Main characters in the short story the most dangerous game


















Sanger Rainsford is the protagonist, and General Zaroff is the antagonist in this story where big game hunting reaches a frightening level. Rainsford and Whitney are travelling together on a hunting trip when Whitney points out a mysterious island called Ship-Trap Island off in the distance. This incident and the discussion the two subsequently have about hunters and the hunted serve as foreshadowing of what Rainsford is about to endure.

Rainsford finds himself on Ship-Trap Island later than night and soon finds out what it feels like to be the prey. The most dangerous game. I suppose when Rainsford is in a tree and reflects that this is how an animal must feel to be hunted tips us off that he has a new attitude.

The story, however, is so bizarre that the theme isn't dealt with in any depth. Perhaps Rainsford might He winds around and doubles back, walking running in loops. This attempt to lose Zaroff is unsuccessful. How does Rainsford's opinion on animals change throughout the story?

At first, Rainsford sees animals only as prizes for human hunters, but later Rainsford sympathizes with the animal "at bay" when he too becomes the hunted. Intelligent, experienced, and level-headed, Rainsford uses his wits and physical prowess to outwit General Zaroff.

His understanding of civilization and the relationship between hunter and prey is radically transformed during his harrowing days on the island. Hiding from Zaroff, he recalls his days fighting in the trenches of World War I, where he witnessed unimaginable violence. At the same time, the three-day chase reverses his life of privilege and ease, forcing him to sacrifice comfort and luxury to survive. Read an in-depth analysis of Sanger Rainsford. With a cultivated voice and deliberate, slightly accented way of speaking, his regal bearing and rarefied aristocratic air belie his dementia and sadism.

He hunts human beings to experience the most satisfying thrill.



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