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How many fires did the protagonist build in "To Build a Fire"?
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In Jack London's "To Build a Fire," the protagonist builds three fires. The first fire is to thaw his frozen fingers and eat lunch. The second, built after wetting his feet, is extinguished by falling snow from a tree. The third fire, ignited using all his matches, is smothered by moss, leaving him unable to build another and ultimately leading to his death in the Yukon wilderness.
The protagonist of Jack London's short story builds three fires on his journey through the Yukon territory. The naive young man builds his first fire after he attempts to eat his lunch but cannot move his lips to bite into his biscuits. When the newcomer realizes that he cannot move his mouth, he builds a small fire to warm himself. The fire melts the ice on his face and allows him an opportunity to eat his lunch.
After stepping through thin ice and getting his moccasins wet, the traveler frantically builds a second fire underneath a tree. The tree begins to sway each time the man breaks branches and twigs off of it until a load of snow falls directly onto his fire. With his second fire extinguished, the man begins to feel the effects of hypothermia set in and has difficulty moving his hands. Unable to use his...
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fingers, the newcomer manages to grab the box of matches and rubs the entire pack against his leg, which ignites all seventy matches at once. He then holds the flaming pack of matches against the tree bark and manages to catch the bark on fire before he drops the flaming matches into the snow. The traveler desperately attempts to place small sticks onto the fire but cannot feed the flames properly and the third fire dies. Unable to build a successful fire, the naive traveler freezes to death in the Alaskan wilderness.
The solitary protagonist of "To Build a Fire" built three fires in all. He built his first fire in order to thaw out his frozen fingers and toes. He plucked his firewood from the undergrowth, where he found a supply of twigs. A roaring fire was soon going, and he thawed the ice from his face and ate his lunch--biscuits and bacon. Before leaving, he smoked his pipe. He built his second fire after cracking through the thin ice and wetting his feet. The fire was a success--for a few moments, for he had unwittingly built it under a spruce tree, and the heat caused snow to fall from the tree and smother the fire. The man managed to build a third fire, using his remaining 70 matches at once in his frozen hands, but a piece of moss smothered the fire, leaving the man without a way to build another, and leaving him alone to deal with the elements.