"What are you doing out here all alone? Aren't you afraid of me?"
Simon shook.
"There isn't anyone to help you. Only me. And I'm the Beast."
Absolutely crazy how the civility and effort towards being disciplined is absolutely shattered. Is this truly how boys will be boys when left to their own devices? No adult guidance, or consequence, or hesitation. There was a shimmering light of order in the beginning with boys in straight lines and talk of rescue but as time went on it seemed it was lost on all of them. Even Ralph, though Piggy did his best to help both of them keep the right goal in mind.
Despite everything that happened beforehand, it was this quote, this scene with Simon and the pig head that truly began to make my skin crawl. Like it was an omen; a shadow descending upon the island of boys who were realizing they would not receive consequences for their actions. Afterward, with Simons final appearance, it felt like the finality of the death of the boys' innocence. That's when I felt like power of the conch in itself was morally shattered and Piggy's final scene when the conch physically shattered was the definite loss of that power, of that innocence ever returning.