In which Harry is mostly dead, Voldemort's soul is ignored for no particular reason, and Albus Dumbledore Lies About It All To You.
Note: This is from the British edition. Readers of the American edition may notice some differences in the text.
Chapter Thirty-Five -- King’s Cross
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The Harrydore's quite strong/ Watch Albie's ego swell/ As Harry thinks all wrong/ Both overact like hell/ For this is the Song That Goes Like This. )
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*laughs* Perfect.
I don't understand why Harry was afraid of the flayed baby soul. Repulsed, I can understand, or horrified, but afraid? Are we supposed to believe he senses it's Voldie's soul? (Though, if Voldie's soul is in that state, it makes him seem pitiable, not frightening. Furthermore, shouldn't having your soul in that state have some affect on you? I really don't get souls in the Wizarding World.)
It's not really a case of "giving his life to save others" if the mortal hero suddenly acquires a "get out of death free" card.
Good point. How is it that his temporary mostly-maybe-death worked to protect people? He didn't actually die for them, both in the sense that he didn't, you know, actually die, and in the sense that his focus was on carrying out Dumbles' plans for him, not protecting his comrades. Besides, if just being willing to die for others is good enough to protect them, why aren't a hell of a lot of people protected in any given ( ... )
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Think about it. If JKR had actually considered the ramifications of a magic system that included protection from death any time one person risked their life saving (or trying to save) another, she could have had a very interesting world. Granted, there'd be a lot more casualties like Neville's parents, since it would be safer to torture your enemy than try to kill them, but that would actually fit her "there are worse things than death" idea better.
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Which renders the whole thing *even more stupid*.
Lily didn't have *any* reason to believe that he would spare her if she stepped aside. Nobody filled her in on Tom's promises to his followers. So where does the "sacrifice" come in?
My head hurts.
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"Oooh, I'm naked!"
"Hmm, the possibilities are intriguing."
...LOL. XD
(Not our fault, LJ! Take it up with the author!)
Wait, I have a brilliant idea! I shall OPEN them. And if I can open them and I can see, then I have eyes!"
And then maybe he will have a tail, and name the ground, and... oh, wait, we did that icon back when he was falling off an enchanted motorbike, didn't we?
If he can't present himself as being kind, he'll claim to be wise, and [if] he can't be wise, he'll put on a great act of being humble.
...
Wow. I think you've really got Dumbledore's number there.
If Dumbledore knows that the Stone can create Inferi, why does he say later that Voldemort didn't know what the Stone was? He certainly created Inferi. A whole lake of them.
I suppose there's more than one way to do that, some scary Dark spell or potion. This bit annoys me in a different way, like what smurasaki said. I wouldn't describe the effect that occurs when Harry uses the Stone, nor how it's described in Beedle, as being anything like the ( ... )
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And this is another concept that could have worked, if she had just obeyed her own rules. Say that the Elder Wand will defeat anyone in direct battle. So the idea, therefore, is to get the wand away from its owner.
Not by theft. If stolen, it should still belong to its rightful owner. A thief should not be able to make it work. But if the owner was tricked out of the Elder Wand, or if he gave it, willingly, to another...then, I think, the wand could work for another owner. And it would be the only wand in the world that would act like this.
That would have fit the fairy tale origins of the wand, and it would not have gone against anything that we already knew.
But no, we had to get a ton of contradictory wandlore instead.
THE STUPID, IT BURNS.
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