A Quote by Phyllis Bottome

... the ears of the hunted grow even keener than a hunter's. — © Phyllis Bottome
... the ears of the hunted grow even keener than a hunter's.
I've become the hunted. I'm enjoying that. It's better to be the hunted than the hunter.
This world's divided into two kinds of people: the hunter and the hunted. Luckily I'm the hunter. Nothing can change that.
It is much easier to be the hunter than the hunted. When you are the one not expected to do anything, you play better.
You can be the hunter, or you can be the hunted.
Be the hunter, not the hunted.
When you're huntin' somepin you're a hunter, an' you're strong. Can't nobody beat a hunter. But when you get hunted - that's different. Somepin happens to you. You ain't strong: maybe you're fierce, but you ain't strong." - Muley
Before I was the hunter. Now I'm the hunted.
Freedom is nothing but the distance between the hunter and the hunted.
In searching for the self, one cannot simultaneously be the hunter and the hunted.
Be the hunter, not the hunted: Never allow your unit to be caught with its guard down.
Disappointment and adversity can be catalysts for greatness. There's something particularly exciting about being the hunter, as opposed to the hunted. And that can make for powerful energy.
I've always been a rodent and rabbit hunter - small varmints, if you will. I began when I was 15 or so, and I have hunted those kinds of varmints since then.
I'm living in the heart of gun culture, but I'm not a gun guy. I didn't grow up with them; I was never a hunter; my dad was never a hunter.
Hunting is now to most of us a game, whose relish seems based upon some mystic remembrance, in the blood, of ancient days when to hunter as well as hunted it was a matter of life and death.
She had forgotten them all; forgotten Richard down in the mud, and the marquis and his foolish crossbow, and the world. She was delighted and transported, in a perfect place, the world she lived for. Her world contained two things: Hunter, and the Beast. The Beast knew that too. It was the perfect match, the hunter and the hunted. And who was who, and which was which, only time would reveal; time and the dance.
In 10000 BC, all human beings were hunter-gatherers; by 1500 AD, 1 percent were hunter-gatherers. Less than .001 percent of people are hunter-gatherers today.
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