He isn't civilized. Someone who is civilized doesn't shoot down men!! He is a murderer!!
Hell no
General Zaroff knew who Rainsford was because Zaroff read the hunting book that Rainsford wrote.
they way he looks acts and talks to others
tall and thin, mustache, gray hair, black eyes
... The Zaroff from Doctor Who is a Professor, and does not hold any military rank. However, I suspect you are talking about General Zaroff from "The Most Dangerous Game" (also known as "The Hounds Of Zaroff"), which is a short story and completely unrelated to Doctor Who. Perhaps you put this question in the wrong category?
One example of irony in "The Most Dangerous Game" is when General Zaroff, who hunts humans for sport, ends up becoming the hunted himself by the protagonist, Rainsford. This is ironic because Zaroff, who considers himself the ultimate hunter, becomes the prey in the end.
General Zaroff
General Zaroff
In the Story Most Dangerous Game General Zaroff Hunts is the Cape Bufflo
Hell no
The falling action in The Most Dangerous Game is when Rainsford and General Zaroff fight to the death in General Zaroff's room.
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.
Zaroff; Ivan
General Zaroff is presented as a sophisticated and cultured character in "The Most Dangerous Game." However, his belief in his superiority and his practice of hunting humans for sport challenges conventional ideas of civilization. While he may have the trappings of civilization, his actions ultimately reveal a darker, more primitive side of his character.
Connell portrays General Zaroff as a civilized savage by showing his sophisticated and aristocratic manners despite his cruel and immoral actions. This is evident when Zaroff engages in refined conversation with Rainsford while casually discussing hunting human beings. Additionally, Zaroff demonstrates his love for art and culture in his luxurious home, contrasting with his barbaric behavior of hunting humans for sport. Finally, Zaroff's adherence to a twisted sense of honor, such as giving his prey a head start before the hunt, showcases his complex and contradictory nature as a civilized man with savage instincts.
Zaroff; Ivan
.22 caliber pistol