Read the passage from Lord of the Flies by William Golding. Jack drew up his legs, clasped his knees, and frowned in an effort to attain clarity. "All the same—in the forest. I mean when you’re hunting, not when you’re getting fruit, of course, but when you’re on your own—” He paused for a moment, not sure if Ralph would take him seriously. "Go on.” "If you’re hunting sometimes you catch yourself feeling as if—” He flushed suddenly. "There’s nothing in it of course. Just a feeling. But you can feel as if you’re not hunting, but—being hunted, as if something’s behind you all the time in the jungle.” . . . "The best thing we can do is get ourselves rescued.” Jack had to think for a moment before he could remember what rescue was. "Rescue? Yes, of course! All the same, I’d like to catch a pig first—” He snatched up his spear and dashed it into the ground. The opaque, mad look came into his eyes again. Ralph looked at him critically through his tangle of fair hair. How are the universal themes "the relationship between violence and human nature” and "the relationship between civilization and nature” best developed in this passage?