English, asked by Ghulam4609, 7 days ago

in James and the Giant Peach in the 17 and 18 chapter did all the insects acted in the same manner yes or no please tell in detail (I swear I will mark you as brainliest )​

Answers

Answered by xynub456
0

Summary (Chapter 17)

It’s chaos inside the peach. James is tangled up with all his friends and all their furniture. The journey down the hill was, according to the narrator, the worst in history. The rolling was fun at first, but after the peach flattened Aunt Sponge and Aunt Spiker, it rolled out of control. To make the journey even worse, the Glow-worm’s light stopped working. Now, though, everything is quiet. The Centipede shouts for light, but the Glow-worm struggles to light her tail. Finally, her light comes on. The Ladybug moans that the journey was terrible, but the Old-Green-Grasshopper says that they’re here. He doesn’t know where “here” is, but it must be somewhere good.

Summary (Chapter 18)

On top of the peach, all the bugs and James look around and blink nervously. They’re in the middle of the sea and can barely see the shore. None of them understand how they got here, and the Old-Green-Grasshopper declares this a “rather awkward situation.” The Earthworm, meanwhile, insists they’re going to die. The bugs panic—the Centipede can’t swim with his boots on, while Miss Spider, the Ladybug, and the Glow-worm can’t swim at all. Calmly, James says that nobody has to swim: the peach is floating, and eventually, a boat can rescue them. The bugs stare at James, amazed, and ask if he’s sure they’re not sinking. With James’s prodding, they look over the edge at the water. He’s right.

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