The boys killed at least three different pigs during the course of the book and all the pigs are cooked and eaten. The head of the sow was cut off, mounted on a stick, which had been sharpened at both end,s and left as an offering to 'the beast' along with its spilled guts.
they put it on a stake and put the stake in the ground in a clearing in the woods that that boy who sneaks off on his own goes to. if you read the book you will find out if you read the book.:)
The hunters formed a ring, which the pig was driven into, and the boys beat it and stabbed it with their spears until Jack finally slit its throat with his knife.
In the Lord of the Flies after they eat the boys reenact killing the pig.
The boys hunt for Ralph as an order of Jack.
to kill the pig
The loving sow was transformed to a horrific face, and demonstrates the change of the boys. At first they were innocent, but changed into killers after time on the island. Lord of the Flies is the translation of Beelzebub.
The pig's head is called "the Lord of the Flies". But only by Simon.
"Kill the pig. Cut her throat. Spill her blood."
Jack and his hunters, hunt and kill a pig. They then eat the meat & Serve the head as a token of peace for the "Beast" The head of the pig attracts flies, and become "The Lord Of The Flies" :) God Bless.
A pig.
In the Lord of the Flies after they eat the boys reenact killing the pig.
In "Lord of the Flies," the feeling of killing the pig is described as a mix of exhilaration, fear, and guilt. The boys experience a sense of power and triumph in their ability to hunt and kill the pig, but they also feel a deep unease at the violence they have committed. This moment marks a turning point where the boys' descent into savagery becomes more pronounced.
In chapter 8 of "Lord of the Flies," the boys hunt and kill a sow. They cut off its head and place it on a stick as an offering to the Beast. This act symbolizes the boys' descent into savagery and their increasing detachment from civilized society.
Roger pretends to be the pig in the pig dance in "Lord of the Flies." He acts out the role during the boys' reenactment of the hunt, revealing the dark and violent nature that lurks within him.
The boys hunt for Ralph as an order of Jack.
to kill the pig
In "Lord of the Flies," the game the boys play after the hunt is a pig-killing game where they reenact the hunt by pretending to be the pig and being chased and eventually "killed" by the other boys. The game becomes increasingly violent and ritualistic, foreshadowing the descent of the boys into savagery and chaos.
The tracks in "Lord of the Flies" were likely left by a pig, as the boys on the island hunt pigs for their survival.
In "Lord of the Flies," flies are often seen swarming around the pig's head, known as the Lord of the Flies. This symbolizes the presence of evil on the island and the boys' descent into savagery. The flies also represent decay and the moral corruption of the boys as they lose their humanity.