The first hints of evil are when Roger throws stones at Henry, foreshadowing his later killing of Piggy. Perhaps a more obvious impression of liberated evil is when Jack paints his face with clay and charcoal. "His sinewy body held up a mask that drew their eyes and appalled them..." "He capered towards Bill and the mask was a thing on its own..." And perhaps most telling of all is the sentence... The mask compelled them.
in chapter four on page 64 the third to last paragraph
Kill the beast. Cut her throat. Spill her blood.
Roger knocks down the littluns' sandcastles in Chapter 4 of "Lord of the Flies" by William Golding. This act foreshadows his later descent into violence and savagery.
Near the end of chapter 4-4.
to show how he is leader and that they have to listen to him, he also attacks them because they are threatening his authority.
This line is from the poem "The Wild Swans at Coole" by W.B. Yeats. It refers to the speaker's emotions overwhelming him as he watches the swans flying by.
Chapter Four - song - was created in 2003.
Jack masks his face with coloured clays and black charcoal markings.
Doctor Doom is the chief adversary of Reed Richards and the Fastastic Four. In Lord of the Flies, Jack is Ralph's main adversary.
Probably some of the most revealing and powerful quotes are from the conversation between Ralph and Piggy near the begining of the chapter, which goes... "Piggy." "Uh?" "That was Simon." "You said that before." "Piggy." "Uh?" "That was murder."
Capital city of the "Lord of the Four Quarters of the World
Where does Russell takes the dogs at the begging of chapter four