they go crazy and kill everyone
the boy who goes missing is the boy with the mulberry coloured birthmark on his face
The first littleun to go missing is a shy little boy with a birthmark on his face who was the first to claim that he saw a "beastie." He went missing in chapter 2 when the boys lit their first fire. Piggy noticed that the boy was gone and everyone feared that he could have accidentally fallen in the fire. They quickly forget about the boy. And we are never to find out what happened to him. Hope that helped :)
In "Lord of the Flies," the wild boar does not specifically eat the littlun with the mulberry-colored birthmark. Instead, the boy goes missing after the boys' frenzied dance and chant during a hunting ritual, which leads to the assumption that he may have fallen victim to the chaos of their descent into savagery. The boar symbolizes the primal instincts awakening within the boys, but it is the group’s brutality that ultimately contributes to the littlun's fate.
At first the boy with the birthmark said he saw the beast when he was actually just dreaming and then he miseriously disappears when he actually dies in a fire the boys made that got out of hand
The one who suffers the most is the boy with the birthmark and he ends up dying, because of there carelesness!
Part of the island burns and the boy with the birthmark on his face dissapears
He raise fear for evryone!!! not sure though. He tells every1 to fear the beastie =) he is a symbol of doubt and fear because then every1 thinks there is something out thereAnother answer: In the text of the book the littlun with the mulberry coloured birthmark on his face raises two question. He asks what the boys intend to do about the snake-thing and also asks will it return the coming night. Symbolically he raises other issues, such as why didn't anyone even know what his name was and why was the exact number of boys never determined?Why did nobody bother to find out his name? The very fact that he had a mulberry coloured birthmark meant that he was noticed but nobody asked him for his name. Perhaps the fact that he had a birthmark somehow lessened his importance to the other boys, his disability somehow made him invisible. I suppose that he is an example of societies atitude towards disability.In the text of the book the littlun with the mulberry coloured birthmark on his face raises two question. He asks what the boys intend to do about the snake-thing and also asks will it return the coming night. Symbolically he raises other issues, such as why didn't anyone even know what his name was and why was the exact number of boys never determined?EDITActually, none of the littluns are named throughout the book because of their lack of importance. The significance of the mulberry birthmark was so that the boy was noticeable, rather than ignored. The distinguishable birthmark is what makes Piggy notice that the young boy has gone missing after the first fire which they fail to control - he's killed in the fire and therefore the first character death, followed by Simon and Piggy.SOURCESStudied at GCSE English.
The boy with the birthmark got lost on page 38 of "Lord of the Flies" by William Golding. This moment serves as a pivotal point in the story, highlighting the chaos and fear that begin to unravel within the group of boys stranded on the island. His disappearance symbolizes the loss of innocence and the descent into savagery among the remaining boys.
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Only two boys died: Simon and Piggy. However there was the boy with the mulberry-shaped birthmark but he is just never seen again (his fate is undetermined).
In "Lord of the Flies," the mulberry-colored littlun, often referred to as the "littlun with the birthmark," goes missing after a fire spreads on the island. It is implied that he perished in the blaze, highlighting the tragic consequences of the boys' descent into chaos. His disappearance serves as a poignant reminder of innocence lost and the darker themes of the novel.