Desribing the littluns in chapter 4: Painted Faces and Long Hair Golding wrote, and I quote directly from the book... 'They obeyed the summons of the conch, partly because Ralph blew it, and he was big enough to be a link with the adult world...' So you could say that the littluns obeyed Ralph, to some degree.
Simon
Piggy
The littluns' are the younger boys aged around six years old or so, some a little older. They laugh at Ralph because they think he is funny and they are laughing at the way that he is talking in Lord of the Flies.
Ralph said that near the end of chapter 2: Fire on the mounatin when Piggy admitted that he didn't know the names of the littluns.
It was in chapter 4 when Roger and Maurice kick down the littluns' sandcastles, afterward Maurice feels bad about it.
Roger knocks down the littluns' sandcastles in Chapter 4 of "Lord of the Flies" by William Golding. This act foreshadows his later descent into violence and savagery.
The littluns in Lord of the Flies are the symbol of commen folk.
The littluns in Lord of the Flies are the symbol of commen folk.
In The Lord of the Flies Simon cares for and gets along well with the Littluns. He takes the time to care for the Littluns.
Simon
Piggy
In chapter 8 of "Lord of the Flies," the boys left in the group are Ralph, Piggy, Samneric (Sam and Eric), and a few other littluns. Jack and his hunters have separated from the main group and formed their own tribe. Simon is also still part of the group at this point, but he is becoming increasingly isolated.
The smaller boys in 'Lord of the Flies' are known as "littluns." They are the younger boys who are not part of the older boys' group.
I have the answer!
Maurice
the littluns represent the typical humans
They look like little kids.