To Build a Fire
did having the dog as his companion on the trip help or hinder the man on his journey to the camp
did having the dog as his companion on the trip help or hinder the man on his journey to the camp
did having the dog as his companion on the trip help or hinder the man on his journey to the camp
I think a motif of the story is that instinct is superior to Knowledge. Jack London specialized in stories about the wilderness. His running theme involved the raw majesty and power of the elements. Naturalism was London's mantra and this story is a perfect example of this. In "To Build a Fire" the setting is in the Yukon. Unlike the man, the dog has instinct built into his DNA. The man's knowledge is subject to his pride and hubris. The dog and nature are in sync. The dog has been conditioned by generations of evolution and he instinctively understands what to do and when to do it. The dog also has the genetics (has fur) to survive better than man. The dog could have helped the man if he respected it. The dog, like nature, was disrespected by the man and that's when the dog becomes a hindrance.