What Happened to Lucy Gray?

(NOTE: Spoiler Alert for the Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes)

A considerable amount of discussion is occurring right now about the whereabouts of Lucy Gray Baird near the end of The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes (BSAS). In typical form for Suzanne Collins, this is one of numerous aspects that she leaves hanging at the end, fueling even further speculation that future books might be coming (or not). While there is reason to believe that Lucy Gray actually dies at the end of the story — and quite logically due to the fact that an impulsive Coriolanus tries to shoot her — I am not yet convinced. There is little or no evidence in the actual narrative that she is even injured, let alone deceased (please bear with me as I play this out below). Admittedly, those who believe she dies have good reasoning to back them up, namely the ballad for which she is named, “Lucy Gray”. If this isn’t a classic case of foreshadowing, I don’t know what is. And just as in “her” ballad, Lucy Gray does indeed disappear within the story. But there is no evidence here of actual death, since the original poem by Wordsworth is modified and only signals disappearance. We don’t know for how long Lucy Gray’s whereabouts will remain unknown.

As a bit of background, the original “Lucy Gray” is a poem written by William Wordsworth in 1799 and is one of his most well-known works. It was also later published in Wordsworth’s Lyrical Ballads. The original poem is based on a true event that was told to Wordsworth by his sister about a little girl in Yorkshire, England who became lost in a snow storm. Her parents traced her footsteps to the middle of a canal lock, where they disappeared. Eventually, this girl’s body was actually found in the canal. In Wordsworth’s version, however, the lost girl simply vanishes into nowhere, likely a spirit which, some say, can still be seen “Upon the lonesome wild”.

The Lucy Gray of Suzanne Collins’ creation clearly parallels the Wordsworth poem as Maude Ivory explains in BSAS. Maude explains that “We mixed it up a little” to change the words to better represent Lucy Gray’s life in the Covey (p. 424 BSAS). Those who believe this Lucy Gray actually perishes at the end can rationally point to both the original and altered poems that suggest Lucy should essentially become a ghost at the conclusion of the story. A supporting argument relates to the confusing exchange in Chapter 30 when Coriolanus is chasing Lucy Gray wildly through the woods and attempts to shoot at her through the trees. He clearly cannot see her, however, and there is no clear indication of whether his bullets hit her (fatally or not). He does hear “a faint cry,” which some interpret as Lucy being hit.

Despite these rational arguments, I’m not convinced. Even if she was struck by a bullet, it could be a non-fatal injury, if she was even hit at all. A flock of birds took off at the same time he heard the cry (p. 583 BSAS). And, she was nowhere to be seen when he reached the spot he thought she would be. Further, it is after this exchange when Lucy somehow amazingly keeps her composure enough to capably sing The Hanging Tree, as a final symbolic gesture to Coriolanus. The mockingjays then fittingly pick up the song with not a little irony.

It is further important to note that Lucy Gray likely knows that forested area like the back of her hand, which Coriolanus does not. She knows where to run and how to get around. A possible clue about her familiarity with the woods is found in Chapter 27, when an unsure Coriolanus asks Lucy Gray how Tam Amber knows the way to the lake. She replies matter-of-factly, “We all know the way. . . It’s our second home”. Suzanne Collins may have included that earlier conversation as a clue for later, indicating that Lucy Gray can easily find her way around the lake and through the forest. And the forest undergrowth is quite thick, which is primarily what impedes Coriolanus’s view — and scrapes him up as well. If it was simply a thinned forest with tree trunks, he would likely have been able to see where she went. Much of the forest in the south-central Appalachians consists of dense undergrowth and a variety of deciduous and evergreen tree species. For someone unfamiliar with such a wide patch of forested land, good luck to them! This is all to say that there is consequently very little, if any, evidence that Coriolanus actually kills her.

