When Simon climbed the mountain to see what it was that the other boys had mistaken for a beast he found the dead and decomposing body of an airman. Simon released the tangled parachute lines, which had been tangled around the rocks and had caused the body to move when the wind caught the parachute canopy.
Simon finds the truth about the beast: that it is just a dead paratrooper caught in the trees, who was mistaken for a monster by the boys due to the darkness and their fear. However, upon attempting to share this revelation with the other boys, he is tragically mistaken for the beast and killed in a frenzied moment of group hysteria.
A dead body.
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.
No, Jack did not believe that Simon was the beast in "Lord of the Flies." He mistook Simon for the beast during a frenzied dance in the forest, but later realized his mistake and Simon's true identity.
The lord of the flies tells Simon that they cannot escape him, the beast, for it is inside themselves. They are the beast. It also tells him that 'he' is going to have fun, and everyone will kill him.
Simon
Simon is the only character who realizes that the beast doesn't exist and that the true beast is within themselves.
Simon meets the beast in chapter 8 on page 137.
Simon is the one who converses with the pig's head, known as the Lord of the Flies, about the nature of the beast. The Lord of the Flies represents the evil and darkness within each individual, which Simon realizes during their conversation.
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.
From the book, "The Lord of the Flies", Simon pictures the new beast as the evil that is inside of everyone. He sees this human as once heroic and sick.
The quote "I don't believe in the beast, I just don't" is spoken by Simon in William Golding's novel "Lord of the Flies." Simon is a character who perceives the true nature of the "beast" on the island as a representation of the inherent evil within mankind.
In "Lord of the Flies," Simon disappears into the forest to find out the truth about the "beast" on the mountain. He has an intense hallucination and realizes that the beast is actually the parachutist from the crashed plane. However, tragically, the other boys mistake him for the beast and kill him in a frenzy during a tribal dance.
In The Lord of the Flies, Jack explains Simon's death to the boys who are with him by convincing them that the beast killed him. He even tries to make himself believe this lie.