The examples of foreshadowing in paragraph nine are the following:
- "[...] it was the beginning of the experience that in some inexplicable way marked the end of innocence."
- "[...] it involved some secret, secret thoughts of one of the Harris boys across the yard."
Foreshadowing is the literary effect in which the author suggests certain development of events that might happen later in the story. As a result, it motivates the reader to continue the account and prepares him or her for future outcomes of the text.
I feel that Auden's poem creations a more powerful and emotional response in the reader becuase, I feel, you can describe a subject better or deeper with words than with a painting. I think it takes a little bit of skill to completely understand what the author is feeling when viewing a piece of artwork. The initial understanding I got from the painting was that people are unaware of other's suffering because they are too involved in everyday life, but Auden's poem digs deep into the subject that people are unaware of other peoples suffering when it is indeed going on.
Well in the words of my agriculture teacher, the answer would be animals. We as Humans cannot survive without them. They however can survive without us. If we were to die out today animals would still roam and might even prosper without our presence. As a matter of fact if all animals died out today we would soon go with them. We need animals for food, clothing and many other things.
1.Buck is our protagonist in the story. London comes as close to seeing life through a dog's eyes as London could get. So, the conflicts all surround Buck. The instigator for the conflict comes when Buck is kidnapped or rather dognapped from his cushy life in California. The rest of the conflicts surround his many adventures on his way to inner doggy nirvana! Any human point of view would have ruined the flow and intent of the novel.
2.
In Chapter IX of James Michener's historical novel, Alaska, gold is discovered in Nome and two of the characters based upon real people, move to this territory in hopes of making their fortunes. Once there, they encounter gold mine thieving, dangerous conditions, and dangerous men. In the setting of this novel and London's novella, Alaska is a raw, naturalistic, formidable land that is unforgiving of any weakness.
This portrayal is, indeed, realistic. With so many men journeying to Alaska in hopes of making a fortune, there would be a high demand for sled dogs. Such a magnificent specimen as the one-hundred-and-forty pound Buck. And, that he would easily revert to his more atavistic nature is also realistic as feral dogs quickly develop shorter, thicker coats and run in packs like their ancestors did.
As Buck and another large dog, a Newfoundland are put upon a ship bound for Alaska, Buck realizes that his captors
...are a new kind of men...and while he developed no affection for them, he nonetheless grew honestly to respect them.
Once in Alaska, Buck further discovers that men and dogs are both little more than savages in this raw land, with no law but the law of force ruling their lives.
<span>Sources: <span><span>http://www.enotes.com/topics/call-wild </span><span>http://www.enotes.com/topics/call-wild/themes
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