Essentially Jack offers the boys irresponsible fun, hunting and killing pigs, having meat to eat and the security of being part of an armed tribe based in the easily defensible castle rock. By comparison in the eyes of the boys all that Ralph has to offer is the responsibility of tending to a fire, building shelters and looking after a load of littlun all in remote chance that they might one day get rescued.
Jack leaves the beast an offering of the sow's head, mounted on a stick, and her guts. He later advises his tribe to, and I quote... "So leave the mountain alone.... and give it the head if you go hunting." After further thought he adds, "We'd better keep on the right side of him, anyhow. You can't tell what he might do."
The earlier members of Jack's tribe are lured in with the prospect of food, fun and games. He offers them meat of the pigs and more 'enjoyment', unlike Ralph, who is more preoccupied with the signal fire.
As the boys' descent into savagery steepens, the methods of which Jack lures the boys get worse. He uses manipulation, fear and power to control them and eventually pain and torture (in the case of Samneric and the littlun, Wilfred).
Yes, Jack does survive at the end of Lord of the Flies because when the naval officer asks who is in charge, Jack starts to step forward to challenge Ralph's claim of leadership but is stopped perhaps by the recognition that now the old rules will be enforced.
Jack Changes from a civilized English choir boy to a dictator type leader (a tyrant), power hungry, savage, hunter.
Jack can be described as demanding, overbearing, savage, unruly and arrogant in lord of the flies.
Jack leads with a Dictatorship government in the Lord of the Flies, by torturing people, and not giving equality. Ralph leads the exact opposite way.
By providing them with meat.
antagonist
In lord of the flies, ben is a follower of jack...or a choir boy.
hunting
jack
Jack
Jack does
Survival
In "Lord of the Flies," the head of the choir was Jack Merridew, who later becomes the leader of a group of boys in their struggle for power and survival on the island. Jack's descent into savagery and his desire for power make him one of the main antagonists in the novel.
He has a knife
In lord of the flies, ben is a follower of jack...or a choir boy.
It is the pig's head cut off by jack, transformed from a loving pig to a creepy horror. The flies were buzzing around the head, making the pigs head the Lord of the Flies. In other interpretations, Jack is considered to be the Lord of the Flies. The beast is also thought to be the Lord of the Flies.
Jack never died
Yes, Jack is still playing the game of power and control in "Lord of the Flies" even as the situation on the island becomes more chaotic and dangerous. His desire for dominance over others drives much of the conflict and violence in the story.
The lord of the flies is the head of the pig that Jack and his 'tribe' killed, they left it on a stake as an offering to the beast (ie)
In "Lord of the Flies," both the boys' need for meat and Jack's desire to hunt are important. The boys need meat for sustenance and nourishment, while Jack needs to hunt to assert his power and control over the group. This conflict highlights the struggle between survival and savagery in the novel.
Piggy
Jack
Jack and Ralph.