I think its D because I believe him saying "<span> I supposed he possessed the power of life and death over all men, and could hang anybody that offended him." meant that. so yeah D</span>
This question is incomplete, here´s the complete question.
The following question references the novel The Call of the Wild by Jack London.
What might fire represent with relation to John Thornton in Chapters 6 and 7? Minimum 3 sentences.
Answer:
In chapter 6, Buck feels a call from the forest that compels him to go away from the fire, from the campfires and towns, and essentially from all mankind, to go into the forest to live in the wild.
Explanation:
His relationship with John Thornton is the only reason Buck has to resists the call of the wild, so he goes back to the fire. But when Thornton dies in chapter 7, Buck loses his only connection to the human world, and finally embraces his wild nature.
Answer:
Neto's conflict about playing football for racist fans is developed through
complications. First, he encourages all of the players to quit the team, but most of
the players decide to keep playing. Then, the school officials refuse to help. These
events reach a climax when Allison reads a letter against racism at the next football
game. The resolution is that the fans change their behavior. Now, Neto knows that
some things are more important than football and that he can make a difference in his
community.
Answer:
irrevocable and vindictive
Explanation:
The damage those rumors did to the actor's reputation is irrevocable, so it is somewhat understandable that he became so vindictive and bitter towards the members of the press who spread lies about him.
irrevocable: this means the rumors caused a lot of damaged that cannot be changed or reversed this is the reason why he has become vindictive(He desires a revenge from those that spread the lies)