Man Listening To Instinct In To Build A Fire, By Jack London

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The human race views knowledge as power. However, in the primal wilderness knowledge can be more harmful than helpful. In Jack London’s To Build a Fire, an ill-prepared man struggles for survival in the harsh Yukon land. London conveys an outstanding story, while also teaching an important lesson. To Build a Fire, skillfully highlights the importance of man listening to instinct. In the unforgiving cold, the inexperienced traveler is accompanied by a wolf-dog native to the land. London states “The animal was worried by the cold, It knew that this was no time for traveling” (66). Unlike the man, the dog acknowledged that the bitter frozen tundra was no place for them. Throughout this short story, London uses the wolf-dog to physically represent instinct. Not only does the dog’s instinct keep him safe, but it helps the dog survive the dangerous trip. At the end of the story the unfortunate traveler is unable to reach his goal of making it back to camp, however without thinking the strong animal instinctively runs to campsite. If only the man had listened to the dog, or …show more content…

The man occasionally let go of his thoughts, and by doing so he could hear his instinct. London even states in the story, “Empty as the man’s mind was of thoughts, he was most observant” (68). The man seemed to be at his prime in the wilderness whenever he simply just didn’t think about what he was doing or what was going on. Consequently, the traveler almost reached the camp by running without thinking. Unfortunately, as the man ran his thoughts began to kick in, “Then the thought came to him that the frozen portions of his body must be increasing, He tried to keep this thought out of his mind and forget it, He knew that such thoughts caused a feeling of fright in him and he was afraid of such feelings” (78). This one little thought diminished any chance for survival that the man had. In the end the man died, not from the cold, but from

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