Once Kenny, Frank, and Tub arrived at the hunting location, they began to walk across the fields that were penetrated with snow. It is evident that Kenny and Frank have established a relationship in which Tub as left out. This is evident the moment that Tub was having trouble getting through the fences yet neither men would help him, simply watched Tub struggle. The snowy conditions of this location allow for Frank and Kenny to abandon their friend and treat him with such malice. As the author indicates, “ The snow was light, but the drifts were deep and hard to move through… fighting away the snow with his knees and elbows. He heard his heart and felt the flesh on his face, but never once stopped.” Tub experiences the physical agony with the departure of his friends; he demonstrates how the snow and cold conditions can enforce the maltreatment of Frank and Kenny. Therefore, the frigid temperatures and conditions show how Frank and Kenny reinforce their malicious behavior through the horrid…
“To Build a Fire” takes place in the Yukon Wilderness. A gold discovery in 1897 led many to brave the Yukon Wilderness (Murdrock). “Within six months, approximately 100,000 gold-seekers set off for the Yukon. Only 30,000 completed the trip” (Murdrock). The Yukon was a very cold and dangerous place with average temperatures around negative twenty degrees with lows reaching far passed negative fifty degrees (Murdrock). With only thirty percent of gold seekers completing the trip with even less claiming the riches they were seeking.…
2. The terrible cold. It says several times in the story “Fifty degrees below zero” over and over again, a human being can only survive so long alone in the cold.…
His short story displays survival and humans .vs. nature. It takes place on the Yukon Trail in Alaska. A man and dog decide to walk the Yukon Trail and experiences harsh weather including extremely cold temperatures and heavy snow falls. He deals with many weather related problems. He faces very cold weather and it doesn’t seem to phase him. His whole body starts to feel numb. He plans on eating lunch but this means he would have to stop and take up more time. So he wastes time doing that. At the end of the story he finally realizes that he's cold and he’s going to die. The dog ends up surviving. The man realizes that he should have prepared better for this. The man vs nature part shows when the man has to build a fire but none of the fires will actually…
Trying to reach the camp by himself with no one else, but a dog, the “Man” completely ignores the temperature and believes that it “did not matter” other than an obstacle to get around. He believes that if a person keeps moving, the temperature doesn’t matter and it won’t effect the journey other than a hinderance of moving. The “Man” continues on his journey while his fingers and toes are already numb, leaving the rest of the body to quickly follow. After falling through ice into water, the “Man” is quick to build a fire and when he succeeded, the snow-filled tree dropped snow on the top of it. He assessed the situation and realized that “he should not have built the fire under the pine tree”. Pine trees are a weak type of tree and their limbs will bounce if pressure is applied, the “Man” ignored the obvious hazard and built the fire under the tree, finishing the fire and himself off. By ignoring the temperature and losing the fire,allows fate to complete with his death and make him unsuccessful toward his want of reaching the camp.…
In the story London describes the harsh weather that he had experienced.London describes the weather as being -75 degrees, and the dangers of that weather. The man is travelling from one area of the Yukon to another camp. He is traveling alone except for a dog. London writes “The trouble with him was that he was without imagination. He was quick and alert in the things of life, but only in the things, and not the significances. Fifty degrees below zero meant eighty-odd degrees of frost. Such fact impressed him as being cold and uncomfortable, and that was all” (To Build a Fire 27). The man does not understand the danger of this setting. Jack London’s time in the Klondike also influenced the conflict in “To Build a Fire”. Which is man vs. nature. The man has to get to camp before he freezes to death. He gets his feet wet, and can not start a fire. The man lacks the instincts and experience to survive, and he eventually freezes to death. “It did not lead him to meditate upon his frailty as a creature of temperature, and upon man’s frailty in general, able only to live within certain narrow limits of heat and cold, and from there it did not lead him to the conjectural field of immorality and the man’s place in the universe” (To Build a Fire 27). The man does not even think about what can happen to him in this environment, and he does not even think he can die in this…
The short story impacted the Man physically. As the day grew colder, the Man received less feeling in his body. His face, legs, feet were all numb. Physically the man couldn’t do anything. “He noted the numbness creeping into the exposed fingers. Also, he noted…
