Humans , many who were shipwrecked sailors .
Montresor is a cunning and vengeful character in Edgar Allan Poe's "The Cask of Amontillado," seeking revenge for a perceived insult, while General Zaroff in Richard Connell's "The Most Dangerous Game" is a sophisticated and ruthless hunter who lures shipwrecked sailors to his island to hunt them for sport. Montresor's motivation is personal revenge, while General Zaroff's is seeking a challenging target for his hunting skills.
C. They are the scum of the earth, with dull brains
in general zaroff's game, how long does he gave to find the prey he hunts?
General Zaroff proposes a hunt, but only the General will be hunting because Rainsford will be his prey.
general zaroff bought the island to hunt his new found prey, humans
"The Most Dangerous Game" by Richard Connell features minor characters such as Whitney, who serves as Rainsford's companion at the beginning of the story, Ivan, the silent and menacing servant of General Zaroff, and the sailors from the ship that Rainsford falls off of at the start of the story.
The main characters in "The Most Dangerous Game" are Sanger Rainsford, a skilled hunter who becomes the prey, and General Zaroff, a Russian aristocrat who hunts humans for sport on his private island. Rainsford must outwit Zaroff in a deadly game of survival.
The title is a play on the word game which can mean a challenge or sport. It can also mean hunted animals. In the short story (set in the 1920s), the "most dangerous game" is both.On his mysterious Caribbean island, Russian expatriate General Zaroff has taken to a different kind of hunting -- hunting men -- mostly shipwrecked sailors who he captures and then kills, ostensibly having given them a chance to escape by eluding him. A marooned big game hunter inadvertently becomes the prey and must turn the tables on Zaroff to survive.
He takes sailors as prisoners that get stranded on his "Ship Wreck Island".
To hunt for men; I hunt the scum of the earth: sailors from tramp ships--lassars, blacks, Chinese, whites, mongrels--a thoroughbred horse or hound is worth more than a score of them."
general zaroff