This chapter's epigraph comes from a famous nursery rhyme, in which a child is told that everything he has is what he wants, and that all the happiness in his life is within his reach. This is a lie, the rhyme says, because if everything he wants is not what he needs, then it's a lie. The rhyme is also a reference to the idea of family, which is that if everything in a person's life is what they want, then everything in his or her life is also what he or she needs. The child asks if this is true, and the nursery rhyme answers that it is. The nursery rhyme also says that the three of them will live in the palace from now on. This means that they will be able to have everything they want in their lives, even if they have to die
This chapter's epigraph comes from a famous nursery rhyme, in which a child is told that everything he has is what he wants, and that all the happiness in his life is within his reach. This is a lie, the rhyme says, because if everything he wants is not what he needs, then it's a lie. The rhyme is also a reference to the idea of family, which is that if everything in a person's life is what they want, then everything in his or her life is also what he or she needs. The child asks if this is true, and the nursery rhyme answers that it is. The nursery rhyme also says that the three of them will live in the palace from now on. This means that they will be able to have everything they want in their lives, even if they have to die