This question is about "The Call of the Wild"
Answer:
Buck's kidnapping had the biggest impact
Explanation:
Buck lived with his owner who was very good for him, met all its needs, making it a pampered dog, well fed and loved, in other words, Buck had a very comfortable life, with everything it could need, but its life took a drastic turn when he was kidnapped to be a treetop dog. There, Buck suffered abuse and deprivation, but it learned to fight and defend himself, which influenced the rest of its life.
In The Red Badge of Courage, when Henry wakes up in camp the day after fighting, he first think he is in a Charnel place because the sleeping men around him look dead.
<span>The speaker in In Memoriam, A. H. H. by
Alfred, Lord Tennyson, believes in Death's supreme power. [ This might
give an idea of how the poem is an account of all Tennyson's thoughts
and feelings as he copes with his grief over such a long period -
including wrestling with the big philosophico-scientific questions of
his day.</span>