I dont know that why I ask u guys
Ralph notices that when they are rolling in the rocks, there is no drop-off at the end of the platform, and it instead curves upwards. This strange anomaly makes Ralph question the nature of the platform and its boundaries.
The strange thing that Ralph notices when the boy are playing around with the rolling rocks is smoke. What he is seeing is not real though.
That they're rocks. And they're rolling.
I am guessing that you are referring to the passage about the rock in the sea when Ralph, Jack and Simon set out to climb the mounttain, in chapter one, to determine whether they are on an island or not. To quote from the book... There was a jumble of the usual squareness, with one great block sitting out in the lagoon. Sea birds were nesting there. "Like icing," said Ralph, "on a pink cake." <---wrong he means chapter 6
I am guessing that you are referring to the passage about the rock in the sea when Ralph, Jack and Simon set out to climb the mounttain, in chapter one, to determine whether they are on an island or not. To quote from the book... There was a jumble of the usual squareness, with one great block sitting out in the lagoon. Sea birds were nesting there. "Like icing," said Ralph, "on a pink cake." <---wrong he means chapter 6
Ralph gets upset because he sees that the boys are playing a dangerous game that could result in someone getting hurt. He is concerned for their safety and the potential consequences of their actions. Additionally, Ralph may also be frustrated by their lack of focus on important tasks, such as building shelters or maintaining the signal fire.
It is real. Rocks can roll.
They are a rolling stone.
a ball rolling across the floor ( a flat surface) you rolling down a hill rocks rolling down hill etc. hope this helped ronkkiki
This scene is extremely significant, because it reveals Ralph's struggle to maintain his focus on what he deems is the most important act on the island--maintaining the signal fire. He knows that he has to gather the boys to make their way from Castle Rock to the mountain where Samneric spotted the beast, but for a moment, Ralph completely loses his focus and grip on his priorities. He sees the enthusiasm of the boys pushing the rocks all around him, and Ralph's train of thought completely slips away. Golding uses the simile "like a bat's wing" to describe the way that Ralph's thought process completely shut down, even if momentarily. He and his leadership faltered, and he could not remember the importance of the smoke signal. Golding's simile is an apt one for the scene, as he described the cave and the pink rocks being streaked with guano, like icing earlier; his diction also seems like a play on words, as if to suggest that Ralph is going 'batty.'
You have to be Wario and then just go to the place with the huge hole in the middle then just hit the rolling rocks using a while they come down you will then get a star!
because the rocks are old and strange
rolling hills witch is rocks