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The Lottery: A Home Reading Report
1. HOME READING REPORT
THE LOTTERY
Sophia Marie D. Verdeflor
Grade 9-1 STEP
Mr. Armin C. Dionson
Subject Teacher
Date of Submission:
September 25, 2014
2. Questions:
1. Who are the characters in the story? Describe each.
The Boys (Bobby Martin, Dickie Delacroix, Harry and Bobby Jones)
In a story this sparse, it's pretty striking how much the boys of the village tell us,
not only about the nature of the lottery (consider that early, ominous pile of
stones), but also about the raw feeling underlying this village ritual.
Mr. Joe Summers
The man who conducts the lottery. Mr. Summers prepares the slips of paper that
go into the black box and calls the names of the people who draw the papers. The
childless owner of a coal company, he is one of the village leaders.
Unlike many characters in "The Lottery," we find out a lot about Mr. Summers.
He's married to "a scold" and has no children, so the villagers feel sorry for him –
even though he runs a coal business and "[has] time and energy to devote to civic
activities (like the square dances, the teen club, the Halloween program, and of
course, the lottery)" (4). This tells you something about the priorities of the
villagers: they appear to place more emphasis on a traditional family life than on
the kind of worldly success that Mr. Summers has achieved.
Mr. Harry Graves
The postmaster. Mr. Graves helps Mr. Summers prepare the papers for the lottery
and assists him during the ritual.
Mr. Summers may act like he's the Big Man of the Village, but he still has to be
sworn in by the mysterious Mr. Graves. Mr. Graves is never described, and he
never has a line of dialogue, which, in a short but dialogue-rich story, is like
pointing a neon sign at him blazing the word "Symbol!" And really, Jackson's not
going for subtle psychological realism, here: the man's name is Graves, people.
There's a reason he's the ultimate authority in a murderous lottery: his name is
where the "winners" of this ritual are going.
Old Man Warner
The oldest man in the village. Old Man Warner has participated in seventy-seven
lotteries. He condemns the young people in other villages who have stopped
holding lotteries, believing that the lottery keeps people from returning to a
barbaric state.
So, Mr. Summers is the shiny surface of the lottery, Mr. Graves is its grim end,
and the boys are the vicious, primitive spirit that drives its enjoyment. But
obviously this story is about tradition in a big way, the tradition that "no one liked
to upset" (5). Given how symbolic the other characters appear to be, there's got to
be a guy who stands in for tradition, and Jackson doesn't disappoint: there's Old
Man Warner. Heck, the man's called "Old Man"; Jackson is once again creating a
figure who's not so much a real person as he is a stand-in for something else, in
this case, those days gone by for which it's so easy to feel nostalgic. And, like
Summers and Graves, we can't ignore the literal meaning of his last name:
Warner, one who warns.
3. As the oldest man in the village, Old Man Warner seems to take it upon himself to
make sure that the village doesn't change. When he hears that other towns have
given up the lottery entirely, he grumbles, "used to be a saying about 'Lottery in
June, corn be heavy soon.' First thing you know, we'd all be eating stewed
chickweed and acorns" (33). So, for Old Man Warner, the lottery is associated
with agriculture and with plenty; it allows the community to guard against
nameless, declining fortune. Old Man Warner is the one who comes the closest to
stating a rationale for the lottery, which apparently has origins so old that even he
can't say how it began; all he knows is that it is associated with abundance and
with the cycle of the year.
Tess Hutchinson
The unlucky loser of the lottery. Tessie draws the paper with the black mark on it
and is stoned to death. She is excited about the lottery and fully willing to
participate every year, but when her family’s name is drawn, she protests that the
lottery isn’t fair. Tessie arrives at the village square late because she forgot what
day it was.
Mrs. Tess Hutchinson stands out right from the start: she arrives at the lottery late,
having "clean forgot what day it was" (8). The town treats her tardiness lightly,
but several people comment on it, "in voices just loud enough to be heard across
the crowd" (9).
So Tess Hutchinson has already been marked by the collective as one who's not
entirely part of the group; she's eager (maybe even too eager, for an adult) to be at
the lottery, but she's not so big on observing the rules that the lottery (and
tradition in general) seems to be all about reinforcing. Obviously, this refusal to
adhere to the rules gets kind of thematized with her constant objections once Bill
Hutchinson draws the marked strip of paper: she protests that Bill "didn't [have]
time enough to take any paper he wanted" (46) and that it "wasn't fair" (this one
she repeats a lot).
