<u>Answer:</u>
<em>Alone with me?” I replied, “But you have been alone with me all the way from Paris, in the train.”
</em>
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<u>Explanation:</u>
The author’s feeling remains the same but he uses different tones in the story to express his feelings. In most of his narration, he speaks as if he was an outsider who is commenting on subject to the eye of the character to show his feelings and express them.
Further, the narrator uses direct discourse when the words of the narrator sounds like the pattern of a speech. For instance, Flaubert remembers his wedding and how long it happened, However, there was nothing at the final.
Answer:
The Call of the Wild is a story of transformation in which the old Buck has to adjust to harsher realities of life where survival is only imperative.
Explanation:
So all and all he has to get better with his surroundings and make the transformation with his survival skills in order to survive.
Side bar: The moral of it is to follow your instincts. And although Buck is loyal to his owner he follows his gut instead.
Because the hero over time will change.
POINT OF VIEW · The narrator speaks in the first person, noting his observations of the war and his brother's involvement
TONE · Matter-of-fact; conversational; sometimes childish
TENSE · Past
SETTING (TIME) · 1775–1779; epilogue, 1826
SETTING (PLACE)<span> · Redding, Connecticut and nearby areas
</span>TIME AND PLACE WRITTEN<span> · Early 1970s, United States
</span>
There is some info lacking here.