Select the correct text in the passage.
In this excerpt from Jack London's "Up the Slide," which sentence reveals information about the setting of the story?
When Clay Dilham left the tent to get a sled-load of firewood, he expected to be back in half an hour. So he told Swanson, who was cooking the
dinner. Swanson and he belonged to different outfits, located about twenty miles apart on the Stewart River, but they had become traveling partners
on a trip down the Yukon to Dawson to get the mail.
Swanson had laughed when Clay said he would be back in half an hour. It stood to reason, Swanson said, that good, dry firewood could not be
found so close to Dawson, that whatever firewood there was originally had long since been gathered in, that firewood would not be selling at forty
dollars a cord if any man could go out and get a sled-load and be back in the time Clay expected to make it
Then it was Clay's turn to laugh, as he sprang on the sled and mushed the dogs on the river-trail. For, coming up from the Swash village the
previous day, he had noticed a small dead pine in an out-of-the-way place, which had defied discovery by eyes less sharp than his. And his eyes
were both young and sharp for his seventeenth birthday was just cleared