Ralph complains that the group has no longer followed the rules or kept up to standards. They go to the bathroom wherever they please and make a mess of the place. They don't build shelters or help out at all. And they let the fire go out. Ralph especially stresses the importance of never letting the fire go out. He scolds and yells at them. He also says that there will be no fires other than the one on the mountain because they waste time making the fires.
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During Jack's feast on the beach Ralph says, "...and you'll have rain like when we dropped here. Who's clever now? Where are your shelters? What are you going to do about that?"
In the final chapter: Cry of the Hunters, Ralph was torn between the choices of 1) breaking through the line of hunters 2) climbing a tree, or 3) hiding and let the hunters pass him by.
well he is really the only character who is concerned about keeping the fire going so they can get rescued
he is homesick, and stressed
Piggy's glasses
The Hunters.
the small group of children were called litttleluns
He asks him to sharpen it at both ends with intent of putting one end in the ground and the other end to have Ralphs head on it. This is not explicitly stated in the novel but we know this because of the lord of the flies