This question is incomplete, here´s the complete question.
The following question references the novel The Call of the Wild by Jack London.
What might fire represent with relation to John Thornton in Chapters 6 and 7? Minimum 3 sentences.
Answer:
In chapter 6, Buck feels a call from the forest that compels him to go away from the fire, from the campfires and towns, and essentially from all mankind, to go into the forest to live in the wild.
Explanation:
His relationship with John Thornton is the only reason Buck has to resists the call of the wild, so he goes back to the fire. But when Thornton dies in chapter 7, Buck loses his only connection to the human world, and finally embraces his wild nature.
Paine makes use of invitation and urgency to motivate people to fight.
<u>Explanation:</u>
Paine makes use of urgency to make the people motivated about the fight which they should fight. The motivation given to the people to encourage them is about the future that their children might spend if the people do not agree to fight at the moment.
He also makes use of invitation to invite the people to join the fight and fight with full determination for the cost of the life of their future generation.
Answer:
C. Set aside a special time for writing and during that period, do nothing but write.
Explanation:
Hope this helps.
Alliteration is the repetition of a word of sound within the same phrase, such as "Ulalume"; Asonance is a vowel coincidence in the termination of two words, such as "it was night in the lonesome october
of my most immemorial year"; the consonance is an unmotivated use of words that are very close for each other, such as " we noted not the dim lake of Auber- (though once we had journeyed down here)"; and the poetic image describes something real through words, such as "these are days when my heart was volcanic", which explains his heart beats too strong.