<span>In Golding's "The Lord of the Flies," Ralph sought to recreate the order and function of that they left behind in the civilized world, while Jack began to enjoy the power and savagery the island's location allowed. During the meeting where Jack challenged Ralph, Ralph held the meeting at dusk, when it was getting dark, and when Jack had returned from a successful--and brutal--pig hunt. The dark's diminishing of Ralph's authority coupled with Jack's sense of savage power gave Jack the sense of power to challenge Ralph. He used fear of the dark to influence the smaller boys to his side.</span>
Well to have a description I would well need the description first so if he was strong bulit had alot of musle square jaw would problly mean he was a strong person who didn't take orders from anyone <span />
1. D: the Bishop is kind and caring and even though ValJean is an ex-convict he is still treated like a human being by the Bishop. Calling him 'brother' further shows how he views all people as equals.
2. D: you would expect ValJean to be grateful for the kindness the Bishop shows him and to accept the food and lodging without causing trouble. ValJean is a former criminal but the Bishop trusted him to not steal what he had. ValJean showed the opposite of these expectations by stealing from the Bishop.
3. C: the Bishop welcomes ValJean into his home and treats him like a real human being. The irony is that as soon as someone treats him like a normal person ValJean starts "stuttering like a madman", acting the way everyone before had assumed he would be (crazy).