Mr. and Mrs. Adams
Mr. Adams is the first person to draw in the lottery, which makes sense
alphabetically – but we don't think we're stretching too far to say that it's also
because he's the First Man. Yes, "The Lottery" is full of tiny little references to
Christian tradition, which we'd be careless to overlook (check out the "Character
Analysis" for the Delacroix Family and "The Stool" in "Symbols, Imagery,
Allegory"). Remember that Adam (and Mrs. Adam, i.e., Eve) brings about the fall
of mankind in the Biblical Genesis story.
The Delacroix Family
The Delacroix family is in the mix right from the start. There's Dickie Delacroix,
who gathers his stones with the other boys, there's Mr. Delacroix drawing his strip
of paper, there's Mrs. Delacroix, chatting happily with Mrs. Graves (ah ha, the
return of the Graves family) and Mrs. Tess Hutchinson (Tess, don't trust her!) –
and then there's Mrs. Delacroix picking up a stone so large she needs to use both
hands to pick it up.
4. The Watsons and the Dunbars
The Watsons and the Dunbars are both intriguing because Jackson specifies that
their family arrangements break the father-as-head-of-the-family-drawing-the-
lottery-papers norm. Mrs. Dunbar must draw because her boy, Horace, is sixteen
and too young. Where is her husband? Home with a broken leg – or is he? Critic
Helen Nebeker claims that a child of the Dunbar family may have been killed at
the lottery in the previous year or two, leaving the husband unwilling to observe
another lottery (source). She cites as evidence the unusual attention that the crowd
pays when Janey draws for her family: a woman watching says "Go on, Janey"
and another says, "There she goes" (27).
Mrs. Graves
Mrs. Graves is the wife of Mr. Graves. She is a friend of both Mrs. Delacroix and
Mrs. Hutchinson. She tells Tess frankly that the lottery is fair – after all, everyone
took an equal chance.
Mr. Bill Hutchinson
Tessie’s husband. Bill first draws the marked paper, but he picks a blank paper
during the second drawing. He is fully willing to show everyone that his wife,
Tessie, has drawn the marked paper.
Bill Hutchinson is the husband of Tess Hutchinson. When she protests his
selection in the lottery, he tells her to shut up. It is unclear why he does so –
perhaps he believes in the lottery, or perhaps he doesn't want the family to be
shamed in front of the entire village.
The Hutchinson Children
The Hutchinson children are named Bill, Jr., Nancy, and Dave. Nancy has
supporters in the crowd who openly express hope that she is not the one chosen.
Baxter Martin
Baxter is the oldest son in the Martin family.
Mr. and Mrs. Martin
Mr. and Mrs. Martin are the parents of Baxter and Bobby. They run the grocery
store.
5. 2. What is the plot of the short story?
Just before 10 a.m. onJune 27th, the childrencame to the village square, where the
boys began to make a mountain of smoothstones andthe girls talkedabout school
days that had just concluded. Husbands came and talked about taxes and wives
gossipedabout the town.
In some towns, the Lotterycouldtake two days, but in this town, there were no more
than 100 residents andthe Lotteryonlytooktwo hours. If the Lotterybegan at 10
a.m., families couldbe home for their noonday meals.
Each year, the concept of creatinga new box from which to draw the Lotterytickets
from is brought up, but nothing ever comes of it. The current boxis said to have been
made with splinters of the box before it.
Mr. Adams, head of the Adams' householdand the man who would be drawing for
the Adams family during the Lottery, turnedto Old Man Warner who was
participatingin his 77thLottery. Adams shared that the NorthVillage was having
talks about giving up the Lottery. Warner snorted. He grumbled, "Lottery in June,
cornis heavy soon."
One by one each male head of the household(or woman if there was no man to take
her place) walked up to the box in alphabetical order and drew a slipof paper from
the box. They were asked to keep it foldedin the palms of their hands without
looking. When every family had a slipof paper, the men were allowed to look. Bill
Hutchinsonhad drawn the slipof paper with the black dot.
Bill's wife, Tessie, threw a fit in front of the entire town, claiming that Bill had been
rushed when he drew his slip, that he did not have enough time; however, the Lottery
continued. Bill's ticket and four blank tickets are placedback in the box to represent
Bill and Tessie and their three unmarriedchildren. The youngest child, with
assistance drewfirst. The drawing continues until each of the Hutchinsons has a slip
of paper. Tessie clings to hers and is the last to openher slip; she is also the one who
pulled the black dot.
The villagers armed themselves with pebbles and gave Bill's youngest sonstones as
well. Tessie was still protestingabout time and redoingthe Lotterywhen the first
stone hit her in the side of the head. The villagers did not stopthrowing.
6. 3. What is your favorite part of the story? Give the
reason.
My favorite part from the story is the:
Mr. Summers spoke frequently to the villagers about
making a new box, but no one liked to upset even as
much tradition as was represented by the black box.
