"OFF THERE to the right--somewhere--is a large island"
Great sport, hunting
The best sport in the world
Not for the jaguar.
Who cares how a jaguar feels?
In the Beginning, Connell uses indirect characterization as he introduces the character, Rainsford, during a conversation with Whitney. We can see that Rainsford is passionate for hunting, but feels little sympathy towards the animals he hunts, only holding the POV of the Hunter.
Gleiten: 2
Where there are pistol shots, there are men. Where there are men, there is food. . . But what kind of men, he wondered, in so forbidding a place?
Although he seems cheerful, the story’s conflict begins to progress as soon as Rainsford lands on the island. Using internal dialogue, Connell indirectly characterizes Rainsford again. Walking along the island, he finds the building where he is introduced to General Zaroff, kicking off “the most dangerous game,” suggested in the title.
Gleiten: 3
Rainsford is considered a complex character because he develops and changes from beginning to end. Through his experience on the island, he is able to learn firsthand how it feels to be a “beast at bay.” This serves as a stark contrast to the character he once was, who divided species into two classes, the hunter and the hunted, calling himself the hunter. In this battle of life and death, Rainsford also developed from the hunter who viewed the killing of animals as fantastic sport, while Zaroff’s practices and the killing of humans as morally reprehensible, to engaging in the same savagery when all was at stake.
"THEN IT WAS THAT RAINSFORD KNEW THE FULL MEANING OF TERROR."
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