Monday, September 2, 2019
To Build a Fire - Man is Foolish :: London To Build a Fire Essays
     To Build a Fire - Man is Foolish                 How many times have you seen birds flying south for the winter?  They do    not read somewhere or use some computer to know that they must fly to survive.    In Jack London's "To Build a Fire", we see how that man is    sometimes foolish.  The man, who is walking in seventy-five degrees below zero    weather, lets his learned behavior override his instinct.  Therefore, he dies.    London's theme is that no matter how intelligent society becomes, we as a    species should never discard our basic instincts.                 In the beginning of the tale we see that the man realizes it is cold,    but only sees this as a fact and not a danger.  The man spit on the ground to    test how cold it was.  His test taught him that it was colder than he had first    thought, but he never thought of that as a danger only as a reality.  "That    there should be anything more to it than that was a thought that never entered    his head" (119).  To many times modern man plods along oblivious to the reality    that lies one moment or misstep away (Votleler 272).                 The man sees that he is feeling the effects of the cold more and more as    he goes along, but more than ever he pushes on.  Several times he comments that    the cold is making his hands and feet numbed, and frostbite is killing his    cheeks.  He thinks "What were frosted cheek?  A bit painful, that was all. . ."    (120).  Again he chose to ignore an instinct that would have saved him.                 The dog, on the other hand, although guided by his learned behavior    still retains his instincts.  The dog follows the man throughout his ill faded    journey, but after the man perishes he relies upon his instincts to survive.    This is witnessed in the last paragraph by the statement "Then it turned    and trotted up the trail in the direction of the camp it knew, where there were    other food providers and fire providers" (129).                 The theme of London's "To Build a Fire" is how we should all take heed    					    
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