If you are a freshman having no idea how to write a book report, or a graduate looking for some help organizing your efforts to get going on your dissertation, or an international student striving with your research, we are here to help YOU with this!

Order a Custom Written Paper

ABOUT  |  ORDER PAPER  |  SAMPLES  |  HOWTO  |  PARTNERS  |  CONTACT US
Existing Member Login
login:
password:
 

Price Packages
within 5 days $14.95 per page
within 3 days $16.95 per page
within 48 hours $19.95 per page
within 24 hours $22.95 per page
within 12 hours $29.95 per page
within 6 hours $38.95 per page

Service Features
275 words per page
Font: 12 point Courier New
Double line spacing
Free unlimited paper revisions
Free bibliography
Any citation style
Real time order tracking
SMS Alert on paper done
No plagiarism
Direct paper download
Original and creative work
Researched any subject
24/7 customer support


Explication of The First Paragraph of Jack London's "To Build a Fire"

Title: Explication of The First Paragraph of Jack London's "To Build a Fire"
Category: Literature / Biographies
Details: Words: 972 | Pages: 4.1 (approximately 235 words/page)


Explication of The First Paragraph of Jack London's "To Build a Fire"

To Build a Fire The first line of Jack London's "To Build a Fire" states, "Day had broken cold and grey, exceedingly cold and grey..." London repeats the words "cold and grey" to emphasis the environment that the man finds himself in. It is cold, twenty-five degrees colder than the man thinks that it is, he is in a temperature that is seventy-five degrees below zero. Extremely cold and forbidding, the grey casts a pall …showed first 75 words of 972 total

You are viewing only a small portion of the paper.
Please login or register to access the full copy.

showed last 75 words of 972 total…to man's intuitive thoughts, the instinctual ones that some men consider less valid because they come from the unconscious mind. His unwillingness to contemplate the extreme cold, the barely used trail, his dog's instincts, reflect the man's inability to view the whole picture. As London puts it "the man had no imagination" he thought only to keep moving and stay dry, then he would be fine, however the man in the end could do neither.

Need a custom written paper?


1997-2006. All Rights Reserved.
Powered by DRN