Does she disappear as indicated in the poem? Yes—at least until the end of Chapter 30. And this is where all the speculation arises now as to her whereabouts. One possibility is that she simply wandered home to deal with her nemesis, the Mayor, head on while rejoining the Covey. She does admit to Coriolanus earlier that she is not too keen on living in the wild. She says, “It’s not just how hard it will be. It’s too lonely. I might’ve made it for a few days, but then I’d have come home to the Covey” (p. 491, BSAS). Of course, she also admits that the Covey can “get by,” and that Maude Ivory will be old enough to lead the group in a few years. But this reflection on her part came when she was still planning to escape with Coriolanus. Now suddenly without him by her side, it is very possible that she simply went back home. Her one true concern in life was to protect her Covey family, so it is reasonable that her determination in this regard is what finally sends her home (not to mention the foreboding loneliness of the Appalachian mountains).  

A New “Theory” of Three Kills

There is one other possible reason why I personally believe Lucy Gray is still alive at the end of BSAS. And despite all of the strong arguments one way or another in the fandom world, I have yet to see this hypothesis (not sure that it’s really a theory yet in the literal sense, but I’ll call it that for now). This argument in support of Lucy’s continued living is based on Suzanne Collins’ continued and strategic use of the number “three”. A lot of things occur in threes throughout the original trilogy (including the chapter numbering and total number of books in the original series). This trend continues apace in BSAS. In fact, there are at least three prominent examples of the use of “threes” that I managed to take note of while reading. The first is the well-known murder of three men by the condemned Arlo Chance, which serves as the fodder for Lucy Gray’s new song, The Hanging Tree. Beyond this, however, Lucy Gray admits to three of her own “kills” during the Tenth Hunger Games, namely Wovey, Reaper, and Treech. She explains each of these in turn in Chapter 24. The first (Wovey) she claims to have been a mistake (she had been “gunning for Coral”). The second was Reaper, which was a “mercy killing”. And Treech’s fate came through her own self-defense with the viper.

The other set of threes has apparently not been considered much in discussions surrounding Lucy Gray’s eventual fate. This involves Coriolanus’s own “kills,” the third of which ends up being Sejanus. Thus, both Coriolanus and Lucy Gray claim three kills each, through the end of Chapter 30. Would Suzanne Collins suddenly defy her habit of using groups of three to allow one more “kill” for Coriolanus? If he actually killed Lucy Gray, this would be his fourth, countering Collins’ own trend. Is this a clue she left us as to the fate of Lucy Gray? We will not know for sure, of course, until (and if) she publishes another book—and only if she decides to continue her character’s story. Now, the one possible glitch in this theory (or whatever it is) is in the Epilogue, when Coriolanus actually does successfully knock off poor Dean Highbottom. However, this occurs technically in the Epilogue, which is not part of the main story. I have to admit the chance, however, that the Epilogue may punch a serious hole in my argument. Still, I can’t see Suzanne Collins suddenly abandoning her trend of “threes,” which to me is a possible code that Lucy Gray is still alive. Until we learn otherwise, however, her footprints will remain as in the Wordsworth poem, suddenly ending in the snow with no Lucy Gray in sight.

Postscript:

One might find it fascinating as I did to learn how closely their final exchange in the woods parallels the actual final verse of the Wordsworth poem. The verse reads as follows:

O’er rough and smooth she trips along,
And never looks behind;
And sings a solitary song
That whistles in the wind.

It appears that Suzanne Collins purposely crafted Lucy Gray’s disappearance in the woods to closely match this final verse. In BSAS, Lucy Gray certainly “trips along” through the woods as Coriolanus chases her and for some time at least, “never looks behind”. Then she sings her “solitary song” (The Hanging Tree) for Coriolanus’s benefit. The song essentially “whistles in the wind” as the mockingjays pick up the tune. Quite the fitting conclusion for Lucy Gray and her own ballad of life!

(Photo: “Winter Road” by Hotel Ocho, Creative Commons)

2 Comments on “What Happened to Lucy Gray?

  1. I think another factor to consider is that Lucy Gray didn’t know that Snow was supposed to leave for district 2. With that in mind she couldn’t have returned to the covey after she (maybe) survived the bullets because she would always be under threat of him coming after her again. I think she left for the woods and hopefully found district 13.

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    • I agree. Too many dangers for her in 12. She would’ve found a way to let the Covey know where she is so they could rejoin her

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