Answer:
The mention of the "midnight sun" and men who "moil for gold" indicates that the poem takes place during the Klondike Gold Rush in the Yukon in the late nineteenth century.
Explanation:
This is an extract from a Robert W. Service poem called "The cremation of Sam McGee". Robert W. Service wrote many poems referring to the Yukon and the Gold Rush that took place around 1898 (late nineteenth century). This poem talks about a prospector (people who went to the Yukon to look for gold) that froze to death during one Yukon winter.
The Yukon is also known as the "land of the midnight sun" because during summer the sun doesn't set and there's light during midnight.
Thus, the mention of the "midnight sun" and men who "moil for gold" indicates that the poem takes place during the Klondike Gold Rush in the Yukon in the late nineteenth century.
I would think it is that the little boy loves his father but the father does not. The father abandoned the boy and he ran home to his mother.
The climax in "Borders" by Thomas King occurs <u>after the narrator crosses the border with his mother</u>.
- Climax is the peak of a story, after the conflict has been settled.
- According to the story, "Borders", the author talks about the journey that was undertaken between a young boy and his mother in their attempts to get into Canada.
- The conflict is resolved after the boy finally goes over the border into Canada. This is where the climax occur.
- Therefore, the climax of the story happens after they <u>cross the border</u>
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