I believe the correct answer is: It reminds readers of the
loneliness and absolute desolation of the characters.
The novel “Frankenstein” (also known as “The Modern
Prometheus”), written by English author Mary Shelley, may serve as an accurate
example of (Dark) Romanticism, and therefore displays the most common
characteristics. One of this characteristics is the nature mirroring the
internal state of characters, which is why the choice of frozen landscapes such
as the North Pole and the Swiss Alps as settings in Frankenstein have an effect
that reminds people of the loneliness and absolute desolation of characters.
While reading the novel, you’ll notice that Victor always
goes to cold and desolated places when he feels troubled and lonely. It is also
a place where he isolates himself from his friends and family to prevent them
from becoming the victims of his creation. This is the state in which he feels
most desolated and according to that, the nature he surrounds himself with
mirrors that.
Answer:
“Day had broken cold and grey, exceedingly cold and grey when the man turned aside from the main Yukon trail and climbed the high earth-bank, where a dim and little-travelled trail led eastward through the fat spruce timberland”
Explanation:
To Build a Fire is a short story written by Jack London. It is the story of a man who sets out on an adventure in an unfavorable weather after being advised not to. He struggled and struggled till he eventually froze and died of hypothermia.
The setting of a story refers to the location and the time the story takes place.
From lines 1-7, the setting of the story is Yukon; a trail in Yukon during the winter.
Im gonna answer it myself and ill come back and say the answer
From all these excerpts of "Lifeboat Ethics: The Case Against Helping the Poor", the last sentence is the one that provides an example of logos because it gives clear and compelling information that helps address the topic by employing reason.
It provides hard data through statistics, to argue his case and convince the reader to believe his ideas.