Preview

To Build a Fire: Revealing the Man

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
857 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
To Build a Fire: Revealing the Man
The story To Build a Fire demonstrates possible dangers of traveling in the Yukon under extreme cold. Through a young man, Jack London depicts the consequences of ignoring instinct and survival advice. The man travels with a dog, who can perceive the dangers of the freezing wilderness. The reader learns of the man's personality through descriptive words and phrases while journeying through the story. At the beginning of the story the man turned aside from the main trail. He stopped at the top of a bank and looked over the landscape. The day was clear, yet the narrator says there exists an "Intangible pall" over things (London 920). Intangible means, incapable of being perceived by the senses, or being realized. A pall is a dark covering, often associated with funerals. The covering is usually a dark cloth of some sort. The narrator exposes an unperceived sense of death in the air. The absence of sunlight causes the weather to be gloomy (London 920). By using the descriptive phrase "intangible pall", London puts a perfect picture of what the land and atmosphere look and feel like. He could be predicting the man's death, almost like warning the reader about events to come. The dog gave off many clues in the beginning that the weather was far too cold. The narrator informs that the dog experienced a "menacing apprehension" as the dog followed along (London 921). To have a "menacing apprehension" means the dog was threatened by anticipation of future misfortunes. The dog sensed what could happen when weather became so cold. The man should have paid closer attention to the signals the dog gave. The dog's instinct told the animal that traveling was a bad idea and they should not be out there. The man's welfare begins to decline when he got wet and needed to build another fire to dry out. The man knows that building a fire is "imperative" at seventy below zero (London 925). Imperative means something impossible to avoid or deter from. The use of such a strong

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    Richard W. Wrangham is a Professor of Biological Anthropology at Harvard University. He had a long term study in Kanyawara chimpanzees and he was well known for his work in the ecology of primate social system. The book Catching Fire refers to the activities of our human ancestors when they began to use fire to practice cooked diet. Although the topic is pretty academic, but Richard used simple sentences and words to explain his ideas well. Yet the proof is still preciseness with provided evidences, and the conclusion is convincible. Hence, this source should be trustable.…

    • 373 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Sharon Draper.Sharon Draper was born in Cleveland,Ohio. She came in the world on April 11,…

    • 603 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Stories with different theme,plots, mood, tones, and setting is what makes up a story. In the short story “ To Build a Fire” the main focus is setting. Setting is when and where the story takes place. Setting can also have a dramatic affect on characters. For example, the author Jack London has the setting take place in the Yukon Territory, making a dramatic affect on the character. The setting in “To build a Fire” impacts the character mentally, emotionally, and physically.…

    • 262 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the short story, “How to Build A Fire,” and the short dialogue titled, “ Survival is the Ultimate Goal in World’s Toughest Sled Dog Race,” there are many differences while at the same time there are many similarities. To begin the two have many similarities. One is that they both are in the same general parts of Alaska. In the article about the dog races it says, “Crossing to Dawson City-the old Klondike gold rush town that marks the Quest’s halfway point.” This is where the short story’s, “How to Build A Fire,” setting took place. This means that the articles both take place in the same spots of Alaska in the cold winters. In the same articles (story) there are even more similarities. Another one is that, in both of the articles/stories one of the characters in…

    • 415 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “To Build a Fire” is a naturalist’s view of the harsh peril that the Yukon can hold. The characters were all in the Yukon and each had different fates due to the willingness to accept the rules of such a harsh climate. The tone and mood help set up such a naturalistic story where one should not trifle with nature. Throughout the story the main character fights himself and the elements to try to survive. “To Build a Fire” by Jack London shows how the dismissal of knowledge and experience due to self-confidence creates arrogance.…

    • 1169 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    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…

    • 941 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Jack London Foil

    • 833 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Jack London’s “To Build a Fire” is a story about knowing your surroundings, and listening to your instincts, just as the dog in this story did. London’s human character, who is nameless in the story, is more like a foil; with the main character being the harsh landscape of the Yukon, where the story takes place amid -75 below temperatures. The man shows how arrogant and inexperienced he is when he travels to the Yukon Territory without proper clothing, the use of a sled, or companions. He has no camping gear, insufficient food supplies, and his surroundings appear insignificant to him. These vital mistakes not only cost the man anger, but eventually a slow, agonizing death due to stubbornness, and a lack of knowledge in the harsh realities…

    • 833 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Over time have been enjoying Ta-Nehisi Coates’s writings. Not because he is a Black American but how excellent his essays and blog are in the world that is jammed with skilled critics who are led by ego and their awareness of certain ideas. He had a lot of hardships growing up in the streets of Baltimore. He had to do all he could to avoid all the evil that was served by the world to him. This has made him talk freely without fear of the various facts that need to be understood by the people and the government. As it has always been known that one’s experience shapes his future positively or negatively, Coates life as a youth has made him humble but slightly rebellious.…

    • 1097 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    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.…

    • 942 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Jack London Research Paper

    • 1485 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Jack London's short stories, "Love of Life" and "To Build a Fire", both tell amazing tales of surviving in the wilderness of the Yukon. In "Love of Life", a man is left on his own to survive with a sprained ankle after his traveling companion, Bill, abandons him in a river. This unnamed man travels across the Yukon in search of a hidden cache that contains food and ammunition for his gun. Winter begins while he looks for his cache and he has to resort to eating live baby birds and minnows; he also has to give up his 15 pounds of gold. After a close run-in with a wolf that ends in the man biting the throat out of the sick animal,…

    • 1485 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    to build a fire

    • 404 Words
    • 2 Pages

    The bone-chilling cold in To Build a Fire effects the main character, an unnamed man, and inevitably kills him. The unnamed man takes his chances in the wilderness by himself, with a half wild dog, even when told not to by an old prospector. The extremely cold temperature effects the basic motor function of his extremities.…

    • 404 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Firstly, when travelling along the river to explore it, he did know about the ice traps that were around the river. However, he still did not avoid them without harm. While travelling along the river, the man slipped into an ice trap. The water instantly turned to ice on his leg, and the already freezing legs were now soaked in the well below sub-zero temperatures. He was not in too bad of shape until he fell into the trap, and now making a fire was imperative, not just a leisurely task when he…

    • 655 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    A hero is someone who possess valor, capability, and captures the admiration of others through courageous deeds and noble traits; the main character in “To Build a Fire” by Jack London lacks all of these characteristics. The man makes many rookie errs throughout the short story and utilizes numerous tips from an old timer from Sulphur creek to try and fix them, he is grateful to the old timer, save for when he believes he is no longer in danger. After building a successful fire rather than thank the old timer he says to himself “well, here he [is]; he [has] had the accident; he [is] alone; and he [saves] himself” (pg. 526). The man believes he is better than average and believing that it is him all by himself exemplifies…

    • 329 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The struggle of man versus nature long has dwelt on the consciousness of humanity. Is man an equal to his environment? Can the elements be conquered or only endured? We constantly find ourselves facing these questions along with a myriad of other questions that cause us to think, where do we fit? These questions, crying for a response, are debated studied and portrayed in both Jack London’s “To Build a Fire” and “The Most Dangerous Game” by Richard Connell. Throughout both stories, we see the settings, the Yukon in “To Build a Fire” and an island in the south Atlantic in “The Most Dangerous Game”, both raw untamed wildernesses, take a toll on the main characters in a very different fashion.…

    • 1063 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the beginning of the tale we see that the man realizes it is cold,…

    • 435 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays