The house burns and the townspeople have like gathered to watch this spectacle because you know how it's done burned down every day yep. Once the fire is out they just start singing this wild nursery rhyme about Constance asking people if they want tea because the tea is poison. Uncle Julian dies not in the fire but as a result of the shock or somethingYeah there's no specific reason why he dies just he is unwell and he dies in this in this interval okay. While this is happening Constance and Mary cat they run off into this hiding place of Mary cats in the woods and Mary cat says that you know she needs some people need poison and Constance is like oh
Shirley Jackson's We Have Always Lived In The Castle shares some qualities with her best-known short story The Lottery; both feature small New England towns that are the site of some unfortunate mob action. Join us for a conversation about non-supernatural creepiness, unreliable narrators, and early flights.
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