Summaries: PS chapters 4 and 5

punkieshazam at yahoo.com punkieshazam at yahoo.com
Sun Oct 14 19:08:49 UTC 2001


No: HPFGUIDX 27631

Can't believe I stopped lurking.

In response to Petunia's hostility to Lily:

When Tom Riddle killed his father and grandparents, he claimed his 
inheritance. He then lived in both the Muggle and Wizarding worlds. He 
used the Riddle money to finance his growing evil empire. He used the 
name Evans in the Muggle world, married a Muggle woman and they had 
two daughters--Petunia and Lily. Petunia is a squib, and just like 
Argus Filch, she is very antagonistic to those who can. This is why 
Tom/Voldemort was so reluctant to kill his own daughter. He spoke very 
familiarly to her "Lily, you foolish girl" or something like that.

So Voldemort is Harry's grandfather, thus the physical resemblance. Am 
clueless as to why Voldie wanted to kill Harry. Maybe he didn't come 
to kill him, just take him away to make him a truly evil Wizard and 
Lily and James were apalled and resisted.  

Punkie






--- In HPforGrownups at y..., Zarleycat at a... wrote:
> > Questions:
> > 1. Vernon had the foresight to purchase a rifle before
> > going to the hut. Was he expecting a wizard to show
> > and how did he think a rifle would defend them against
> > magic?
> 
> Yes, Vernon thought something or someone would show up, if only 
> because of the way the letters to Harry kept appearing.  Vernon 
would 
> have purchased a grenade-launcher if he could have - the rifle was 
> probably the most lethal thing he could get his hands on quickly.  
> And don't you suppose that a rifle could injure or kill a wizard if 
> they were ambushed or taken by surprise and didn't have time to 
> protect themselves with a spell or charm?
> 
> 
> > 2. Petunia considered Lily a freak. If there had been
> > other wizards in the family somewhere, why would
> > Petunia consider Lily's magic such an aberration?
> > Wouldn't she have heard of/been familiar with other
> > wizarding members of the family?
> 
> 
> Maybe there were others in the extended Evans family and Petunia 
> consisdered them freaks, too.  Or, perhaps there is a latent 
jealousy 
> in her feelings towards Lily because Lily had these extra abilities 
> that Petunia didn't have. 
> 
> 
> > 3. Who do you suppose addresses the Hogwarts letters
> > and how did they continue to be able to know exactly
> > where Harry was?
> 
> I'm sure there is some sort of magical letter addressing quill that 
> can work tirelessly day and night to produce these letters.  And, 
> since Harry is the Boy-Who-Lived and under some sort of not-quite-
> explained protection at the Dursleys, I'm sure that Dumbledore is 
> able to keep tabs on Harry's whereabouts.
> 
>  
> > 4. Vernon says that Harry needs all kinds of supplies,
> > implying that he is not willing to provide them. Why
> > didn't Hagrid say that Lily and James had money and
> > that Harry could get his own things?
> 
> I think Hagrid sized up the Dursleys pretty quickly and decided that 
> it was a waste of breath to try to explain anything about the 
> wizarding world to them, including wizard money.  
>  
> > 5. Why was Hagrid not willing to tell Harry why he had
> > been expelled?
> 
> Don't know - it was not the right time to get into all that?  Hagrid 
> was embarrassed about it?  Or Hagrid knew he'd probably use some 
> magic sometime in his brief trip with Harry, and wanted to minimize 
> his rule-breaking?
> 
>  
> 
> > Questions:
> > 1. Hagrid says he flew to the hut on the rock. How?
> 
> Perhaps he used his umbrella to conjure up a broom to get out there.
> 
> > 2. I know this has been discussed before, but perhaps
> > there are some new ideas out there. How did the
> > Dursleys manage to get home from the hut on the rock?
> 
> They were able to attract the attention of a passing fishing boat.  
> And the unwritten law of mariners is that you help anyone you find 
in 
> trouble.  The Dursleys could say that their leaky old boat sank in 
> the storm and boy, weren't they lucky that they were able to make it 
> to this little island?  That way they'd just look like incompetent 
> sailors rather than crazy people.  
> 
> 
> 
> > 4. Harry seems to have been very quick to decide that
> > the boy at Madam Malkin's reminds him of Dudley, why
> > do you think that is?
> 
> I think JKR tells us in the following passage:
> 
> ' "My father's next door buying my books and mother's up the street 
> looking at wands"..."Then I'm going to drag them off to look at 
> racing brooms.  I don't see why first years can't have their own.  I 
> think I'll bully father into getting me one and I'll smuggle it in 
> somehow."
> 
> Harry was strongly reminded of Dudley.'
> 
> Dudley always got what he wanted from his parents and was not above 
> kicking and screaming to do so.  Draco is not that infantile, but 
> certainly sees himself as controlling his parents and being able to 
> use them to satisfy his whims.  Very Dudley-like.  
> 
> 
> > 5.  Draco had been there longer than Harry, why wasn't he
> > finished getting his robes?
> 
> I suspect Draco is a bit of a clothes-horse and is accustomed to 
> dressing in the height of fashion.  No hand-me-downs for that boy. 
He 
> has the money to purchase more than what is considered necessary by 
> the school and I'm sure, with his parents' approval, sees clothing 
as 
> a way to put the Malfoy wealth and position on display.  
>   
> 
> Marianne





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