Voldemort: Born or Made Evil?
Tamara
buffyeton at yahoo.com
Fri Jun 24 02:15:14 UTC 2005
No: HPFGUIDX 131327
--- In HPforGrownups at yahoogroups.com, "Geoff Bannister"
<gbannister10 at a...> wrote:
> --- In HPforGrownups at yahoogroups.com, "Tonks" <tonks_op at y...> wrote:
>
> Tonks:
>
> <snip>
>
> > Then we have Harry. Harry is an example of someone like the other
> > two who has somehow (??) managed to rise above it all. And the
> > mystery is just how has he been able to do that? I think that the
> > books are about many things, and one of them is the developing
the
> > ability to overcome the evil done to us by other so that we do
not
> > give it back to the world.
>
>
> Geoff:
> I am reminded firstly of the old couplet:
>
> "Two men looked out from prison bars,
> One saw mud and one saw stars."
>
> It has also been said that an optimist sees a glass as half-full, a
> pessimist as half-empty.
>
> Much hinges on a person's attitude of mind. People who are faced
with
> difficulties and problems such as illness, misfortune or being
> treated badly by others - as Harry,Tom and Snape for example - can
> react in two ways. They can let it take over their lives, they can
> brood over injuries, real or imagined, and complain to all who will
> listen about their bad luck and wallow in it or they can set their
> sights on rising above it and defeating it rather than the converse.
>
> Harry has had to adopt the latter course in order to stay positive -
> not necessarily consciously but because he possesses that kind of
> temperament.
>
> As ever, Dumbledore's comment on choices comes back into play.
I think being sorted into Gryffindor, which as we all know he
requested, made a big difference. I don't see Harry as being very
optimistic. But he has the huge support of Hermione and the Weasleys
who are optimistic. If LV and Snape had the same support system, they
might have turned out differently.
Tamara
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