English Edition
Literature
White Fang
English BooksWhale Edition by Jack London
A wilderness novel of instinct, violence, survival, trust, and domestication.
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White Fang
White Fang tells the story of a wolf-dog shaped by hunger, cruelty, wilderness, and eventual human kindness. Jack London’s adventure novel explores survival and transformation in the North.
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This edition is based on a public domain text and has been prepared for digital reading by BooksWhale.
Public domain basis
Why this edition can be shared
Jack London died in 1916, and White Fang was first published in 1906. These dates support the public-domain basis for this English original-language edition.
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White Fang
Jack London
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Part I
Preview chapterChapter I. The Trail Of The MeatPreview
Dark spruce forest frowned on either side the frozen waterway. The trees had been stripped by a recent wind of their white covering of frost, and they seemed to lean towards each other, black and ominous, in the fading light. A vast silence reigned over the land. The land itself was a desolation, lifeless, without movement, so lone and cold that the spirit of it was not even that of sadness. There was a hint in it of laughter, but of a laughter more terrible than any sadness—a laughter that was mirthless as the smile of the sphinx, a laughter cold as the frost and partaking of the grimness of infallibility. It was the masterful and incommunicable wisdom of eternity laughing at the futility of life and the effort of life. It was the Wild, the savage, frozen-hearted Northland Wild.
But there was life, abroad in the land and defiant. Down the frozen waterway toiled a string of wolfish dogs. Their bristly fur was rimed with frost. Their breath froze in the air as it left their mouths, spouting forth in spumes of vapour that settled upon the hair of their bodies and formed into crystals of frost. Leather harness was on the dogs, and leather traces attached them to a sled which dragged along behind. The sled was without runners. It was made of stout birch-bark, and its full surface rested on the snow. The front end of the sled was turned up, like a scroll, in order to force down and under the bore of soft snow that surged like a wave before it. On the sled, securely lashed, was a long and narrow oblong box. There were other things on the sled—blankets, an axe, and a coffee-pot and frying-pan; but prominent, occupying most of the space, was the long and narrow oblong box.
In advance of the dogs, on wide snowshoes, toiled a man. At the rear of the sled toiled a second man. On the sled, in the box, lay a third man whose toil was over,—a man whom the Wild had conquered and beaten down until he would never move nor struggle again. It is not the way of the Wild to like movement. Life is an offence to it, for life is movement; and the Wild aims always to destroy movement. It freezes the water to prevent it running to the sea; it drives the sap out of the trees till they are frozen to their mighty hearts; and most ferociously and terribly of all does the Wild harry and crush into submission man—man who is the most restless of life, ever in revolt against the dictum that all movement must in the end come to the cessation of movement.
But at front and rear, unawed and indomitable, toiled the two men who were not yet dead. Their bodies were covered with fur and soft-tanned leather. Eyelashes and cheeks and lips were so coated with the crystals from their frozen breath that their faces were not discernible. This gave them the seeming of ghostly masques, undertakers in a spectral world at the funeral of some ghost. But under it all they were men, penetrating the land of desolation and mockery and silence, puny adventurers bent on colossal adventure, pitting themselves against the might of a world as remote and alien and pulseless as the abysses of space.
They travelled on without speech, saving their breath for the work of their bodies. On every side was the silence, pressing upon them with a tangible presence. It affected their minds as the many atmospheres of deep water affect the body of the diver. It crushed them with the weight of unending vastness and unalterable decree. It crushed them into the remotest recesses of their own minds, pressing out of them, like juices from the grape, all the false ardours and exaltations and undue self-values of the human soul, until they perceived themselves finite and small, specks and motes, moving with weak cunning and little wisdom amidst the play and inter-play of the great blind elements and forces.
Table of contents
Inside this edition
- 01Full text
- 02Part I
- 03Chapter I. The Trail Of The Meat
- 04Chapter II. The She-Wolf
- 05Chapter III. The Hunger Cry
- 06Part Ii
- 07Chapter I. The Battle Of The Fangs
- 08Chapter II. The Lair
- 09Chapter III. The Grey Cub
- 10Chapter IV. The Wall Of The World
- 11Chapter V. The Law Of Meat
- 12Part Iii
- 13Chapter I. The Makers Of Fire
- 14Chapter II. The Bondage
- 15Chapter III. The Outcast
- 16Chapter IV. The Trail Of The Gods
- 17Chapter V. The Covenant
- 18Chapter VI. The Famine
- 19Part Iv
- 20Chapter I. The Enemy Of His Kind
- 21Chapter II. The Mad God
- 22Chapter III. The Reign Of Hate
- 23Chapter IV. The Clinging Death
- 24Chapter V. The Indomitable
- 25Chapter VI. The Love-Master
- 26Part V
- 27Chapter I. The Long Trail
- 28Chapter II. The Southland
- 29Chapter III. The God’S Domain
- 30Chapter IV. The Call Of Kind
- 31Chapter V. The Sleeping Wolf
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