(Munro, 270-271) In this passage, the two foes can easily be seen in a situation that is very threatening. The urge that the two men have to do what they have always wanted with his opponent is an element of the id. This murderous instinct is soon shown up by the civility that the two savages have. The two men cannot do this terrible act against each other with the upraising that the two have had. But their moral dilemma is soon brought to an end when "Nature's own violence overwhelmed them both". This violence ending the direct threat of violence the two were in, and it changed the goal of the meeting from success to survival.
The two men now had to make it through the "falling [of the] beach tree" (Munro, 271). At first, though, survival was not the main thought on the mind of the two, for each believed his party was closer. But, they would soon find out the party that came to their rescue would be on neither of the two's side. The bitterness "both men spoke with" concerning their possible defeats was soon changed into talk of those bonded. The two men, in their time of physical and mental unrest, find themselves soon coming into a friendly conversation that settles the disputes they have