Simon meets the beast in chapter 8 on page 137.
no
In chapter three: Huts on the Beach Ralph and Simon are in the process of constructing the third shelter.
The Lord Of the Flies itself to Simon
Simon is an epileptic and during an epileptic fugue he has an internalised conversation with the evil which he knows dwells within us all. He mentally projects this inner beast onto the pig's head on a stick which Jack has left as an offering for the imagined beast.
Simon meets the beast in chapter 8 on page 137.
Simon dies.
The jungle
no
How is Simon from lord of the flies?
Simon becomes the "pig" during the hunt in Chapter 8 of "Lord of the Flies." The boys, caught up in their frenzy, mistake Simon for the beast and unknowingly contribute to his tragic death in their violent hysteria.
Simon helps Ralph build shelters in Chapter 3 of "Lord of the Flies."
I'm pretty sure that's the chapter where the boys mistake him for the "beastie" and they kill him.
When Simon goes back into the woods in chapter 8 of Lord of the Flies, he encounters the "Lord of the Flies," which is a severed pig's head mounted on a stake. He has a hallucination where the head seems to be speaking to him, and in his delirious state, he realizes the evil within himself and the other boys.
In Chapter 8, Simon discovers the "real" beast is a pig (sow) head on a stick, which is the Lord of the Flies... the lord of the flies also claims that the boys created the beast and everyone of the boys is a beast in himself.... In Chapter 9, the so called beast Samneric saw in earlier chapters and the same so called beast on top of the mountain that Roger, Ralph, and Jack saw is just a dead body of an airman in a parachute (Simon's discovery)... he then untangled the parachute lines...the wind caused the body to move like a puppet
Simon is the Christ-figure in Lord of the Flies. He disappears to private clearings in the island to appreciate and commune with nature. Later in the novel, he goes alone to the top of the mountain to investigate the parachuter. After his death, his body is surrounded by a glowing halo of sea life and drifts away.
In Chapter 3 of "Lord of the Flies," Simon's character is shown to be quiet, introspective, and compassionate. He shows concern for the littluns and tries to alleviate their fears by telling them that they will be rescued. Simon's actions reveal his empathy and sensitivity towards others, setting him apart from the other boys on the island.