Throughout the story, Call of the Wild, Buck goes through phases of having many owners as he moves from civilization to the wilderness. The two owners that stood out the most were Hal and John Thornton. Hal was a very cruel and inexperienced owner. John Thornton was a very smart and compassionate man as he cared for humans and animals. Even though both of them had differences, they also had similarities.…
So then Buck went “into the primitive”, he was mistreated and abused for the first time. So it was the early stage before more horrendous events began. Buck was not used to this sort of abuse and was very confused on what was happening. He was being sold, and there was talk that Buck was worth. It is 1897, many people from all over the world are traveling north.…
In The Call of the Wild, Jack London creates the character of Buck by using physical characteristics, mental characteristics, and descriptions of actions. The author used physical characteristics to describe Buck as a large dog. In Chapter 1 we read that, "His father Elmo, a huge St. Bernard, had been Judge's inseparable companion, and Buck bid fair to follow in the way of his Father. He was not so large- he weighed only one hundred and forty pounds - for his mother, Shep, had been a Scotch shepard dog.…
In Call of the Wild, Buck had to use a strong sense of perseverance to get through his many injuries. First off, Buck had crucial owners that beat him. In the beginning Peralt kidnapped Buck from the Judge and beat him. His first owner, the man in the red sweater made Buck obey him by hitting him with a club.…
But Buck became a beast, and killed Spitz in a blood filled rage. Bucks leg closed on Spitz’s leg, the crunch of the bone snapping in half, the dog had faced him on only three…
According to The Call of the Wild, Buck was driven to be dominant for multiple reasons. One reason he undertook his mission was because of the anger and hate towards Spitz. The text states that when Spitz killed Curly, “Buck hated him with a bitter and deathless hatred.” (London 27). This eventually led to Buck killing Spitz.…
The Call of the Wild teaches one about love and how love is the strongest force that has the power to heal, and the power to break someone. John Thornton’s love healed Buck, it taught him about the good in man. When John died, that very same love broke Buck, he was drowned in grief. His inner wolf broke out and he killed men. He completed the transition into a creature of the wild when he killed the…
In conclusion, Buck saw kill or be killed throughout his new life. In Jack London’s classic novel The Call Of The Wild, life is to kill or be killed. “We know that their adventures are childish. They themselves are fools. They are ready to kill or be killed over a card-game in which an opponent or they themselves was cheating.…
Finally he is rescued and by a man he grows to love and defend in The Call of the wild there is an underlying theme, or message that the author portrays, you must adapt to the environment to survive. Buck was in the north land for the…
he yelled, and kicked the bear in the rear.” (Paulsen Par. 11). Brian’s belief about the agreement between he and the bears and the action of kicking the bear reveal that his personality is naïve, ignorant, and asinine. In Call of the Wild, Buck doesn’t know where the other dogs are or how to keep cold, so he aimlessly searches for them, and…
Both stories exhibit the humbling power of the natural world. In Call of the Wild, Buck is captured from the comfort of his know surroundings and forced to work as a sled dog in the Alaskan frontier. On his way to Alaska, Buck attempts to evade his captors by trying to attack and escape them. The man in the red sweater proceeds to beat Buck with a club until he learns the “Law of Club and Fang”. This can be seen as a humbling experience for Buck.…
Traveling through the frosty Yukon with dogs and sleds, or just yourself in below seventy-five degree weather sounds pretty similar, right? Yes, it does however, they can also be complete opposites. The Call of the Wild by Jack London is about a dog and his journies through the Yukon during the gold rush as a sled dog. The main character, Buck, faces many struggles and difficulties along with many victories and successes. To Build a Fire, also written by Jack London is about a man who is brand new to the Yukon, who is traveling by himself with a wild dog at his heels.…
This proves that Buck was determined because this scene from the book shows that Buck has just defeated Spitz. It also shows he was determined because Buck just stood and watched he still wasn’t done with his mission, he had to get his rightful place in the traces. According to the passage, “'Look at Buck!' said Francois, laughing. ' He's killed Spitz, and now he wants to be leaddog.…
IfThe Call of the Wild is a story about ultimately achieving mastery over a foreign, primal world, that mastery is achieved only through separation from the group and independent survival. Throughout much of the story, Buck is serving a master or a pack; even as a leader he is carrying out someone else’s commands and is responsible for the well-being of the group. In many ways, then, when John Thornton cuts Buck free from his harness, he is also beginning the process of Buck’s separation from a pack mentality. Although Buck continues to serve Thornton, his yearnings for a solitary life in the wild eventually overcome…
Since, Buck has to Buck never has lived in the wild. , he has never had to use his wild instincts. Last, Buck has to adapt to the way wolves do things in order to survive. For example when John Thorton died Buck decided it was best for him to join a wolf pack. Since, Buck has never been on his own for food, shelter, and many other things, he adapts to kill for himself, and protect himself throughout the night.…