A riddle that has imortant implications on events in the ...
Renee
R.Vink2 at chello.nl
Sun May 29 11:26:08 UTC 2005
No: HPFGUIDX 129672
--- In HPforGrownups at yahoogroups.com, "tinglinger" <tinglinger at y...>
wrote:
> Katherine Coble
> I can't seem to get to that document, but historically speaking,
the
> Royalists didn't use the guillotine. That was the toy of the
> Revolutionaries. Not sure how this pertains to the Potterverse,
> though...
>
> Well, they DID use it in so far as they (the Royalists) were the
ones
> to directly partake of its particular charms....... ;-p
>
>
>
>
> tinglinger
> The exact facts of the dream are not important .... the flaw in the
> story is more basic than that......
>
> and the particular incident that the riddle related to is the
events
> alleged to have occurred at Godric's Hollow on that fateful
Halloween
> night
Renee <briefly delurking, because this is so interesting>:
Is it that no one could know what the man was dreaming because he
died without regaining consciousness, and therefore couldn't tell
anyone?
And are you saying that no one could know know what exactly happened
at Godric's Hollow because James and Lily are dead, Voldemort
(assuming he actually knows what happened) never told anyone and
Harry was too young to grasp it (though not too young to remember,
as the Patronus lessons show)?
Renee
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