Read the following excerpt from “Stephen Crane’s Own Story.” What type of external conflict does it describe?
The Cuban leader turned to me and said: "Go help in the fireroom. They are going to bail with buckets."
The engine room, by the way, represented a scene at this time taken from the middle kitchen of hades. In the first place, it was insufferably warm, and the lights burned faintly in a way to cause mystic and grewsome shadows. There was a quantity of soapish sea water swirling and sweeping and swirling among machinery that roared and banged and clattered and steamed, and, in the second place, it was a devil of a ways down below.
Here I first came to know a certain young oiler named Billy Higgins. He was sloshing around this inferno filling buckets with water and passing them to a chain of men that extended up the ship's side. Afterward we got orders to change our point of attack on water and to operate through a little door on the windward side of the ship that led into the engine room.
A. person versus person
B. person versus nature
C. person versus society
D. person versus self