Simon faints on occasion and also seems to suffer from epilepsy, which would account for his imagined conversation with the Lord of the Flies, his nose bleed and subsequent collapse. Having seen the unsympathetic reaction of the boys towards Percival's nervous breakdown Simon would seek to avoid a similar reaction. The need to avoid being seen while experiencing an epileptic fit would account for Simon's desire to spend time alone in his 'secret place.' It seems that he simply sat there and thought.
The Lord of the Flies tells Simon that he should stay and become a part of the group, rather than trying to escape or resist it. It tries to convince Simon that there is no way to avoid the darkness and brutality within all humans.
He tells him that he will have fun with him.
Simon represents the spiritual side of man as well as the goodness in a mans heart. He is used to parallel the savage actions of the other boys.
He tells simon to go away because he was only a scared little boy.
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.
During Simon's internatised conversation with the evil within himself, the 'Lord of the Flies' says a number of things. It tells Simon, "You know perfectly well you'll only meet me down there--so don't try to escape!" It also Tells Simon, that "We are gong to have fun on this island." He is also warned not to 'try it on' or "We shall do you."
page 152 when Simon crawls out of the forest to tell them that the "beast" is actually just a dead pilot. then they kill him
In "Lord of the Flies," Simon goes through the forest alone to inform Piggy that the group hunting.
During Simon's internatised conversation with the evil within himself, the 'Lord of the Flies' says a number of things. It tells Simon, "You know perfectly well you'll only meet me down there--so don't try to escape!" It also Tells Simon, that "We are gong to have fun on this island." He is also warned not to 'try it on' or "We shall do you."
Simon has a conversation with the Lord of the Flies (the pig's head on a stick) in the forest, during which he realizes that the beast is actually the darkness and evil within themselves. However, he doesn't get a chance to tell the other boys before he is killed by them during a frenzied dance.
No one ever found out about what the beast really was from Simon because they had accidentally beaten him to death before Simon could actually tell them anything.
At page42, Simon commented on Piggy. "We used his specs, he helped that way." shows that Simon see the best out of people.
In chapter eight of Lord of the Flies from Simon's point of view, he ventures alone into the forest and witnesses the parachutist's corpse. He realizes that the "beast" the boys fear is actually the dead pilot. He rushes back to tell the others, but is mistaken for the "beast" and tragically killed in a frenzied frenzy by the boys during a storm.
Simon's death causes an uproar from Ralph and Piggy who are furious about how and who murdered him. Samneric two of the people who murdered Simon, but due to shame, they decided not to tell Ralph or Piggy. Ralph secretly knew about it, but did not tell them.
In "The Lord of Flies", Simon finds the body of the dead paratrooper and becomes sick at the smell of the rotting corpse. He frees the parachute line and runs to tell the others about the body, but they mistake him for the beast and beat him to death.