As the town’s people assimilate, the author mentions several families by name showing that the entire town is gathering. Every member of every house comes to the ceremony –children included. The readers see the first foreshadowing of darkness when the children gather pebbles and rocks into piles. As the short story progresses, Jackson narrows in on one character named Tessie Hutchinson. As Tessie comes into the story she arrives late to the ceremony and acts as if it is a normal day. She is calm and collected during arrival and sounded excited for what day it was as she said,” … and then I looked out the window saw the kids gone, and then I remembered it was the twenty-seventh and came a-running,” (Jackson, par. 9). The author uses foreshadowing to explain the characters feelings about the lottery when Tessie finds her family she gives a tap on another character, Mrs. Delacroix, “shoulder as a farewell” (Jackson, para. 9). This shows that Tessie could be saying goodbye for the last time before they start the …show more content…
Jackson then wrote, “she held her hand out desperately as the villagers moved in on her,” this shows how her calm and collected changed into a burst of resentment (Jackson, para. 75). They even gave her son a few pebbles, so he could throw some at his mother.
This shows another dark scene of the town and in this moment, Tessie Hutchinson is yelling “It isn’t right. It wasn’t fair,” (Jackson, para. 75). This is where the reader sees the next change in Mrs. Hutchinson. She now portrays the belief that the towns people have turned on her, and what they are doing is unfair. Through these events the reader sees the change in Tessie in the story. She was a character that went along with what everyone else was doing. By the end, we saw her character change to an opposing viewpoint because it was her who was to suffer the results of the lottery. She was now against it and wanted a change- a little too