
These are the answers to the questions found at Mrs.Ganesan's blog http://jganeasn.blogspot.com/.
1.At the beginning of the chapter, Piggy tells Ralph to blow the conch and call an assembly. Ralph at first believes that this is an unneeded blowing of the conch, for there are only four boys that the assembly would do anything for, but the assembly was called anyway.
2.Piggy declares that Jack needs to return his glasses mostly just to say that they need to have order and discipline. He is also blind without his glasses, so that shows that he definitely needs them. It's a kind of talisman for Piggy, against the evil of blindness.
3.Ralph said that when they approached Jack, that they would be clean and neat. He was saying this so that they could prove to Jack they were civilzed, that they didn't need to have painted faces and be naked waist down. He wanted to show that could act without truculently.
4.Roger challenges the approach of Ralph and the remaining kids of his side. He was on the upper level of Castle Rock, with a heavy boulder ready to attack.
5. When Jack returns to see Ralph at his fort, he and two other hunters approach with a headless sow, showing that have been hunting in the woods. They, like last time, had left the head of the sow for the "beast".
6. Ralph calls Jack a thief, which causes Jack to attack him. This eventually became not them trying to kill each other, but a bout, like a fencing match. I eventually met a cessation, only for them to attack again.
7. After the fight, Jack orders the other savages to tie up the twins. They however gave up no fight, giving up very easily.
8. Towards the end of the chapter, Piggy asks for order. He wants to show all of them that they can be sensible. However, the delirious Roger decides to roll the ready boulder at Piggy sending him 40 feet towards his death.
9. STRONG BODY PARAGRAPH
I believe that Roger is the one individual who is responsible for Piggy's death. If he hadn't rolled that boulder, Piggy wouldn't have flown off of the cliff to his death. The author fully described that Roger had put all of his energy and weight into the lever, making him totally unable to stop the boulder. He was totally responsible for wanting to kill Piggy. Jack didn't even tell Roger to attack. Jack was at then was an innocent bystander, he hadn't rolled the boulder, and he was just attacking Ralph. This one act went with the rest of the from the novel. This act had shown that every man's weakness is the craziness we have when we loose the rules.
1.At the beginning of the chapter, Piggy tells Ralph to blow the conch and call an assembly. Ralph at first believes that this is an unneeded blowing of the conch, for there are only four boys that the assembly would do anything for, but the assembly was called anyway.
2.Piggy declares that Jack needs to return his glasses mostly just to say that they need to have order and discipline. He is also blind without his glasses, so that shows that he definitely needs them. It's a kind of talisman for Piggy, against the evil of blindness.
3.Ralph said that when they approached Jack, that they would be clean and neat. He was saying this so that they could prove to Jack they were civilzed, that they didn't need to have painted faces and be naked waist down. He wanted to show that could act without truculently.
4.Roger challenges the approach of Ralph and the remaining kids of his side. He was on the upper level of Castle Rock, with a heavy boulder ready to attack.
5. When Jack returns to see Ralph at his fort, he and two other hunters approach with a headless sow, showing that have been hunting in the woods. They, like last time, had left the head of the sow for the "beast".
6. Ralph calls Jack a thief, which causes Jack to attack him. This eventually became not them trying to kill each other, but a bout, like a fencing match. I eventually met a cessation, only for them to attack again.
7. After the fight, Jack orders the other savages to tie up the twins. They however gave up no fight, giving up very easily.
8. Towards the end of the chapter, Piggy asks for order. He wants to show all of them that they can be sensible. However, the delirious Roger decides to roll the ready boulder at Piggy sending him 40 feet towards his death.
9. STRONG BODY PARAGRAPH
I believe that Roger is the one individual who is responsible for Piggy's death. If he hadn't rolled that boulder, Piggy wouldn't have flown off of the cliff to his death. The author fully described that Roger had put all of his energy and weight into the lever, making him totally unable to stop the boulder. He was totally responsible for wanting to kill Piggy. Jack didn't even tell Roger to attack. Jack was at then was an innocent bystander, he hadn't rolled the boulder, and he was just attacking Ralph. This one act went with the rest of the from the novel. This act had shown that every man's weakness is the craziness we have when we loose the rules.
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