HBP & the Weasleys
caspenzoe
cruthw at earthlink.net
Fri Jul 9 18:35:18 UTC 2004
No: HPFGUIDX 105322
> Valky:
> Agreed, though I still have somewhat of a feeling that the Half
> Blood intimation runs deeper than just a champion of the cause.
> Though, indeed Arthur is a champion of the cause.
>
> Genma again:
> > Now that we have ourselves a "King Arthur of the halfbloods," we
> > would need our prince. I can't speculate as to this... perhaps
> Ron or Percy? I don't know.
> >
>
> Valky again:
> Now, why did YOU say Ron first?
> We could go on for a year considering which boy and why. Which
could
> be really fun and illuminating, for us to do. So, all we need is a
> few more of us interested in examining the Weasleys as possible WW
> royalty.
> Any takers?
>
> (Is there anyone who remembers the thread on this list some time
ago
> that investigated this very theme long before the HBP title was
> released. As I recall it had some base footing in the ponderings
of
> who was Gryffindors Heir.)
Just some a thoughts along these lines:
Is the "Weasley is Our King!" anthem running through OOTP a really
obvious and broad JKR hint at royal blood in the Weasley line - and
such blood specifically deposited in Ron - the youngest son? And
don't we know that this anthem refers to Ron and not another of the
Weasley brothers immediately? And how do we know it? There have been
Weasely players on the Gryffindor Quidditch team throughout the
books after all. Is Ginny the first female Weasley in generations
because they've finally produced a true "King," and thus no further
sons are needed?
Also, don't you love the irony? All along, Harry has been the
seeming leader of our heoric trio, with Ron stepping into the the
background, playing the knight. But it's Ron who really calls the
plays in SS, and practically orders Harry to go on while sacrificing
himself (as in some traditions, pagan, neo-pagan and Christian are
believed to be born to do). Ron, very Dumbledor-like really, is the
better strategist, the better chess player, and the one Hermione
(Ms. Smartie-pants that she is) seems to be falling for consciously
(?) or not. Other ironies: the Weasley's poverty - a
very "Christian" indication of nobility; and, along the same lines
Arthur Weasley's broadness of love which includes the ordinary
Muggle-born.
Perhaps Dumbledore's real agenda in all this is to restore the once
and future Kingly and Gryffindor line of Weasley to leadership over
the more grasping Slytherin and Slytherin-controlled current Wizard
leadership. Maybe he's ultimately a true servant of the house of
Weasley?
More information about the HPforGrownups
archive