Tuesday, December 3, 2019
The Call Of The Wild Summary Essays - Literature,
  The Call Of The Wild: Summary      William Smith  Reading II    By Jack Londen    Throughout the novel The Call of the Wild, we follow a dog named  Buck through his journey through the Klondike. We experience a  transformation in him, as he adapts to the cold, harsh land where  he is forced to toil in the snow, just to help men find a shiny  metal. Buck seems to almost transform into a different dog by the  end of the book. In this essay, I will go over what Buck was like,  how and why he was forced to adapt to his new environment, and  what he changed into.    When we first met up with Buck, he lived in the Santa Clara  Valley, on Judge Miller's property. He was the ruler of his  domain, uncontested by any other local dogs. he was a mix between  a St. Bernard and a Scotch Shepherd dog. He weighed one hundred  and forty pounds, and he carried every one with utmost pride.  Buck had everything he could want. Little did he know, he would  soon have it all taken away from him. One night, while the judge  was away at a raisin grower's committee meeting, the gardener,  Manuel, took Buck away from his home. Buck was then sold, and  thrown in a baggage car. This would be the beginning of a new,  cruel life for Buck. On his ride to wherever he was going, Buck's  pride was severely damaged, if not completely wiped out by men who  used tools to restrain him. No matter how many times Buck tried to  lunge, he would just be choked into submission at the end. When  Buck arrived at his destination, there was snow everywhere, not to  mention the masses of Husky and wolf dogs. Buck was thrown into a  pen with a man who had a club. This is where Buck would learn one  of the two most important laws that a dog could know in the  Klondike. The law of club is quite simple, if there is a man with  a club, a dog would be better off not to challenge that man. Buck  learned this law after he was beaten half to death by the man who  had the club. no matter what he tried, he just couldn't win.    Buck was sold off to a man who put him in a harness connected to  many other dogs. Buck was bad at first, but eventually, he learned  the way of trace and trail. Buck had to learn many things if he  was to survive in this frigid land. He had to learn to sleep  under the snow, and to eat his food as fast as possible so as not  to have it stolen. At about this point in the book, we see Buck  start to go through a metamorphosis of sorts. He transforms from a  house dog to a more primitive, savage version of his former self.  It was as if hundreds of years of knowledge, learned by his  ancestors, were dug up and brought out. Buck proceeded to lose all  the fat in his body and replace it with muscle. Buck was no longer  Judge Miller's pet. He was a machine of survival and triumph. Most  Southland dogs like him ended up dead because of their inability  to conform. Buck was born to lead the team, but one dog would do  everything possible to try and keep him down. This dog's name was  Spitz. Spitz was a white wolf dog who was a proven champion in  confrontation and was as crafty as they come. It was clear that he  and Buck would not work well together. When dogs have  confrontation in the Klondike, only one survives. This was because  of a law called fang. The law of Fang is such that, when two dogs  fight and one is knocked to the ground, that is it. The rest of  the spectators will instantly pounce on the downed dog and make  quick work of it.    All of these unspoken rules had turned Buck into the Best dog to  ever roam the Klondike. Buck did eventually fight Spitz and send  him to his death. After all of the transformations and cruelty he  had been through, you would think that Buck would never be able to  trust another human. He was being starved to death by a gold  seeking group who had not brought enough food for the dogs. When  Buck could finally not move another step, a man from the group  started to beat Buck. As the blows grew less and less painful, and  he was    
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