The Shining

The Shining

by

Stephen King

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The Shining: Chapter 46 Summary & Analysis

Summary
Analysis
 Around noon, Wendy decides to go to the kitchen to make something to eat. Danny is in the bathroom, so Wendy knocks on the door and tells him it’s lunchtime. She asks if he knows where Jack is, but he doesn’t. It doesn’t really matter, Danny says again. Wendy leaves the room. She is certain Jack has gone insane. They listened to him all night long, having what sounded like drunken conversations with himself. Early this morning, there was a loud crash, and silence followed.
Danny is convinced the family is going to die, which is why he tells Wendy that it doesn’t matter where Jack is. Sooner or later, Jack is going to get around to killing them, and Danny and Wendy can’t hide forever.
Themes
Precognition, Second Sight, and the Shining Theme Icon
Isolation and Insanity Theme Icon
In the lobby, Wendy notices the velvet rope that blocks the ballroom is down, and the metal pole is knocked over. She passes the registration desk and wonders what she will do if Jack appears. Will she have the courage to kill him and save herself and Danny? Or will she stand frozen in fear? Wendy has always thought herself weak. During trouble she usually sleeps and tries to avoid it. She gets to the kitchen and feels some relief. She feels Hallorann’s comforting presence, and thinks maybe he is on his way now to help them.
Despite Wendy’s opinion that she is weak, she is actually quite strong, as evidenced by her ongoing resolve to protect Danny. Like Danny's ability to sense where Jack is and what he's thinking, Wendy’s ability to sense Hallorann’s presence further establishing the fact that she has at least some amount of the shining, as well.
Themes
Fear, the Paranormal, and Reality Theme Icon
Precognition, Second Sight, and the Shining Theme Icon
Family  Theme Icon
Quotes
Wendy quickly whips up an omelet and gets a can of tomato soup from the huge walk-in pantry. The door is heavy and close to the ground so mice can’t get under it, and it locks with a massive bolt. As she cooks, Wendy feels a presence behind her. She puts her hand on the knife in the pocket of her robe and spins around, but the kitchen is empty. She finishes cooking and mentally prepares herself to return the way she came. Wendy puts the food on a tray and walks out to the registration desk. It is December; they could be stuck here for another four months. It could be weeks, maybe even a month, before the rangers come to check on them. How long can she reasonably avoid Jack? She puts the tray on the desk and calls his name.
King pays special attention to the pantry door here, foreshadowing its significance in the coming pages. In the meantime, Wendy is obviously terrified. She thinks Jack is going to come up from behind and attack her, and she is incredibly brave in her decision to just get it over with and find him. Despite the fact that Wendy is obviously scared of the Overlook, too, this fear is completely overtaken by her fear of Jack. To Wendy, Jack is much more dangerous and scary than any haunted hotel could ever be.
Themes
Fear, the Paranormal, and Reality Theme Icon
Isolation and Insanity Theme Icon
Alcoholism and Abuse Theme Icon
Wendy’s calls are answered with silence. She crosses to the lobby and pushes through the doors of the Colorado Lounge, the smell of fresh gin hitting her. There isn’t any alcohol at the hotel, Wendy tells herself. She goes around the bar and finds Jack sprawled out, drunk, on the floor. Surprisingly, she isn’t mad. She walks behind the bar, passing several decorative wine bottles wrapped in straw. Jack begins to stir, and Wendy, going to him, asks if he thinks he can walk.
Despite everything Jack has put Wendy through, she obviously still loves him. She wants to help him, even though he is clearly drunk, but she can’t figure out how. In just a moment, Wendy will use of the decorative wine bottles to knock Jack out and then drag him into the pantry.
Themes
Fear, the Paranormal, and Reality Theme Icon
Family  Theme Icon
Isolation and Insanity Theme Icon
Alcoholism and Abuse Theme Icon
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Jack asks if it is really Wendy, and she says yes, then he grabs her ankle. “Gotcha!” he yells. Wendy is struck with pure fear, more intense than any fear she could possibly feel for the hotel. She tells Jack he is hurting her ankle, and he threatens to hurt more than that. He accuses Wendy of never really loving him, and never bothering to think about his “re…res…respons’bilities.” Wendy is crying now, and Jack says she is just like her mother. He knows that Wendy and Danny have been conspiring against him, and now Wendy has turned Danny against him.
Notably, Jack stutters here, just like George Hatfield, which reflects his immense guilt over George’s attack. Jack’s responsibility in this case is to kill Danny and Wendy and make them a permanent part of the hotel. Jack is again acting jealous, as Wendy does, too. Wendy usually feels like an outsider with Jack and Danny, but here Jack implies that he is the outsider to Wendy and Jack.
