If you think of it, hunters are absolute zero on the scale of human beings.
What Samuel Taylor Coleridge wrote upon first witnessing an otter hunt will help you think of it:
The miserable little animal was pursued by men with large poles with spikes in their heads. . . . Then the poor creature having found refuge in its hole, twenty men got on to the bank and endeavoured by jumping and other means to force the earth down into the unfortunate animal’s hiding place, and this ‘sport’ was continued, until worn out by fatigue and fright surrounded by men and dogs, without the ghost of a chance of escape, the victim became an easy prey to its enemies.
(Quoted on pages 82 of Otter, by Daniel Allen. Reaktion Books, 2010.)
For a brief biography of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, click here. For images of or relating to Samuel Taylor Coleridge, click here.
For a brief biography of Daniel Allen, click here. For images of or relating to Daniel Allen, click here.
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