That the pigs head was a gift, a gift to the beast.
Jack says, "See? We saw it!" pointing to the pig's head on the stick as a sign of power and dominance over the other boys. He uses the pig's head as a symbol of fear and control to intimidate the other boys.
Jack says that they should continue to make offerings and sacrifices to the beast in order to keep it happy and prevent it from harming them.
Jack puts the pig's head on a stick as an offering to the beast that the boys fear. This symbolizes the boys' descent into savagery and the darkness within them. It also represents the power and influence that fear and evil can have over individuals.
Jack declares that the pig's head will be a sacrifice to the Beast, so he impales it on a stick (sharpened at both ends). The head later becomes the Lord of the Flies.
The hunters put the pig's head on a stick because it is a type of gift to the "beast"
When Jack and his tribe kill the pig they stick the pigs head on a spear and put it in the clearing as an offering to "the beast". They do not know that the beast is actually a part of them and not a physical being.
Jack and Roger planned to hunt and kill Ralph as he was the last remaining obstacle to Jack's authority on the island. They intended to use force and violence to eliminate Ralph and solidify Jack's leadership among the boys.
Jack's group sacrifices the head of a pig to the beast, placing it on a stick as an offering. This gruesome gesture symbolizes their descent into savagery and their willingness to appease the imagined beast.
Jack promises the Lord of the Flies that he will continue to hunt and kill for it. He also pledges to offer sacrifices to it in the form of the pig's head that he places on a stick as an offering.
They mounted it on a stick. it was a offering the the beast.
The Lord of the Flies is not the pig's head on the stick. The pig's head on the stick was an offering left in tribute to the Beast by Jack and his tribe. The "Beast" is a figment of the children's imaginations, which Jack, by the act of leaving an offering, has raised to the status of a primitive God. By this act alone they have invested their imagined Beast/God with increased power, power which must be appeased. The Lord of the Flies (Beelzebub) was one of the many names given to the Devil. The name is used in this context to illustrate the true nature of the "God" which Jack and his hunters are appeasing. The real beast is their own nature, the darkness in the hearts of men, the evil within. It is this inner evil which Simon has an imagined conversation with. Simon does not converse with a pig's head on a stick, dead pig's heads (or live ones for that matter) are incapable of holding conversations.
the Lord of the flies, is the pig head that was put on the stick.
Samneric tell Ralph that Jack intends to hunt him and that he has "sharpened a stick at both ends." Later Ralph finds and takes the stick on which Jack had mounted the pig's head, as an offering to the beast. Ralph realises that the stick has a point at each end. The implication is that Jack intended to behead Ralph and mount his head on a sharpened stick, as an offering to the beast.