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History Recap / ItFeelsMoreLikeAMemoryChapter35InterludeAnotherFiftyYears

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* SeasonFinale: Along with chapter 34. It’s the last chapter of the third timeline, and shows the aftermath of the conclusion event of Aaron drinking poison at the treason trial.

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* SeasonFinale: Along with chapter 34. It’s the last chapter of the third timeline, and shows the aftermath of the dramatic conclusion event of Aaron drinking poison at the treason trial.
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* SeasonFinale: Along with chapter 34. It’s the last chapter of the third timeline, and shows the aftermath of the conclusion event of Aaron drinking poison at the treason trial.
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* DistantFinale: This chapter consists of vignettes of what happens after Aaron’s death up to 35 years after it, all from James Madison’s point of view.

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* DistantFinale: This chapter consists of vignettes of shows what happens after Aaron’s death up to 35 years after it, all from James Madison’s point of view.

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Changed: 284

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* IdiosyncraticEpisodeNaming: Following the convention of naming every chapter title after a ''Hamilton'' lyric, this chapter takes its title from the line "I live another fifty years" from "Who Lives, Who Dies, Who Tells Your Story."

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* IdiosyncraticEpisodeNaming: Following the convention of naming every chapter title after a ''Hamilton'' lyric, this chapter takes its title from the line "I live another fifty years" from "Who Lives, Who Dies, Who Tells Your Story."" That line is from when the audience finds out what Eliza does, what happens as a consequence of her husband and the musical’s protagonist Alexander’s actions, and what happens to his legacy; all after Alexander dies. This chapter does the same, but with James Madison and Aaron Burr.


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* NeverTrustATitle: The title is from a lyric in ''Hamilton'' where what’s happening when that lyrics is sung is very similar to what happens in this chapter[[note]]the audience finds out what happens to a character after the protagonist is dead, what happens as a consequence of the protagonist’s actions, and what happens to the protagonist’s legacy[[/note]], but on a surface level it lies: James Madison only lives another 35 years, not 50 as the chapter title says.
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* DistantFinale: This chapter consists of vignettes of what happens after Aaron’s death, all from James Madison’s point of view.

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* DistantFinale: This chapter consists of vignettes of what happens after Aaron’s death, death up to 35 years after it, all from James Madison’s point of view.

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Removed: 138

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Where Are They Now Epilogue seems to focus on many different characters in snapshots, this follows one character and although you get to see what happens to other characters, it’s from one person’s point of view. It’s also one story in general, with “what happened to others” being a part of that, instead of individually switching to multiple different characters and the scene switches focusing on “what happened to other character?” The scene switches are part of their own aftermath story, not usually strictly “and this happened to that person”


* DistantFinale: This chapter consists of vignettes of what happens after Aaron’s death, all from James Madison’s point of view.



* WeirdHistoricalWar: James Madison uses Aaron's notes on the War of 1812, notes he was able to make because of his previous lifetimes, in order to win it.
* WhereAreTheyNowEpilogue: This chapter consists of vignettes of what happens after Aaron’s death, all from James Madison’s point of view.

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* WeirdHistoricalWar: James Madison uses Aaron's notes on the War of 1812, notes he was able to make because of his previous lifetimes, in order to win it.
* WhereAreTheyNowEpilogue: This chapter consists of vignettes of what happens after Aaron’s death, all from James Madison’s point of view.
it.
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* DenouementEpisode: Wraps up the loose ends of the consequences of chapter 34’s events, like what happens to Thomas Jefferson, if Alexander fights to clear Aaron’s name and if so how, how James Madison deals with the aftermath of Aaron’s death, other consequences of the two treason trials’ events for America, and how Aaron’s posthumous notes affect things.

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* DenouementEpisode: Wraps up the loose ends of the consequences conclusion of chapter 34’s events, this lifetime’s story arc where Aaron killed himself to avoid getting any verdict in the treason trial, like what happens to Thomas Jefferson, if Alexander fights to clear Aaron’s name and if so how, how James Madison deals with the aftermath of Aaron’s death, other consequences of the two treason trials’ events for America, and how Aaron’s posthumous notes affect things.
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* DenoumentEpisode: Wraps up the loose ends of the consequences of chapter 34’s events, like what happens to Thomas Jefferson, if Alexander fights to clear Aaron’s name and if so how, how James Madison deals with the aftermath of Aaron’s death, other consequences of the two treason trials’ events for America, and how Aaron’s posthumous notes affect things.

