to convict Piggy of not helping to start the fire. Simon says ‘We used his specs…he helped that way’. This shows that he has some affection and sympathy for Piggy.

In the novel, Simon’s character is a Christ figure. Everything he does is good. All the other boys on the island have the secret ‘inner evil’, which only Simon can fight against. This ‘inner evil’ is William Golding’s idea as to why people do evil things. He believed that when you are born you have a certain amount of good and a certain amount of evil inside you. He believed that as you go through your life you would show bits of evil at any time. The only problem is that the evil would be totally out of your control. Some people only show small amounts of evil, and others would turn completely evil, like Roger or the ‘pig’s head’- the Lord of the Flies itself. Simon is completely good because he has controlled the amount of evil showing form his body, down to a minimum.

On the island there are different objects and characters, which represent evil. Simon is the only character on the island that can fight these presences. He does when he confronts the ‘Pig’s head’ later on in the story. One of the presences is Roger. Roger is pure evil, and only in the last four chapters does the reader discover this. Roger seems to be quite timid at the beginning of the story, when he marches in with the choir. However, as the story progresses, Roger starts to show signs of evil escaping him.

One other presence on the island, which enters the story later on, is the ‘dead airman’. The ‘dead airman’ is seen as the ‘beast’ because the evil inside the boys manifests and produces an image of something to be scared of. On the island, the ‘dead airman’ represents a piece of the adult and civilised world. Simon is the only boy who knows and believes that the ‘beast’ isn’t real and shows a Christ-like compassion to him.

Join now!

Another presence of pure evil is the ‘pig’s head’ or Lord of the Flies. The name, ‘Lord of the Flies’, is translated into ‘Beelzebub’. It is a Hebrew name meaning ‘Satan or any devil of some sort’. The name was used in the bible. Therefore, Golding has chosen a fitting title for the novel.

When Simon confronts the ‘Lord of the Flies’, it is just a pig’s head on a stick, which Jack had stuck into the ground in Simon’s special retreat. However, when Simon is speaking to it he doesn’t see it as a pig’s head, he sees ...

This is a preview of the whole essay