I would write about what Ralph thinks will happen next and how he misses his dad. You would also write about who he likes the most and which boys obey him.
A fort.
When the boys elect Ralph as leader, in favour of Jack, Ralph puts Jack in charge of the choir and asks him what he would like them to be. Jack replies, "Hunters."
I suppose it would be Ralph, his one flaw being over-obsession with the fire
Simon. Ralph accuses him of going to the toilet, which makes the others boys laugh. However, we know about his faintings and hallucinations so think he might have been hiding so the other boys would not notice what was happening.
He hope to remind Jack and his tribe that they are not savages but simply schoolboys stranded on an island. He hope that this will remind them that they are civilised human beings and that there are some things that they should not do.
I think that a journal entry is in the format of an essay, so I would say at least five paragraphs...but actually, i honestly don't think it matters, as long as you get the point across...hope this helps!
In "Lord of the Flies," both Ralph and Jack could be considered protagonists, as they are both significant characters with distinct roles and ambitions. However, the story primarily follows Ralph's perspective and struggles, so he could be seen as the main protagonist.
Because Ralph doesn't hide his emotions, he expresses them freely. When he is ecstatically happy he stands on his head and when he is angry he loses his temper. Ralph 'wears his heart on his sleeve' for all to see and they know exactly where they stand with him.
Ralph Laren underwear varies in materials from cotton to silk which has an impact on the comfort. I would think that it would be very comfortable because those two materials are good quality.
Any where really but the best places I think would be at walmart and target
Jack attacked Piggy rather than Ralph because he knew Piggy wouldn't fight back. If he had attacked Ralph there was a good chance that Ralph would have beaten him and Jack couldn't take the risk of losing face in front of his own hunters.
At the end of the book Ralph wept for the end of innocence, the darkness in men's hearts and the death of his the true, wise, friend called Piggy. But I don't think that they were friends. Piggy attached himself to Ralph right at the start of the book although it was quite apparent that Ralph found him to be an bit of an annoyance but was too polite to tell him to 'push off.' Ralph found Piggy's advice useful and he as always on hand to remind Ralph what he had been saying, when he had his petit mal fugues and lost track of what he had been talking about. Piggy certainly benefited from being around Ralph, as he knew that without Ralph's protection Jack would have picked on him all the time. Essentially I think that circumstances forced Ralph and Piggy into an alliance of mutual convenience but I doubt that there was any real genuine affection. If anything Ralph seemed initially to prefer Jack and Simon as potential friends.