Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Chapter 4 review



The difference in life, power, and violence in the first three chapters and the change in the spectrums in the fourth chapter is in the first chapter, the boys started with a more stabilized and methodical gathering or assembly on the beach. On the shore of the beach the boys had an assembly of where they established power and leadership among the boys. The boys in the fourth chapter had been more or less in panic when the fire went out and the "litttleuns" grew tiresome of playing in the sand. When Jack had killed the pig, he left the fire unattended and so the fire became futile and was extinguished. The fire was a big symbol in the book which stood for hope because when they started the fire they saw a boat in which they thought they would be rescued. When the fire went out, The boys lost their sense of "hope" and began to utterly start to lose faith in each other and in hind sight, life itself. The boys that once had said, "This is our island" and thought that they were "invincible, and said that they would have fun until the grown ups came to rescue them. later in the book as boredom, hunger, and unrest started to appear, the boys started to worry about if they would be rescued or not.

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