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* DenoumentEpisode: DenouementEpisode: Wraps up the loose ends of the consequences of chapter 34’s events, like what happens to Thomas Jefferson, if Alexander fights to clear Aaron’s name and if so how, how James Madison deals with the aftermath of Aaron’s death, other consequences of the two treason trials’ events for America, and how Aaron’s posthumous notes affect things.
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* DenoumentEpisode: Wraps up the loose ends of the consequences of chapter 34’s events, like what happens to Thomas Jefferson, if Alexander fights to clear Aaron’s name and if so how, how James Madison deals with the aftermath of Aaron’s death, other consequences of the two treason trials’ events for America, and how Aaron’s posthumous notes affect things.
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* NotSoCrazyAnymore: InUniverse example. Aaron tries to troll the world posthumously by leaving a few nonsense sentences as predictions. [[ExternallyValidatedProphecy To a modern-day reader, these nonsense sentences are clear references to Schrödinger's cat and nuclear bombs.]] [[JustifiedTrope Justified]] if Franklin's idea that Aaron unwittingly blurts out future truths is correct.

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* NotSoCrazyAnymore: InUniverse example. Aaron tries to troll the world posthumously by leaving a few making up nonsense sentences and leaving it behind for the world as predictions. [[ExternallyValidatedProphecy To a modern-day reader, these nonsense sentences are clear references to Schrödinger's cat and nuclear bombs.]] [[JustifiedTrope Justified]] if Franklin's idea that Aaron unwittingly blurts out future truths is correct.
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* ADayInTheLimelight: For James Madison. Most of the fanfic is from Aaron Burr’s point of view, but this chapter is entirely from James Madison’s point of view and centers on his life after Aaron dies.

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* ADayInTheLimelight: For James Madison. Most of the fanfic is from Aaron Burr’s point of view, but this chapter is entirely from James Madison’s point of view and centers on his life after Aaron dies.dies, albeit still having a lot of Aaron-as-viewed-by-James.
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* ADayInTheLimelight: For James Madison. Most of the fanfic is from Aaron Burr’s point of view, but this chapter is entirely from James Madison’s point of view and centers on his life after Aaron dies.
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* WeirdHistoricalWar: James Madison uses Aaron's notes on the War of 1812, notes he was able to make because of his previous lifetimes, in order to win it.
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* {{Irony}}: This is the one lifetime so far where Aaron isn’t overly concerned with protecting Alexander from an early death. This is the one lifetime so far where he doesn’t die prematurely in a duel, but relatively peacefully as an old man in his 70s who died of illness.
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* ContentWarnings: There’s one at the very start of the chapter for slavery as a major topic, advising readers who don’t want to deal with that to read ''Burr: An American Musical'' instead since it gives about the same information that reading this chapter would plus some additional detail about Jefferson’s impeachment trial.

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* ContentWarnings: There’s one at before the very start of the chapter for slavery as a major topic, advising readers who don’t want to deal with that to read ''Burr: An American Musical'' instead since it gives about the same information that reading this chapter would plus some additional detail about Jefferson’s impeachment trial.
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* ContentWarnings: There’s one at the very start of the chapter for slavery as a major topic, advising readers who don’t want to deal with that to read ''Burr: An American Musical'' instead since it gives about the same information that reading this chapter would plus some additional detail about Jefferson’s impeachment trial.
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* SwitchingPOV: Most of the fic is from Aaron's point of view, but like the other interlude chapter, this chapter is completely from James Madison's point of view.

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* SwitchingPOV: Most of the fic is from Aaron's point of view, but like the other interlude chapter, this chapter is completely from James Madison's point of view.
* WhereAreTheyNowEpilogue: This chapter consists of vignettes of what happens after Aaron’s death, all from James Madison’s point of
view.
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* SwitchingPOV: Most of the fic is from Aaron's point of view, but this chapter is completely from James Madison's point of view.

to:

* SwitchingPOV: Most of the fic is from Aaron's point of view, but like the other interlude chapter, this chapter is completely from James Madison's point of view.
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* AllLowercaseLetters: Like every other chapter title of this fic, this chapter's title is in all lowercase letters.
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!! "interlude: another fifty years" contains examples of:
* AccidentalTruth: Aaron makes up nonsense and has it released as his predictions. Those supposed nonsense predictions clearly indicate Schrödinger's cat and the detonation of nuclear bombs to anybody who already knows about those things, [[DramaticIrony which would just be the readers of the fic]] until many more years pass InUniverse.
* ExternallyValidatedProphecy: A modern-day audience aware of Schrödinger's cat and nuclear bombs knows that the prophecies Aaron Burr intended as nonsense come true.
* IdiosyncraticEpisodeNaming: Following the convention of naming every chapter title after a ''Hamilton'' lyric, this chapter takes its title from the line "I live another fifty years" from "Who Lives, Who Dies, Who Tells Your Story."
* NotSoCrazyAnymore: InUniverse example. Aaron tries to troll the world posthumously by leaving a few nonsense sentences as predictions. [[ExternallyValidatedProphecy To a modern-day reader, these nonsense sentences are clear references to Schrödinger's cat and nuclear bombs.]] [[JustifiedTrope Justified]] if Franklin's idea that Aaron unwittingly blurts out future truths is correct.
* SwitchingPOV: Most of the fic is from Aaron's point of view, but this chapter is completely from James Madison's point of view.

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