Jack's and his tribe first try to drive Ralph from his hiding place in the thicket by sending a boulder crashing into it. When this tactic fails Jack then tries to smoke Ralph out of his hiding place by lighting a fire. Ralph makes his way out of the opposite side of the thicket by surprising and stabbing a 'savage' who is on guard. Ralph runs for it and the savages spread out across the island signalling to each other. Ralph tries hiding again, this time in Simon's secret place but is spotted by another savage, who he attacks and stabs with his spear. The fire which Jack lit soon spread out of control and set fire to most of the island. Ralph ended up stumbling onto the beach, with Jack's tribe in hot pursuit.
Ralph stabbed two boys with his spear, while evading Jack's hunters in the final chapter of the book: chapter 12: Cry of the Hunters.
Yes, the hunters have killed a wild pig in chapter 3 of "Lord of the Flies." They successfully hunt and kill the pig, marking their first significant achievement in terms of survival skills and providing food for the group.
Kill the beast. Cut her throat. Spill her blood.
The hunters made an ululating sound by beating their hands against their open mouths.
In chapter 4 of "Lord of the Flies," Jack and his hunters chant, "Kill the pig. Cut her throat. Spill her blood." This ritualistic chant reflects their descent into savagery and their increasing detachment from civilization and morality. It signifies their growing bloodlust and primal instincts taking over.
In chapter 8 of "Lord of the Flies," Ralph characterizes Jack's hunters as primitive and barbaric, with an emphasis on their violent tendencies and detachment from civilization. He sees them as being consumed by their bloodlust and becoming more savage as they embrace their roles as hunters. Ralph is disturbed by their descent into savagery and the way they prioritize hunting over maintaining the signal fire and runway.
getting fire wood
In Chapter 11 of "Lord of the Flies," the boys hold a meeting to discuss the wild beast they fear on the island. They decide to search for it, which leads to a chaotic and violent hunt. The confrontation with the beast ultimately reveals the darkness within themselves as they lose their sense of civilization and morality.
In Chapter 4 of "Lord of the Flies" by William Golding, Ralph is mad at Jack because the hunters were supposed to maintain the signal fire. The hunters barely hear or react to Ralph's tongue lashing, more distracted by the joy that they actually caught a pig.
Ralph decided that he could either hide and hope that the hunters went past his hiding place without spotting him or he could break through the advancing line of hunters, hopefully without being spotted.
The signal fire went out because Jack 'needed' the two of his hunters who should have been on fire duty to complete a ring of hunters in his pig huntRead more: Why_is_the_signal_fire_outI was looking for this forever lol.
He is camouflaging himself so he can hunt without being seen