The savage reckoning in Jack London’s To Construct a Fireplace has made this well-known quick story a staple of highschool and faculty studying lists for greater than a century.
In simply 7,000 phrases written in 1908, London describes a gold miner’s deadly misjudgment of freezing climate as an example the implications of humanity’s self-delusion and mulish nonchalance within the face of what London biographer James L. Haley labeled nature’s “uncaring cosmic energy.”
The sentences are quick, the descriptions as crisp because the Yukon’s frigid air, and the still-relevant insights into human conduct punishing.
Right here is how London first describes our doomed — and unnamed — traveler as he breaks off from the primary Yukon path in minus-50-degree climate.
“The difficulty with him is that he was with out creativeness. He was fast and alert within the issues of life, however solely within the issues, and never within the significances.”
This lack of expertise, the reverence for info with out context, give the traveler a false sense of confidence and management.
“Fifty levels under zero…didn’t lead him to meditate upon his frailty as a creature of temperature, and upon man’s frailty typically, in a position solely to stay inside sure slim limits of warmth and chilly…Fifty levels under…