Piggy.
Ralph :d
Piggy & Ralph
Piggy
Ralph ridicules it as pointless by saying "yes and then we could build a radio and a televison." When Piggy explains that all you need is a stick to make a sundial Ralph tells Piggy to, "Shut up."
Piggy likely pretended that the idea to call with the shell was Ralph's because he wanted to avoid confrontation or conflict with the other boys. By giving credit to Ralph, Piggy may have hoped to maintain a sense of harmony within the group and avoid being singled out or further marginalized. Additionally, Piggy may have recognized that Ralph's leadership position made his ideas more likely to be accepted by the group.
It is Jack's idea to use Piggy's glasses to start the fire. Jack steals the glasses right off of Piggy's face without even asking him first.
He responds by not really liking the idea but goes along with it anyway. They find a conch and Piggy tells him how to blow in it so it makes a noise. When he blows the conch, slowly, one by one, all the other schoolkids stranded on the island come to the place where Ralph and Piggy are.
Piggy is the one who suggests using the glasses to start a fire in "Lord of the Flies." He realizes that the lenses can concentrate sunlight to create a flame.
ralph was the one who found the conch shell, piggy was the one who showed him how to use it properly and gave him the idea to use it to signal the other kids on the island
He responds by not really liking the idea but goes along with it anyway. They find a conch and Piggy tells him how to blow in it so it makes a noise. When he blows the conch, slowly, one by one, all the other schoolkids stranded on the island come to the place where Ralph and Piggy are.
Ralph doesn't fully implement Piggy's idea on restoring order because he is influenced by Jack's charisma and power, which leads to a division in the group. Additionally, Ralph struggles to assert his leadership over the group in the face of growing chaos and fear, making it difficult for him to enforce Piggy's suggestions. Ultimately, the breakdown of order on the island results in the tragic consequences that unfold in the novel.
Initially Ralph viewed Piggy as an uninvited and unwanted intrusion on his pleasure at finding himself on a tropical island. Ralph walked off when Piggy was forced to asnwer a call of nature, he didn't wait for the fat boy. Ralph didn't ask Piggy what his name was, probably because he wasn't in the slightest bit interested. Ralph probably felt that he had nothing in common with a fat asthmatic boy who wore a greasy wind-breaker, dropped letters from his words and who didn't know how to swim. Gradually however Ralph's attitude to Piggy began to change. When Ralph found the conch in the lagoon it was Piggy who identified it and told him that it could be blown. Piggy also suggested calling the rest of the boys on the island. Over the course of the book Piggy was constantly on hand to remind Ralph, when he lost track of what he was saying probably due to Petit Mal epilsepsy. Piggy was the voice of reason who suggested lighting a signal fire on the beach when it seemed that the beast was preventing the boys from relighting the fire on the mountain. Slowly Ralph's attitude changed from indifference, through a period where he simply made use of Piggy's abilities, to companionship and finally to the realisation that Piggy had been his friend.