White Fang Study Guide
Choose to Continue- White Fang
- Novel Summary
- Novel Summary: I.1 The Trail of the Meat
- Novel Summary: I.2 The She-Wolf
- Novel Summary: I.3 The Hunger Cry
- Novel Summary: II.1 The Battle of the Fangs
- Novel Summary: II.2 The Lair
- Novel Summary: II.3 The Gray Cub
- Novel Summary: II.4 The Wall of the World
- Novel Summary: II.5 The Law of Meat
- Novel Summary: III.1 The Makers of Fire
- Novel Summary: III.2 The Bondage
- Novel Summary: III.3 The Outcast
- Novel Summary: III.4 The Trail of the Gods
- Novel Summary: III.5 The Covenant
- Novel Summary: III.6 The Famine
- Novel Summary: IV.2 The Mad God
- Novel Summary: IV.1 The Enemy of His Kind
- Novel Summary: IV.3 The Reign of Hate
- Novel Summary: IV.4 The Clinging Death
- Novel Summary: IV.5 The Indomitable
- Novel Summary: IV.6 The Love-Master
- Novel Summary: V.1 The Long Trail
- Novel Summary: V.2 The Southland
- Novel Summary:V.3 The God's Domain
- Novel Summary: V.4 The Call of Kind
- Novel Summary: V.5 The Sleeping Wolf
- Character Profiles
- Metaphor Analysis
- Theme Analysis
- Top Ten Quotes
- Biography: Jack London
- Essay Q&A
White Fang: Novel Summary: IV.5 The Indomitable
Select a Chapter:
IV.5 The Indomitable
Summary
Although Matt is able to recognize that White Fang has been domesticated previously, Weedon Scott is dubious that he will be able to tame the dog. When Scott attempts to throw a piece of meat to White Fang, the meat is intercepted by another of Scott's sled-dogs. That dog pays for it with his life as White Fang swiftly kills him. He also bites Matt's leg when Matt kicks him in rebuke. Scott thinks he should do White Fang a favor and put the beast out its misery by killing him, but Matt argues that it was the dog's own fault, and his, for interfering with this wild creature's feeding: "I wouldn't give two whoops in hell for a dog that wouldn't fight for his own meat." Scott gives White Fang a chance, and begins to pet him. White Fang fights the instinct to bite Scott's hand for as long as he can, but, at length, he must yield to it. This time, Matt moves to kill White Fang, but Scott intercedes. They notice that White Fang seems to understand the threat of the rifle and decide that he is too intelligent a beast to kill. They agree to give White Fang another chance.
Analysis
This brief chapter suggests that White Fang's intelligence has not deserted him entirely. Freed
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from the tyranny of Beauty Smith, the dog is able to again demonstrate his intelligence as he shows his reaction to the rifle. His ferocious defense of his meat and his delayed biting of Scott's hand emerge as understandable, inevitable consequences of the harsh treatment he has received at humans' hands for so long. Scott states what the narrator has previously stated: "Poor devil. What he needs is some show of human kindness." This chapter, then, serves as an important turning point in the narrative's plot. From this point on, White Fang will receive those displays of kindness, and will change as a result.
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White Fang Study Guide
Choose to Continue- White Fang
- Novel Summary
- Novel Summary: I.1 The Trail of the Meat
- Novel Summary: I.2 The She-Wolf
- Novel Summary: I.3 The Hunger Cry
- Novel Summary: II.1 The Battle of the Fangs
- Novel Summary: II.2 The Lair
- Novel Summary: II.3 The Gray Cub
- Novel Summary: II.4 The Wall of the World
- Novel Summary: II.5 The Law of Meat
- Novel Summary: III.1 The Makers of Fire
- Novel Summary: III.2 The Bondage
- Novel Summary: III.3 The Outcast
- Novel Summary: III.4 The Trail of the Gods
- Novel Summary: III.5 The Covenant
- Novel Summary: III.6 The Famine
- Novel Summary: IV.2 The Mad God
- Novel Summary: IV.1 The Enemy of His Kind
- Novel Summary: IV.3 The Reign of Hate
- Novel Summary: IV.4 The Clinging Death
- Novel Summary: IV.5 The Indomitable
- Novel Summary: IV.6 The Love-Master
- Novel Summary: V.1 The Long Trail
- Novel Summary: V.2 The Southland
- Novel Summary:V.3 The God's Domain
- Novel Summary: V.4 The Call of Kind
- Novel Summary: V.5 The Sleeping Wolf
- Character Profiles
- Metaphor Analysis
- Theme Analysis
- Top Ten Quotes
- Biography: Jack London
- Essay Q&A



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