Each owner Buck transformed himself with different lifestyles and new habits. For example Hal abused him so he got used to being abused and hurt pulling very heavy sleds that were overloaded. Buck was so happy with John. He experienced love for the first time and he was developing a strong affection to John who saved his life. When buck finally has no owner he is acting and becoming like a wolf. He was just a house dog and now he is living in the forest by himself and he is acting like a wolf. The way buck has changed with each owner is shocking. Even though his love for John he still had a little wild to him that made him want to become crazy.
Beaten, neglected, and loved Buck dealt with all those things. In the story ‘’ The Call of the Wild ‘’, the central theme is how one treats animals can reflect on what kind of person they are.
Buck lost everything that he wants and everything that he loves. “The last tie was broken. Man and the claims of man no longer bound him.”(23). The quote explains he was free from the chains of man and love. The last of the domestic animal was gone and only there was the fierce wolf. Then came the blood lusting to kill whoever had murdered John Thornton, his handler and his lover. John Thornton had meant everything to him, Thornton was the reason he came back from the forest each time. He felt the grief of losing his loved one who he could not live without. The original Buck was gone he was replaced by the mighty wolf, the alpha of a wolf
Buck in the book “The Call of the Wild”, goes through many obstacles where he faced getting killed. He was just an ordinary house dog, but was kidnapped by his family’s gambling-addicted gardener. He later is beaten with a bat until he obeys and
Buck answered the call of the wild after Thornton’s death. He ran and howled with the wolves. The Indians called him a ghost dog because he was a powerful wolf who came to the place where Thornton died every year. This was because Buck felt the passionate love for him and Thornton. Buck saved Thornton, risking his life. “Love. Genuine, passionate love, was his first time.” (pg 73). What the influence of love Thornton had for Buck was unbreakable. Thornton’s influence allowed Buck to grow more
Call of the Wild A major theme in The Call of The Wild is that one must adapt to survive, which buck does throughout the entire book. At the beginning of the book, Buck sees he needs to begin to assimilate to his surroundings. First, Buck learns, not everything is perfect, nor is everyone. For example, he sees that Manuel isn’t perfect when he steals and sells him so he can have money for the Chinese Lottery.
His ancestors are calling to him by howling, he debates on leaving his perfect master or answering the call of the wild. The theme of Struggle for mastery shows right away Buck learns that being a trained house dog will not work for being a sled dog in the Yukon. Almost right away when he arrives in the Yukon he learns that he needs to be his own master. Buck always been “king like” or the leader when he was with his first master Judge Miller “He must master or be mastered; while to show mercy was a weakness.” (London, 77)
I picked this quote from chapter 6 and it explains the tension building up inside of Buck during his time with John Thornton, who is the ideal master, and his relationship with Buck represents a perfect friendship between a dog and their owner. The author tells us that this is the first time that Buck has loved a human. Yet it is clear that Buck is supposed to free in the wild, so Buck doesn’t know whether to stay with his owner or go free into the wild. But after Thornton is killed and he avenges his death he has no more reasons to not go into the wild where he truly belongs.
Buck’s owner had died and he visited the sight of his death before living on as a wolf, “but every year he returns to the place Thornton died, to mourn his master before returning to his life in the wild”. Everyone has lost someone in their lives. It’s just a part of life, just how Buck treats it like a real human being, but then goes back to his life as a wolf. Buck also overcomes the adversity of the abusive owners. Buck tries to fight the owners off but gets suffocated,”Then the rope tightened mercilessly, while Buck struggled in a fury, his tongue lolling out of his mouth”. Buck is overcoming the harsh and abusive conditions of these owners. We go through times in our lives that are tough like Buck. Some say that the abusive manner towards the dogs is too much. But, it shows how much Buck has changed through the book, how he has become stronger, and how we treat dogs
Everyday he would become more and more like a wolf and have more wild instincts. Jack London used personification in his writing a lot. Buck became a bully, he would bite squirrels and let them go and he would laugh about it. He would do that a lot and think it was funny and he wouldn't let go until he bit down and clamped his teeth. “There were fierce fighters among them,but three battles with the fiercest brought Buck to mastery, so that when he bristled and showed his teeth they got out of his way” (London 49).Buck was a good fighter and once he got into it you weren't dragging him out of it.
In The Call of the Wild, one theme could be that only the strongest survive, Buck goes through significant changes in his life and has to learn very quickly how to adapt in order to survive. The connection between this theme and natural selection is that if you are not able to adapt or suited for a certain task, you will fail. If Buck had not adapted and learned how to a sled dog, he would have most likely of died. When it says "only the strongest survive" it means that if you are not prepared or are weak, you will die first. In natural selection, when disasters happen or things in the world change, only the strongest, smartest, and quickest to adapt will survive. Bucks life changed very rapidly, but he was able to adapt very quickly to his
At the end of the book, Buck fulfills his quest by becoming wild. First, Buck hunts wild animals. For example, Buck kills deer, wolverines, and a moose. Since Buck kills wild game, he learned how to provide for himself. Second, Buck kills yeehat Indians for instance rips throats out, chases them down. Since Buck kills humans, last Buck joins a wild wolf pack to be free and a leader. For example he fights his way into a pack, becomes leader. Since Buck has become the ghost dog. In conclusion Buck fulfills his quest by becoming a wild animal that kills for its meat and protection in a
The environment a person lives in has an effect on them that shapes their character. People learn from the situations and others around them. This influence on character affected Buck, the main character in Jack London’s Call of the Wild. Within Buck’s time under the ownership of man, his experience with Perrault and Francois; Charles, Hal, and Mercedes; and Jack Thornton; had shaped him into the current dog he became.
Buck finds out very quickly that life in the wild is not as many people make it out to be. Because of the rough situation in which Buck was placed, the dog has to adapt to the life around him very quickly. In order to survive he must be resourceful, greedy, selfish, confident... ect. Buck was almost forced to follow his call of the wild. It did not take him long to forget his old life with the judge, when he was seemingly happy and content.
They had a lot of gold that was up North that they wanted. They had got the gold and Thornton uses his 1,600 that Buck just won to set up a expedition . Buck had made a friend and she was a wolf and almost takes off for the wild. It seem like they was really meant for each other because they really not any evil animals they friendly and loveable so they will be great friends. Buck had attacked a bear and he had killed the bear at that. I feel like that’s good and kind of bad because, Buck is a dog and he killed a bear. Another thing is that he protected himself from the bear. He kind realized how fun it was killing things, which makes him chafe against the pleasant domesticity of his life with Thornton. Buck had really starting to treat himself
Over the course of The Call of the Wild, Buck’s character traits increasingly make his behavior more primitive. He was born on a ranch in Santa Clara Valley, California to a St. Bernard and a Scotch shepherd dog (London 3). At the beginning of the novel, he was stolen by the gardener’s helper, sold, and then transported to Alaska to work as a sled dog (London 3-8). While he worked as a sled dog, he learned to follow primitive law far out from civilization. At the end, he joins a pack of wild wolves, proving his strength and agility and becoming the leader of the pack, hunting and killing like a wolf (London 44). All of this signifies Buck’s transformation into a wild beast.