Sam and Eric's description of the beast as a monster with wings and claws reflects how fear and imagination can distort reality in the minds of individuals. This distortion is a result of the primal instincts and anxieties present in human nature, which can lead to the projection of exaggerated, illusionary threats. The boys' perception of the beast highlights the fragility of human understanding and the influence of fear on physiological responses, such as heightened adrenaline and a fight-or-flight reaction.
The beast has several names already in the book Lord of the Flies. It is initially referred to as a snake-thing or beastie. Later during his internalised conversation the beast is named as the Lord of the Flies. Finally the real nature of the beast is revealed as the darkness in the hearts of men.
The pilot
Simon is the only character who realizes that the beast doesn't exist and that the true beast is within themselves.
the beast in lord of the flies is parachutist who got entangled in the tree branches
In Lord of the Flies there is technically no physcial beast. "The Beast" is a symbol for something greater i.e our inner savergery. Golding uses the beast as only a symbol which the boys seem to reconize even more with their desent into savergery
Simon was mistaken for the beast in "Lord of the Flies". He was killed by the other boys during a frenzied tribal dance on the beach.
Piggy.
By reading the book
At the end of the novel "Lord of the Flies" by William Golding, it is not explicitly solved or addressed who or what the "beast" actually is. The boys on the island come to acknowledge that the beast is a manifestation of their own inner evil and savagery.
Jack leaves the guts of the sow and its head, mounted on a stick, as an offering for the beast.
page 93
sam does