It depands on what you know and how stupidity you were if you don't know how to answer this question. Do it yourself you moron.
Innocent children were gathering stones. The villagers gather in the square to begin. Parents called their children who earlier on were collecting the stones .Tessie Hutchinson was late. They begin by checking whether or not all families were there. Then they called up the head/father of each family to draw the lots. Mr Hutchinson got the black dot and therefore his family had to draw lots again. Tessie got the black dot on the paper this time and was to be stoned to death as the tradition had to go on. The stones that children collected earlier was passed out to everyone there. They threw stones at her although she yelled "It isn't fair".You suck at spelling, idiot.
In Shirley Jackson's short story "The Lottery," it is Tessie Hutchinson who wins the lottery in their small village. However, winning the lottery in this story has a dark and tragic consequence.
No, "The Lottery" by Shirley Jackson is not written in first person. It is written in third person point of view.
i have no clue.
Yes
Metaphors and symbols.
third person and objective....
The boys start collecting stones in "The Lottery" by Shirley Jackson. They gather the stones in preparation for the annual village lottery where they are used as a form of primitive weaponry in the stoning of the chosen "winner."
There is no character named Harry Jones in the short story "The Lottery" by Shirley Jackson. The story focuses on a town's annual ritual where one person is selected by lottery to be stoned to death. The protagonist, Tessie Hutchinson, becomes the unfortunate winner of the lottery.
The main characters in "The Lottery" by Shirley Jackson are Mr. Summers, Old Man Warner, Tessie Hutchinson, Bill Hutchinson, and the townspeople. The story follows the tradition of a small town's annual lottery, where one person is chosen to be stoned to death as a form of sacrifice.
They learn that he is a monster from mars!!
The themes are outdated traditions and scapegoats.
I first read it in grade twelve.