Piggy stands on the margin of the forest clearing, observing the chaos around him as the boys assemble for the meeting. He is the voice of reason and order amongst the group and holds his ground on the outskirts, symbolizing his role as an outsider and intellectual.
Piggy stood outside the triangle formed by the logs as a sign of dissapproval, indicating that although he was listening to the meeting he did not intend to speak.
Piggy is Ralph's best ally but he does not stand up for Piggy.
he says that they could use the materials to start a fire
He tells Ralph to blow the conch
He suggest that ralph blows the conch.
He proposes that they hold a meeting to discuss options.
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.
Read the story -___-
There are several meetings which take place in Lord of the Flies. In one meeting, after the signal fire has been allowed to go out on top of the mountain, Piggy stands in the long grass at the apex of the triangle formed by the fallen logs, as a sign of protest.
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 and Piggy found each other and blew the conch shell first, so they called the first meeting of the boys
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.