I think the pressure does start to get to the governess being placed under such circumstances, as there is a lot going on within the story to work against her and let her mind start to play tricks upon her or perhaps for stress to just start to shape itself in various different ways.
For she herself is a young and inexperienced woman who is put in a position of being fully responsible for these two children knowing she has no real support system.
It is alluded to the fact that she may have fallen in love with the Master, even if her contact with him is all but non-existent so she is eager to please him by not forcing him to have more responsibility but takes it all upon her own shoulders to appease his wish to be left completely out of it. Her only confidant being Mrs. Grose who is not much help at all.
Her first introduction to the young boy being under the condition of some mysterious trouble he got himself into and Mrs. Gose's evasiveness about the nature of the child's behavior.
In addition to the rather vague disappearance of the former governess coupled with the background of being mostly alone within this rather large and strange house.
It would put quite a strain upon a person and cause their thoughts to start to crop up various different plausible scenarios to try and make since of some of the vague and elusive mysteries that do hover around the house and those connected to the house.
That makes me think of her first encounter with the "figure" whom she sees within the tower, and rather conveniently the image appears to her shortly after she had just been contemplating now nice it would indeed be if she were to encounter another person upon her walk.




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