This chapter's epigraph comes from a poem by the English poet William Butler Yeats. It's a poem in which he compares himself to a "half-finished product" . In other words, he's the one who's finished with his sister. He's done with her, and now he wants to destroy her. The poem ends with a soliloquy about how he'll return everything that's been taken from her.
This chapter's epigraph comes from a poem by the English poet William Butler Yeats. It's a poem in which he compares himself to a "half-finished product" . In other words, he's the one who's finished with his sister. He's done with her, and now he wants to destroy her. The poem ends with a soliloquy about how he'll return everything that's been taken from her.