The parachutist is described as "figure dropping swiftly beneath a parachute, a figure hung with dangling limbs.” The author describes the parachutist as "held by a complication of lines." Later, the parachutist is described as "corpulent" and "ungainly." The parachute man is seen by the boys as a living thing and as a representation of the "beast," and to the reader, it symbolizes the adult world that still exists off of the island.
intellectual
intelligent
submissive
steadfast
resourceful
innovative
mature
naive
ljh
He is a littlun and is a minor character in the book
sup
Simon is an epileptic and during an epileptic fugue he has an internalised conversation with the evil which he knows dwells within us all. He mentally projects this inner beast onto the pig's head on a stick which Jack has left as an offering for the imagined beast.
Lord of the Flies is narrated from a third person viewpioint.
the dead parachute man
Because they are young, frightened children whose imaginations can get the better of them.
The parachute on the mountain in "Lord of the Flies" is a symbol of the outside adult world and civilization. It represents the boys' connection to the world beyond the island, highlighting their isolation and descent into savagery without the presence of authority figures or societal norms.
Ralph can be described as fair-minded, determined, and principled in "Lord of the Flies." He shows leadership qualities and represents order and civilization in contrast to the chaos that ensues on the island.
a parachuter who launched from a plane after it exploded. he is dead, but moves because the wind blows his parachute.
ljh
samneric
No, there are no words that begin with the letter "q" in the novel "Lord of the Flies" by William Golding.
He is a littlun and is a minor character in the book
green and candle like
he dies in a fire.
He was dead when he landed. The boys thought he was moving because his parachute was caught in the trees and when the wind blew, he would sway.