I didn't track Fischer's deduction at the end of the book and I'm hoping i'm just missing something.
Florence's spirit flips the bible to the passage with "If thy right eye offend thee..." and he rushes to play the recording back to a previous sitting to the "Extremes and limits. Terminations and extremities" bit, jumps up and exclaims "She knew!" before rushing to the chapel to confront Belasco. It's eventually revealed that Belasco hated how short he was so he had his legs removed to use taller, artificial ones. He's been the sole spirit behind the haunting the whole time.
I don't understand this sequence of events. It seems like it's supposed to be a clever deduction by Fischer but it doesn't make any sense to me. How did Fischer connect that bible passage to what was on the recording? What did Florence know("She knew!") and how exactly did that help Fischer figure anything out? I get that the bible passage relates to Belasco's legs but it doesn't make sense to me why she chose to hint at that to Fischer.
treaderofthedust t1_isytihd wrote
As far as I can tell the logic goes something like this: >!Having deduced that Belasco was motivated by ego, Fischer intuits that he might be compensating for something. Florence's phrase "terminations and extremities" implies "cutting off limbs", and "if thy right eye offend thee" adds the idea of despising a body part so much that you get rid of it... Yeah, it's a stretch.!<