The battle between man and nature is a theme common to many literary works. Some people exaggerate the role of nature and human beings, but this story reveals both weaknesses and provides an interesting twist. By using an airplane or a round character, participation in events of a specific life change may cause roles to shift, which may actually prove that nature has been nurtured. Mr. London participates in the reader, prepares the plot through a specific purpose of role, perspective, and shows his opinion about the winner.
London emphasizes the existence of the theme of "turn on fire" in several respects, the most important of which is the environment in which he selects stories. This story takes place in the wilderness of the cold Yukon, and in the cold winter there is neither "sunshine" nor "sunshine" in the sky (118). London put his lonely human nature into the dangerous environment of the Yukon Wilderness enough to begin explaining his theme, but London combines this cruel environment with the fatal coldness of the Yukon winter When he created the environment, a hostile, representative of the environment of existence. The distance of the wilderness of Yukon and the lack of human travel companion help to explain the human existentialist concepts in the universe. To further emphasize this idea, London did not name the hero, but simply called him "a man" through the story.
Close important elements such as settings and symbol surfaces. After analyzing the entire story, all elements work together to create a theme. In Jack London's "To Build a Fire", the man decides to meet his friends despite the cold weather. Unfortunately, the man lost his fighting strength at cold, cold temperatures. All men tried wasting trying to enter the next camp, Jack London, and the story intertwined different themes. The man did not realize how cold it was, but even the dog knew that the temperature was dangerous. "Animals are irritated with a cold, I know there is no time to travel now" (London, 570). The story is told in a viewpoint of third person name omniscience, and the reader can tell a story as if it is on the screen of a movie.