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Jack London's "To Build a Fire"
Title: Jack London's "To Build a Fire"
Category: Literature / English
Details: Words: 425 | Pages: 1.8 (approximately 235 words/page)
Jack London's "To Build a Fire"
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 mans intelligence 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
showed first 75 words of 425 total
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showed last 75 words of 425 total
all take heed to modern knowledge and learned behavior has its benefits, but our primal instincts should never have
ignored. The man in the story had lots of knowledge but neglected to pay attention to his 'sixth sense.' The dog on the other hand, followed as long as he could but then let his instincts carry him to safety. We can never have enough knowledge to replace the survival skill that nature has provided us.
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