How does zaroff die
Firstly, in the story The Most Dangerous Game, Rainsford is justified in killing General Zaroff because on the island the only way to live is if the stranded people hunt or the stranded will in contrast become the ones being hunted. In the beginning of the story Rainsford is talking to Whitney about jaguars. General Zaroff stocks his island by misdirecting passing ships using a simulated lighthouse. Rather than directing the ships to safety, the light leads the ships to the rocky shore.
Those sailors able to swim to shore from the resulting shipwreck are captured and held prisoner until the General once again needs game to prey upon. Zaroff collects the men, feeds them, and sends them to his training school for preparation.
He then releases them one by one into the jungle under the guise of joining him on a hunt. Zaroff gives the men a head start and then pursues them during the cover of night. Zaroff While the story clearly indicates that Rainsford kills Zaroff, it is not stated explicitly.
He must be considered one of the most diabolical characters in all of literature. General Zaroff thinks of himself as civilized for two reasons.
First, he has all the trappings of aristocracy — nice clothes, a butler, a fine mansion with a hunting preserve. Second, he sees hunting as a very civilized pursuit as it is seen by, for example, English aristocrats. Zaroff inherited his money from his father, then invested it. Zaroff is a Russian Cossack, and the son of a nobleman. Rainsford and Zaroff both love the thrill of the hunt, and they have travelled to different parts of the world to kill the big game they view as their greatest challenge.
Rainsford is still an enthusiastic hunter, while Zaroff has grown bored with the sport. 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. The pair are on a yacht headed to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. At the time of the story, they find themselves somewhere in the Caribbean. Both men are aficionados of big-game hunting. General Zaroff is a hunter that can kill any animal. He is so good, that he doesn 't enjoy hunting. In order to be entertained, he starts to hunt a different animal, humans.
He hunts humans because he wants to be challenged. He sent Richmond because he knew that anyone who went would be killed, and therefore technically commit murder. If he believes Richmond should have died for doing something to him, then he deserves his death because he did something to someone else as well. One of the reasons why Rainsford is justified in killing General Zaroff is on the island the only way to live is to hunt or to be the one being hunted. Secondly, Rainsford is justified in killing General Zaroff because Zaroff wanted to die.
Lastly, Rainsford is justified in killing General Zaroff because killing Zaroff is going to be the only way Rainsford will escape the island from a psychopath.
Firstly, in the story The Most Dangerous Game, Rainsford is justified in killing General Zaroff because on the island the only way to live is if the stranded people hunt or the stranded will in contrast become the ones being hunted.
In the beginning of the story Rainsford is talking to Whitney about jaguars. Whitney is stating that the jaguars must feel some sort of feeling like fear or terror but in contrast Rainsford states that the jaguars have no understanding of feelings. Then Rainsford is put on a island where he symbolically represents the jaguar and General Zaroff would symbolically represent the hunter.
Rainsford has no way to live unless he kills General Zaroff because Zaroff would most likely continue to force Rainsford to …show more content… This is shown when Rainsford got into Zaroff's room. One of us is to furnish a repast for the hounds. The other will sleep in this very excellent bed.
On guard, Rainsford. Zaroff knew he is going to die and is also hoping for it. Rainsford is justified in killing General Zaroff because Zaroff wanted to. Show More.
0コメント