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There's some dramatic irony at play the first two times the governess sees the apparition of Peter Quint, since her entire narrative has already been framed as a ghost story. Therefore, readers already have an inkling that Quint must be a ghost, but the governess herself takes a little while to come to this conclusion.
The governess is deeply unsettled at first, and she seems to have an inclination from the very beginning that there's something suspicious and perhaps even supernatural afoot—and yet, she doesn't articulate this at first, not even to herself. Instead, she waits several days and goes through all of the possible explanations for why she might have seen an unknown man on one of the house's towers. She even wonders if perhaps the servants at Bly have pulled some sort of prank on her—she's somewhat relieved to decide, after a few days, that the servants haven't made her the "object of any 'game.'" But this conclusion (that nobody's playing a prank on her) leaves her grasping for answers:
There was but one sane inference: someone had taken a liberty rather gross. That was what, repeatedly, I dipped into my room and locked the door to say to myself. We had been, collectively, subject to an intrusion; some unscrupulous traveler, curious in old houses, had made his way in unobserved, enjoyed the prospect from the best point of view, and then stolen out as he came. [...] The good thing, after all, was that we should surely see no more of him.
In this passage, the governess decides that a stranger has trespassed by sneaking onto the grounds of Bly and mounting one of the towers. But thanks to the frame story and the heavy foreshadowing at the beginning of the novella, readers intuitively understand that the governess is wrong in this moment—the man she saw standing on the tower wasn't a wayward traveler. What's more, even though the governess confidently says she'll certainly "see no more of him" at Bly, it's quite obvious that she will see him again. After all, this is a ghost story, and it wouldn't be much of a story if this were the only time the ghost appeared. When the governess suggests these things to make herself feel better, then, readers understand that she's woefully mistaken, and this only adds to the mounting tension.












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Common Core-aligned