I've been wondering about Mrs Grose for some time and meaning to post some similar thoughts, Gladys. I think she is one of the least reliable characters in the story, along with the uncle. It is Mrs Grose who immediately identifies the apparition as Quint, with no prompting from anyone else: I think she is fully aware of what has been happening and is much relieved that the governess has arrived to shoulder the burden of responsibilty. Her later reluctance to confirm the governess' experiences is an indication of her reluctance to become involved again in events which have previously thoroughly frightened and mystified her. Likewise, I think the uncle is fully aware of what has been going on and by stressing to the governess that he does not wish to be involved, is denying any responsibility for the happenings in his own house. It was he, after all, who left the children to the care of Quint and Miss Jessel; Quint had been in his employ for some time - surely he knew the man's character? I think he feels guilt over how events developed - maybe he had come under Quint's malign influence himself and banished the man to the country to escape from him, only to realise too late the peril in which he had placed his wards.
Now, I have offered no textual backup for this interpretation! But James (William) proposed that events should be interpreted by intuitive means rather than logical deduction, so I'm following Jamesian lines of analysis - and was brother Henry doing the same thing?
Thanks for your interpretation of the line from the end of the story, Jozanny, but I'm still not sure how it should be read - it's the final ambiguity.



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Yeah, it's hard to explain Miles if the ghosts aren't real. So you lean to the ghosts aren't real theory? How do you explain the title, The Turn of the Screw?
