In "To Build A Fire" by Jack London, the man is arrogant and overconfident. Of the four passages, this can be most inferred from passage C. Passage C reads:
"Those old-timers were rather womanish, some of them, he thought. All a man had to do was to keep his head, and he was all right. Any man who was a man could travel alone."
This clearly shows that the man thought he was more intelligent than the older generation from the area that advised him not to travel alone when the temperature was 50 degrees below zero. It was 75 degrees below, but he thought he could outwit nature. As he was freezing to death, he realized he was wrong, but it was too late. He was overconfident and that ultimately led to his death.
Answer:
Hrothgar's speech emits values such as peace, friendship, bravery and loyalty.
Explanation:
When interpreting Hrothgar's speech, we can see that he reminds Beowulf of the success for the peace established in his kingdom. He is not blinded by Beowulf, but he is extremely grateful, happy and privileged to meet a warrior so brave and strong, capable of buying a fight from a people that was not his, and winning it. For all these achievements, Hrothgar shows an intense relationship of loyalty between him and Beowulf and the desire that the friendship between them will last and remain alive through the years.
The first one sorry if it’s wrong