Deepak Chopra once said, “The masculine energy was about survival. The male was the hunter who risked his life and had to be in the fight-flight mode.” When pertaining to survival, the main character in “To Build a Fire” by Jack London failed to follow three main steps in Laurence Gonzales’ nonfiction trade book, “Deep Survival.” The main character failed to stay calm, to think, analyze, and plan, and to never give up during his trek through the pure, untrampled white snow.…
The grating cold and bleak surroundings “made no impression on the man” (6) while the dog became “depressed by the tremendous cold” (7), painting the man as a figure unaffected by the severe conditions, immortal and daunting. He viewed the conditions as “cold and uncomfortable, and that was all” (6), which gave him a tough aspect of character, showing the ultimate power and force of nature over man, no matter how fortifying and strong he may be. These characteristics illustrates a contrast between the state of mankind and the state of nature. The animal also provides a comparison of the ignorance of humans’ instinct in comparison to the animal who understands the ferocity of nature. Allowing the environment to kill the man indicates that he is weak both mentally and biologically, while on the other hand the dog is stronger by surviving the same harsh surroundings of the brutal Yukon. “The brute had its instinct” (7) and “its instinct told it a truer tale than was told to the man” (7), because the man was “not much given to thinking”, displaying his obvious ignorance about the ways of nature and how the animal’s instincts trumped his own. Although the man was “keenly observant” (8), he was woefully inept at survival and despite the man’s tough aspects of character, his utter ignorance and over-confidence in himself led to his demise and allowed nature to shape his grisly…
He spat into the air and it froze before it even hit the snow. Deep down he realizes how intense the temperature really is but moves along anyway. The native husky, was upset with the man’s judgement to travel in these conditions. The dog however, remains on the man’s heels hoping he soon comes to a stop to build a fire; and so he does. When they finally reached Henderson Creek, the man notices that the creek is frozen and he is now walking on ice. After the dog breaks through the ice and wets his legs, the man decides to stop and help the animal dry his fur by building a fire. The man eats his lunch and they continue walking on the ice but this time the man is the one who breaks through. Realizing now how cold it is he thinks back on what the old-timer told him and wonders if he should have listened in the first place. As he tries to build a new fire he feels his fingers growing numb and unfortunately fails at doing…
Fifty degree below weather in the frozen, harsh Alaskan wilderness demonstrates the desperate fight and struggle for survival. The extreme conditions the newcomer faced was no place to venture without the experience and knowledge of the Yukon's harsh environment. Yet the man was…
The narrator in “To Build a Fire” by Jack London, experiences the loss of fire.…
In the story, the man is traveling with a dog. The dog is somewhat a companion, but for the most part it only views the man as a fire and food provider. The only item the man brings with him is his lunch wrapped in a handkerchief. His ultimate goal is to reach a camp where “the boys“ are. At the beginning of the story, London describes the man as, “ without imagination.” and “quick and alert in the things of life, but only in the things, and not the significances.” (London 115) This leads the reader to believe that he thinks about the perils he will have to overcome in his journey to camp, but does not think about how they will come or what his actions will do to provoke them. For example, when the man built his first fire, he built it under a spruce tree. He knew it was easier to pull the twigs from the tree and put them in the fire if it was right underneath, but he did not clearly think of what he was doing. “Each time he had pulled a twig he had communicated a slight agitation to the tree, an agitation sufficient to bring about the disaster.”(London 120) The agitation eventually caused the snow piled up on the tree to collapse right on the fire underneath. The man seemed confident that he would not face too much danger. He did not think about the weakness of human beings compared to the strength of nature. Instead, he believe that all he needed in order to live was to “keep his head”.(London 119)…
In “To Build a Fire” by Jack London the man and the dog start off as traveling friends, but then they realize they have different perspectives on survival techniques. Whereas the dog knows it is way too cold to be on a hike, the man takes it as a little adventure. Even though the man thought he was prepared to hike at these blistering temperatures, he found out he was not as prepared as he thought he was. The man tries to defeat Mother Nature but finds out the hard way he is just not prepared enough to support a man and dog.…
-The description of the “nine-hour rescue” from “icy water” dramatizes the incident to exaggerate the danger the men were in and the inconvenience that was…