Not just the savages, not just the civilized boys-all the boys kill Simon, because all of the boys lack the courage Simon displayed in facing the beast. But when Simon returns with the news that there's no real beast, only the beast within, the other boys kill him. Of all the boys, only Simon fights through his own fear to discover that the "beast" at the mountaintop is just a dead man. Simon occupies this role in Lord of the Flies, and in doing so he symbolizes all the great spiritual and religious men, from Jesus to Buddha to nameless mystics and shamans, who have sought to help other men accept and face the terrible fact that the beast they fear is themselves. William Golding: The Man Who Wrote Lord of the Flies by John Carey A diligent biography of William Golding doesn't fully capture the creative madness of its subject, finds Peter Conrad. This is a life of religion and spiritual truth-seeking, in which men look into their own hearts, accept that there is a beast within, and face it squarely. Sir William Gerald Golding was a British novelist, poet, playwright and Nobel Prize for Literature laureate, best known for his novel Lord of the Flies. Lord of the Flies, novel by William Golding, published in 1954. But in Lord of the Flies, Golding presents an alternative to civilized suppression and beastly savagery. ![]() Most of the boys on the island either hide behind civilization, denying the beast's existence, or succumb to the beast's power by embracing savagery.
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