Themes
Fear, the Paranormal, and Reality Theme Icon
Family  Theme Icon
Isolation and Insanity Theme Icon
Alcoholism and Abuse Theme Icon
Quotes
Jack puts his hands around Wendy’s throat, and she steps back, fumbling for the knife in her left pocket. Jack breathes pure gin in Wendy’s face and pins her left arm down. Danny walks in and screams for Jack to stop, but Jack keeps strangling Wendy, cutting off her air. Her free hand gropes along the bar, finding one of the decorative bottles. She raises it, briefly hopes she doesn’t mess up and hit him on the shoulder or back, and brings the bottle down hard on his head. The bottle shatters and Jack drops.
Wendy gives herself very little credit for just how tough she is. Here, she worries that she won’t be able to hit Jack hard enough, but she knocks him out cold. Surprisingly, Danny’s screams are not enough to get Jack to stop, which suggests that the hotel has a firm grip on him now, and has finally convinced him to kill Wendy and Danny. 
Themes
Fear, the Paranormal, and Reality Theme Icon
Isolation and Insanity Theme Icon
Alcoholism and Abuse Theme Icon
Time Theme Icon
Danny runs to Wendy, and they stand there for a moment, holding each other. Wendy tries to explain to Danny that the hotel has made Jack behave this way, and Danny asks where Jack got the “Bad Stuff.” Wendy says the hotel gave it to him, and she reminds Danny that Jack loves them. Wendy thinks to herself that it is Danny’s power to shine that is fueling the hotel, like a battery in a car. Without Danny, the hotel is creepy, but it is no scarier than a haunted theme park attraction. But, Wendy thinks, if the hotel gets Danny and somehow “absorbs” his shine, what then? The though gives her chills.
The hotel wants Danny’s power so it can use it for evil. Wendy suggests here that the hotel could be so much worse than it already is if it had Danny’s shine. Wendy makes of point of reminding Danny that the hotel is influencing Jack’s behavior. The hotel has influenced him to drink and assault her, which Wendy thus implies he wouldn’t do without the hotel’s influence. This reflects the profound love she has for Jack—despite everything, Wendy still doesn’t want Danny to think poorly of him.
Themes
Precognition, Second Sight, and the Shining Theme Icon
Family  Theme Icon
Isolation and Insanity Theme Icon
Alcoholism and Abuse Theme Icon
Wendy tells Danny that they must put Jack somewhere, so he can’t hurt them or himself, until a ranger or Hallorann comes. He asks where, and Wendy suggests the pantry. It is warm and has plenty of food, and the door is sturdy. Wendy and Danny can eat what is in the freezer and refrigerator. They will all be fine for a while. Wendy picks up Jack’s legs and drags him in the direction of the kitchen. They have been married for seven years, and she had no idea he was this heavy. As she drags him, Jack talks in his sleep about smoke and a gas can, and something about cheating.  
Judging by his mumbling, Jack could be dreaming about the wasps’ nest that his father set on fire years ago. Given that the wasps’ nest is an ongoing symbol for the hotel and the danger lurking within it, Jack’s allusion to its incineration here underscores both the current danger of the situation (Hallorann is on his way to interrupt any ensuing violence) and the fire that could erupt if Jack forgets to check the boiler again. Jack also seems to be dreaming about George Hatfield (who Jack insists cheated on his final English exam), further emphasizing Jack’s internal torment over his own guilt.
Themes
Fear, the Paranormal, and Reality Theme Icon
Isolation and Insanity Theme Icon
Alcoholism and Abuse Theme Icon
Wendy drags Jack to the pantry, but she can’t get the bolt open. She was just in the pantry, she thinks, but now the bolt won’t budge. Danny cries that Jack is waking up, and then Danny steps up to the bolt and rotates it, knocking it open. In her haste, Wendy had forgotten to rotate the bolt. She drags Jack into the pantry just as he wakes and starts to get up. Wendy runs and yells to Danny to shut the door. Danny slams the door and engages the bolt, and Jack beats furiously on the other side. He threatens to kill them both, screaming profanities. Wendy reminds Danny it is the hotel talking, not his daddy, and they leave the kitchen.
Wendy is so scared of Jack that she can’t get the pantry open, something she has done countless times before in her weeks at the Overlook Hotel. As Jack beats on the door and threatens to kill them, it is obvious that he has been completely taken over by the hotel. Wendy again reminds Danny of this, which underscores her profound love for her family. She doesn’t want Danny to think his father doesn’t love him, even though Jack just tried to kill her.
Themes
Fear, the Paranormal, and Reality Theme Icon
Family  Theme Icon
Isolation and Insanity Theme Icon
Alcoholism and Abuse Theme Icon