Answer:
Robert Burns and John Steinbeck are two authors who brilliantly <u>capture the disappointment that follows failed plans</u>.
Robert Burns' poem, 'To a Mouse' was the inspiration for the title behind John Steinbeck's 1937 novella, Of Mice and Men. Set in the 1930s during the Great Depression, Steinbeck plays on Burns' idea of <u>shattered dreams and failed plans through the characters of this classic work</u>.
Answer:
He means that he did not falsify nature, but introduced animals that acted on instinct, just like in real life.
Explanation:
London says that the animals in their stories are not humanized, they do not have the human capacity to reason, to think about the consequences, advantages and disadvantages of their actions. On the contrary, the animals in his stories, act completely on impulse, without the need for reasoning and caution. This is a way of being true to nature and not putting a human responsibility on animals, as some works approach. He states that when he writes in this way he criticizes the humanization of animals, that is, he criticizes the unrealistic and dishonest representation about humanity.