In "Lord of the Flies," Ralph, Jack, and Simon are the three boys who go exploring. Ralph takes the lead as the group's elected leader, Jack is charismatic and wants to assert his dominance, while Simon is compassionate and introspective. Their exploration serves as a way for the boys to bond and assert their independence in their new, isolated environment.
Lord of the Flies is a book. There were boys in the book. They split up into two different groups in the book. One group of the boys in the book go to Castle Rock to use it as a hide out.
Lord of the Flies documents the progression of "innocent" boys into savagery.
Piggy. He has to inventarise the other boy´s names.
pigs
pigs
Do your homework and read the book.
Simon i think. he was refrenced as being small.
The little kids in the book "Lord of the Flies" were called "littluns." They were the youngest boys on the island who often played and were not actively involved in the power struggles and conflicts of the older boys.
Read the book really....
Sam and Eric are both young boys on the island in "Lord of the Flies," but their exact ages are not specified in the book. They are among the younger boys in the group.
"Lord of the Flies" is a book expressing a metaphor of how chaotic society is and can be when authority is ignored. Ralph is one of the boys who remains civilized in the book, and his main fear is of what the boys are going to turn into and do without authority. He knows chaos will corrupt the society of the boys on the island and he fears this.
The book you are referring to is likely "Lord of the Flies" by William Golding. In the novel, a group of boys get stranded on a deserted island and attempt to govern themselves, but their society quickly deteriorates into chaos and violence.