The author included this passage primarily to illustrate the deprivation the dingoes face due to the inhospitable environment, suggesting that the hungry animals might prey on whatever source of meat they find. The description of the pup's hunger and the scarcity of sustenance underscores the harsh realities of survival in the arid landscape, thereby highlighting the motivation for wild animals like dingoes to hunt for food, even if that means they may pose a threat to livestock or other animals.
A dog with dark fur and light tan markings looks off into the distance while sheep graze in the background.
Image credit: Shutterstock.AI/Shutterstock
The dingo and the working dog faced each other, eyes locked in the light of the luminous moon. The presence of the working dog, a Kelpie, was inexplicable in the remote surroundings. Earlier that evening, his owner had fed him after he'd finished his own meal—a reminder to the dog of who was boss and to keep close by—a working dog shouldn't wander. So, as usual, he'd curled up in his kennel with a full stomach, languid and content. But then he'd heard the dingo cry.
The thin, disconsolate thread of sound had interrupted his leg-twitching, lip-quivering dream. At that moment, Nature had crooked a finger at him that he simply could not ignore. He'd left his kennel and traversed through paddocks, across a dry riverbed, along a ridge, then down into a gully. The dingo was alone, having recently lost her mate to a poison bait. When the Kelpie took a step forward, she growled. But instead of further warning him off, her amber eyes glinted.
***
Hunger pangs woke the pup where he lay, ravenous, in a den with his brothers and sisters while their mother hunted. It was days since he'd last fed on meat—rabbit, rat, or wombat. The arid landscape provided little respite from the heat, and sustenance was scarce. He was about to rouse his siblings when a surge of noise forced them all into consciousness. They scrambled upright, ears pricked, eyes wide, whiskers trembling.
Something crunched on dirt and stones outside the den. A face unlike any he'd ever seen appeared low to the ground, then a hand reached in and dragged out one of the pup's brothers. The hand returned and dragged out the other brother and the two sisters—one at a time. The pup pressed himself against the rock wall, but there was no escaping the clutching fingers that persisted, grabbing him by the scruff of the neck and pulling him into the early-morning sunlight.
His brothers and sisters were nowhere to be found, but the strange face regarded him with interest. Unlike the ginger-colored fur of his siblings, the pup's coat was black, his chest and paws light tan.
"You look as much like a Kelpie pup as any I've seen," the hunter said. He brought the pup's face close to his own. "Apart from that yellow topaz glint in your eyes." He grinned. "But that'll be our little secret. You'll fetch a good price." He carried the pup to his horse, swung into the saddle, and moved off, holding the terrified bundle in front of him with a broad hand.
***
Question 2
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Read this passage from the story:
Hunger pangs woke the pup where he lay, ravenous, in a den with his brothers and sisters while their mother hunted. It was days since he'd last fed on meat—rabbit, rat, or wombat. The arid landscape provided little respite from the heat, and sustenance was scarce.
Why did the author include this passage?
It establishes the deprivation the dingoes face due to the inhospitable environment, suggesting that the hungry animals might prey on whatever source of meat they find.
It illustrates the author's opinion that dingoes pose no threat to farmers or landowners who are raising animals in remote environments.
It provides details about the author's personal experiences with and in-depth knowledge of the native plants and animals that reside in arid and sweltering landscapes.
It reinforces the idea that in the wild, mature animals are more concerned with self-preservation than with nurturing their young.
1 answer