At one point Jack does say... "We're English, we aren't savages." Piggy also mentions to the lttle'uns that he comes from Camberley, which is a town on the River Cam (near Cambridge in England).
In "Lord of the Flies," the hints about what happened to the boys include the discovery of the pilot's body who parachuted onto the island, the eventual rescue of the boys by a naval officer, and the final scene where the boys are seen weeping for the loss of innocence and the darkness within themselves. These hints suggest the descent into savagery and chaos that led to tragic consequences for the boys.
The boys were school boys all going home. Their plane was shot down in the starts of the war and they were the only ones to survive. Later a downed pilot makes his way onto the island but is already dead when his parachute lands on the cliff.
This book is based during World War 1 and the boys are being evacuated from England. We know this as soon after they land there is gunfire. Two fighter jets (one is European- or ali) are firing at each other.
A specific area was never mentioned but they are all British
Britain
The boys looked for their own smoke to signal the ship but it had gone out.
Emperor of the Flies, it explores what would have happened if the boys were not rescued.
In Chapter 1 of "Lord of the Flies," social classes do not explicitly emerge among the boys. They are all initially depicted as schoolboys from different backgrounds who have crashed on a deserted island. However, hints of potential class divisions based on age, physical appearance, and leadership qualities among the boys start to emerge as the story progresses.
generally not as boys/men can not pick up hints of any kind! If you like him, tell him
I'm pretty sure that's the chapter where the boys mistake him for the "beastie" and they kill him.
There is no specific age given for the choir boys in "Lord of the Flies," but they are described as being young boys, likely around the same age as the other boys on the island (around 6-12 years old). The focus in the book is more on their descent into savagery rather than their exact age.
The author hints at the possibility of the Curtis boys being split up when Ponyboy overhears Darry and Soda discussing the idea of sending him to a boys' home. This foreshadows the potential separation of the brothers due to their limited options and circumstances.
Boys aren't good at taking hints, Just tell them.
The smaller boys in 'Lord of the Flies' are known as "littluns." They are the younger boys who are not part of the older boys' group.
The boys are savages, so they don't control the flies. Also, the lord of the flies is far away from castle rock, so they don't have to deal with it.
Dear Boys happened in 1994.
The young children in "Lord of the Flies" are referred to as "littluns." They are the younger boys on the island who are not quite old enough to be considered part of the older boys' group.