1 Young life had little chance in such a famine.
2 Like most creatures of the Wild, he early experienced famine.
3 This had happened at the end of a second and less severe famine.
4 This famine was not a long one, but it was severe while it lasted.
5 In the worst pinches of the famine he stole back to the fires of the gods.
6 In the third year of his life there came a great famine to the Mackenzie Indians.
7 One day While Fang encountered a young wolf, gaunt and scrawny, loose-jointed with famine.
8 Famine came again, and the cub with clearer consciousness knew once more the bite of hunger.
9 Forgotten were the days they had hunted together, the game they had pulled down, the famine they had suffered.
White Fang By Jack LondonContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER I THE BATTLE OF THE FANGS 10 During the early summer, in the last days of the famine, he met Lip-lip, who had likewise taken to the woods, where he had eked out a miserable existence.
11 This seal had been stamped upon him again, and ineradicably, on his second return from the Wild, when the long famine was over and there was fish once more in the village of Grey Beaver.
12 The hard obstruction of the cave-wall, the sharp nudge of his mother's nose, the smashing stroke of her paw, the hunger unappeased of several famines, had borne in upon him that all was not freedom in the world, that to life there was limitations and restraints.
White Fang By Jack LondonContextHighlight In PART 2: CHAPTER IV THE WALL OF THE WORLD