This quotation, from the fifth paragraph of the story,
reveals how firmly entrenched the villagers are in the
lottery’s tradition and how threatening they find the idea
of change. The villagers have no good reason for
wanting to keep the black box aside from a vague story
about the box’s origins, and the box itself is falling
apart. Beyond shabby, it barely resembles a box now,
but the villagers, who seem to take such pride in the
ritual of the lottery, do not seem to care about the box’s
appearance. They just want the box to stay the same.
Their strident belief that the box must not change
suggests that they fear change itself, as though one
change might lead to other changes. Already, some
towns have stopped holding lotteries, but these villagers
do not seem to be headed in that direction. Instead, they
hold firm to the parts of the tradition that remain, afraid
to alter even this seemingly insignificant part of it for
fear of starting down a slippery slope.
7. 4. Can you relate with any of the character? Who?
How?
Yes, I do think so. I think, I can relate to Tessie
Hutchinson.
How can I relate to her?
So, I can relate to her because Tessie Hutchinson
quickly settles into the crowd and joins the lottery like
everyone else, Jackson has set her apart as a kind of free
spirit who was able to forget about the lottery entirely as
she performed her chores. Perhaps because she is a free
spirit, Tessie is the only villager to protest against the
lottery. When the Hutchinson family draws the marked
paper, she exclaims, “It wasn’t fair!” This refrain
continues as she is selected and subsequently stoned to
death, but instead of listening to her, the villagers ignore
her. Even Bill tells her to be quiet. We don’t know
whether Tessie would have protested the fairness of the
lottery if her family had not been selected, but this is a
moot point. Whatever her motivation is for speaking
out, she is effectively silenced.
Basically, in short, I do like Tessie among the other
characters because she is motivated and especially she
knows about the magical word “FAIR”. That’s all
8. 5. Lesson learned from the story?
In Shirley Jackson's, "The Lottery", human morals and values are
thrown away all for the pride of winning something. What is it that
they really win? When you win the lottery in this story, you
actually win death by stoning. Isn't that ironic, people actually
being competitive and getting excited about death in public? What
morals or values do these people really have, and how are they
different from what common society is thought today?
The first to gather in the square on the day of the lottery are the
children. The children, sweet, innocent children who do not know
any better and are only taking part in this cruelty because they
view it as a fun game. Then the adults begin to gather in the
square. They are older and wiser, knowing what is to become of
that one individual whose name is drawn. They know of the agony
that awaits them, but they have been taught to believe in it, so they
continue to participate even if it means they are the chosen one.
These adults are so caught up in tradition that they do not see that
it is morally wrong to kill a man. These are innocent people, dying
for what they think is right.
The main characters in this story also exhibit these same
characteristics. Somewhere deep inside they have got to know the
difference between right and wrong, but for traditions sake, they
continue the stoning process. The black box symbolized tradition
verses progress. The town’s people are repressed and can't grow
because of the killing tradition. The story also has a literal conflict
as Tessie Hutchinson is complaining about the cruelty and
injustice, then the crime turns around and happens to her This
woman's small child is even taught the tradition when he throws
pebbles at his mother. These people were involved in every day
society and in church, yet they took it upon themselves to kill one
another.
In today's society the actions taken in this story would have been
considered morally wrong and punishment for committing these
9. crimes would be handed down by the court system. The judicial
system of today would punish them with incarceration or death by
lethal injection. This legal system was actually illegal, more of a
martial law. These people were ruling themselves. The best
example is Mr. Summers; he made it a happy gathering, conducted
all the civil activities, and then was also the executioner. He brings
with all his justice and ruling, death. The purpose of the lottery is
to weed out the people and learn the cycle of life is to accept
democracy.
I feel that Shirley Jackson did an excellent job in identifying the
injustice of this story. Although I personally do not agree with the
killing of innocent people or any type of marshal rule. This story
makes you think about what is important in your life and how to
respect what you have in this world. It makes you think about what
you have learned as a child growing up and what you know is right
and wrong. The story does a great job in making you realize the
meaning of church and religion in your everyday life as well as the
legal system. We as humans all do things without questioning, but
don't put your faith in human hands.
One moral in this story has to do with the nature of violence.
Violence can occur anytime, and there is no rhyme or reason to it.
The most mild-mannered person can be capable of vicious acts.
This story shows a community of seemingly average, peaceful
citizens who participate in a horrific ritual of violence and death
voluntarily. The village is shown to be a collection of nice,
hardworking people who are appear to be like many typical
communities, yet they have a tradition that singles out an
individual to be brutalized and killed. These people spend much of
their time as neighbors and friends, yet their ritual requires/allows
them to randomly choose a person as the target for their cruelty,
and it is carried out without conscience or grief.