In the book "Lord of the Flies" by William Golding, it is Simon who emerges from the jungle and encounters the Lord of the Flies, which is a pig's head on a stick placed as an offering to the imaginary beast. Simon has a conversation with the Lord of the Flies, which represents the evil and savagery within the boys.
Only the children survived with the oldest child being 12.
At the end of the boy the only boys who we know definitely did not survive are Piggy and Simon, who were both murdered. It also seems pretty safe to assume that the littlun with the mulberry coloured birthmark on his face perished when the first fire got out of control, as he was never seen again after it. Ralph also stabbed at least two of Jack's tribe with his spear, so they may also have been dead or badly injured.
The only boys I recall dying were Simon and Piggy. Simon was killed by Jacks 'tribe' when he ran from the forest and was attacked. Piggy was killed by Roger with a rock. I don't know about all of the littluns but I think a lot of them survived.
Ralph, Jack, Roger, Sam N' Eric, Robert, etc. Besides Piggy, Simon and the boy with the birthmark on his face, they all lived.
All the boys excepts Simon and a boy that they didn't know the name of.
A British naval officer and his ship see a fire raging and stop to help. They take the boys back into society.
Well, technically, multiple people emerge from the jungle, but what I think you are talking about is when Simon comes out of the jungle with news that the beast is not real. So, it was Simon.
Simon and piggy
He sees a snake beastie thing in the jungle.
The jungle
The Jungle
the thing that crawls out of the forest is Simon.
The jungle catches fire
The jungle catches fire
In "Lord of the Flies," the beast is said to inhabit the jungle during the day. The littlun describes it as a creature that hides in the treetops and comes out at night.
Are you referring to two separate books, called The Secret Place and Lord of the Flies or are you referring to Simon's 'secret place' in the jungle in the book Lord of the Flies? If you are referring to two separate books you need to read them both and make notes comparing and contrasting the two stories.
In "Lord of the Flies," the character who leaves the group to go off on his own is Simon. He often seeks solitude and spiritual reflection in the jungle, away from the group's chaos and violence.
In "Lord of the Flies," Wilfred is one of the boys stranded on the island. He is mentioned briefly in the story, as being one of the boys tortured by Jack and his tribe. Wilfred represents the theme of violence and savagery that emerges among the boys as they regress into savagery without adult supervision.
In "Lord of the Flies," it is Simon who is tending the fire when the boys' fear of the beast emerges. As the boys mistake a dead paratrooper for the beast and flee, Simon remains at the scene and discovers the truth about the figure on the mountain.
In William Golding's novel "Lord of the Flies," Simon talks with the Lord of the Flies, which is a pig's head on a stick that represents the evil within the boys on the island. Simon has a hallucinatory conversation with the Lord of the Flies, which symbolizes his inner struggle with the darkness present in humanity.