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Most of the fiction (at least four novels and more than a dozen short stories), drama (about a half-dozen plays), and poetry (more than eighty poems) that Toomer wrote during his lifetime remains in manuscript form, so his public reputation rests almost entirely on one work, Cane. Published in 1923, the slim volume includes work in all three genres and is widely recognized as a major product of the Harlem Renaissance, a 1920’s flowering of African American art and literature that created intense interest among black and white intellectuals.
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Answer:
In chapter nine, Jack tries to tempt the rest of Ralph's group to join the hunters by offering them food, safety, and fun, a potent mix that the boys find hard to resist. When Ralph and Piggy arrive at Jack's site, they see piles of roasted meat and coconuts to eat. Jack sits on a log that is like a throne, painted like an idol, surrounded by heaps of food. When he demands to be brought a drink, it is brought to him. So the answer is he wants other boys to join his tribe.
A fable is not a real story, usually a fable contains a moral tale. Example - the scorpion and the frog.
A satire uses humor, an irony to ridicule people- talks about politics and major topics. An example of Satire is Bill, Maher.