Harry & Lord Voldemort's Wands
Linda
KIDATHEART_ at CHARTER.NET
Fri Apr 25 01:52:12 UTC 2003
No: HPFGUIDX 56115
--- In HPforGrownups at yahoogroups.com, "jlg881" <jgates at e...> wrote:
> Now I come back with "No two Ollivander wands are the
> same, just as no two unicorns, dragons, or phoenixes are quite the
> same." PS/SS pg 84 US edition. But Billy says that the phoenix is
> the same and I said yes but the wood is different. LV's wand is
> made of yew and is 13.5" long. Harry's wand is made of holly and
is
> 11" long. Billy said that didn't matter it is the magical core
that
> matters.
Now me:
There is really no cannon that I can come up with to support
a definite answer to your question so I'm going to try an educateedd
guess.
What makes a wand unique if they share the same core? It
seems to me that it must have to to with the length of the wand, the
type of wood it's made of or any combination of the three
properties. As you can see, I definitely believe that the wands are
net identical just because the cores are identical. I only wish
there was some cannon to back up my gut feeling on this one.
If anyone has any canon to proove or disproove the former,
I'll take any help I can get.
Linda
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