Jackson and Lawrence
The Theme of Sacrifice in Jackson's "Lottery" and Lawrence's "Winner"
The theme of "sacrifice" is integral to the author's purpose in both "The Lottery" by Shirley Jackson and "The Rocking-Horse Winner" by DH Lawrence. While the two authors use the idea of sacrifice in very different ways, the importance of sacrifice is clearly delineated. However, Jackson and Lawrence approach the theme from separate angles and with two very unique purposes in mind. This paper will examine the theme of "sacrifice" in each short story and show how it is used to convey the author's underlying message of the importance and value of Christian sacrifice.
In Jackson's "Lottery," sacrifice is arbitrary and random. Each year, an individual from the town is selected by lottery to be stoned. There is no sense, no reason given for the tradition -- other than that it is a tradition and must therefore be followed. One has a sense the village operates according to a rather anti-Christian creed: instead of "Let he who is without sin cast the first stone," these villagers assert that all must throw stones regardless of guilt or innocence. Blood must be shed. Someone must be sacrificed.
In Lawrence's "Rocking-Horse Winner," the child Paul sacrifices himself in order to please his mother, who is consumed by a materialistic/selfish mentality. As he is able to predict the winner of horse races by riding his rocking-horse to an imaginary victory, he collects vast sums of money, which he gives to his mother in an attempt to fill the empty hole inside her. At first, the money seems to work -- but gradually it turns out that enough is never really enough. The problem is that each "race" takes a little from Paul's life -- until finally he gives himself so completely to one last...
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