The Child By Tiger Literary Analysis

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In the “The Most Dangerous Game” by Richard Connell and “The Child by Tiger” by Thomas Wolfe, General Zaroff and Dick Prossner both battle internally to overcome their weaknesses that the ultimately succumb to in the end. “The Most Dangerous Game” is cited as a piece of escape literature due to the questioned ending that is perceived by the reader; “The Child by Tiger” serves as a piece of interpretive literature as the reader is left with a feeling of after-shock in the aftermath as the climax is reached. In the “The Most Dangerous Game” and “The Child by Tiger,” two men are portrayed outwardly as normal, kind-hearted individuals. The benign manner demonstrated by these men in the beginning of each story drifts like a fading starlight as the story progresses. As the dingy, opposing sides of Zaroff and Prossner are unveiled, the personalities revealed evidently show how internally kind-hearted individuals struggle in contrast to each other. The actions given by each protagonist at the beginning of each story set in with a perception of generosity in the tone given by the narrators. In “The Most Dangerous Game,” General Zaroff is first perceived to be a somber gentleman that will help Mr. …show more content…

Prosser mirrors how humans experience internal struggles in life. His character represents how fallible humans are trapped, internally torn, and constantly in quandary from making the right choice in life. The tiger’s symbolism represents a human that has endured great amounts of calamity during the course of his or her life. The reader is left wondering why Prossner’s gun is lying around. The villagers eventually learn of Mr. Prossner’s horrendous, violent rampage. The villagers pursue and catch him; knowing there is no way out, “he sat down calmly on the bank…stood up like a soldier…faced the mob” (Wolfe) as he anticipates what was to come for him. After being fired on using three hundred rounds, Mr. Prosser was killed and was no longer a

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