In chapter 2 of "Lord of the Flies," Piggy and Ralph use three main strategies to gain organization: they establish a signal fire to attract potential rescuers, create a system for talking during meetings using the conch shell, and delegate tasks among the boys to maintain order and productivity on the island.
Early in the first chapter Ralph told Piggy that his father was a commander in the Navy.Early in the first chapter Ralph told Piggy that his father was a commander in the Navy.
When Ralph squirted water at Piggy, while they were bathing, Piggy simply said, "Mind my specs..." However when Ralph did it a second time Piggy beat the water with his hands and shouted, "Stop it! Did You hear me?"
That he thinks his hunters are incompetent at what they do and that Ralph is not a proper chief because he talks like piggy.
Simon did not defend piggy , only Ralph did in chapter 2 , look into pg 42 or 41 carefully
to kill the pig
Samneric and Piggy.
In chapter 8 of "Lord of the Flies," the boys who stay with Ralph are Simon, Piggy, and Samneric. They choose to remain loyal to Ralph and help him maintain order on the island.
Ralph cannot think like Piggy at the meeting in chapter 5 because they have different priorities and perspectives. Piggy's focus is on practicality, reason, and order, while Ralph is more concerned with maintaining the group's morale and addressing immediate concerns. Their different approaches reflect their contrasting personalities and leadership styles.
Most of the boys have joined Jack's tribe leaving only Piggy and the twins, Samneric, remaining loyal to Ralph.
In Chapter 5, Ralph says that Piggy can think things through, and how he has all his ideas lined up in his head. Hear is an excerpt:Once more that evening Ralph had to adjust his values. Piggy could think. He could go step by step inside that fat head of his, only Piggy was no chief. But Piggy, for all his ludicrous body, had brains.This shows that Piggy would be heard more if people could see past his weight.
Ralph and Piggy develop personal-friend bonds, Ralph playfully teases Ralph while the other boys condescend him, Ralph is the only boy who defends Piggy however. Piggy stresses that Jack is against civility, which Ralph stands for, Piggy says that Jack holds no regard for Piggy, nor any concern for him.
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.