At the first meeting when Jack and Ralph are both contenders to be leader it is Roger who suggests that the boys should have a vote. Roger is the boy who threw stones at Henry, wanting to hit the littlun but subconsciously throwing the stones wide of his target as a result of years of conditioning not to hurt other children. Roger volunteered to join Ralph and Jack when they climbed to the top of the mountain in search of the beast. Roger and Robert accompanied Jack to Ralph's camp when he invited the boys to come to his feast. Jack chose Maurice and Roger to join him on his night time raid to steal Piggy's glasses. It was Roger who launched the boulder from the top of castle rock which resulted in the death of Piggy. Samneric told Ralph that Roger was a 'terror' and that he had hurt them when they had been captured and forced to join Jack's tribe. When Ralph was hiding in the thicket in the final chapter he heard jack and Roger questioning one of the twins who then squealed in pain.
he is one of the boys who betrays Ralph and joins jacks new tribe. Escencially he kills piggy in the end too.
Another answer: Roger is described in the book as, and I quote... 'There was a slight, furtive boy whom no one knew, who kept to himself with an inner intensity of avoidance and secrecy.' Roger is a sadist who takes pleasure in inflicting pain on other boys and on pigs. He is the personification of true evil. He knows what he does is wrong but he simply doesn't care, in fact he might even enjoy his actions even more because of this. Roger takes this to the limit when he sends the boulder crashing onto the casueway, knocking Piggy on to a rock in the sea and killing him, simply because he felt like doing it.
Roger killed Piggy by pushing a large rock onto him, causing his death.
There is no mention in the book of Roger dying.
Ralph.
He is very evil,bad and violent, and he is willing to kill.
Roger
Jack, Roger, and the Littluns kill Simon when he shows up to warn them.
Roger
Roger
Roger throws rocks at Henry in Chapter 4 of "Lord of the Flies," on page 62 (Penguin Books edition, 2006).
Murder
He is struck by a boulder that was released by Roger.
Roger and Maurice.
Maurice
NO
In "The Lord of Flies", Roger begins to take on Jack's traits and reacts in the ways of his leader. Although he had always had a cordial relationship with Ralph, Jack's hatred of him eventually causes Roger to hate him as well and go along with the plot to kill him.