The Night House: I think there's something in my house. Like a presence. I mean, I don't know. I feel like there's something. Like there's something watching me. And all this weird stuff. I'm having these dreams. I mean, it feels like they're dreams. They feel real though when they're happening.
Tommy: That's why we couldn't find cause of death. She's still alive.
Austin: Alive? We lit her on fire. We took out her heart
Cheers to the spirits of both death & drink,
May Satan himself give you a wink!
To the night filled with screams & sweets,
As we honour the undead who roam our streets.
At midnight the devil will ring his unholy bell,
and all the ghouls & goblins will let out a yell.
See you next year is the message they send,
Because another Halloween has come to its end.
- PuimcĂn
People once believed that when someone dies, a crow carries their soul to the land of the dead. But sometimes, something so bad happens that a terrible sadness is carried with it and the soul can't rest. Then sometimes, just sometimes, the crow can bring that soul back to put the wrong things right. - James O'Barr
Candy Corn: The candy was created in the 1880s by George Renninger, a candymaker at the Wunderle Candy Company in Philadelphia. However, the Goelitz Candy Company now the Jelly Belly Candy Company - popularized the candy in 1898 when they picked up the recipe and began marketing the treats as a candy called "Chicken Feed."
"We offered you paradise. You would have experienced emotions a hundred times greater than what you call "Love". And a thousand times greater than what you call "Fun". You would have been treated like Gods, and lived forever in beauty, but now, because of your distrustful nature, that can never be."
Trantor the Troll:
You will die for the disgrace of your forefathers!
Ernest P. Worrell:
I didn't have four fathers! I only had one father and I didn't know him that well!
A jack-o'-lantern is a carved pumpkin, turnip, or other root vegetable lantern, commonly associated with the Halloween holiday. Its name comes from the reported phenomenon of strange lights flickering over peat bogs, called will-o'-the-wisps or jack-o'-lanterns. The name is also tied to the Irish legend of Stingy Jack, a drunkard who bargains with Satan and is doomed to roam the Earth with only a hollowed turnip to light his way.
The application of the term to carved pumpkins in American English is first seen in 1834. The carved pumpkin lantern's association with Halloween is recorded in the 1 November 1866 edition of the Daily News from Kingston, Ontario:
The old time custom of keeping up Hallowe'en was not forgotten last night by the youngsters of the city. They had their maskings and their merry-makings, and perambulated the streets after dark in a way which was no doubt amusing to themselves. There was a great sacrifice of pumpkins from which to make transparent heads and face, lighted up by the unfailing two inches of tallow candle.
Samaziel: There are eleven princes in hell. And I'm WAY up here [reaches up]
Samaziel: . And that stinky Bahomet is WAY down there [points down]
Satanic Panic
"I'm your boyfriend now, Nancy."
We don't kill people, we destroy demons.
- Frailty