strange morals (was: Snape's Remorse vs. Snape's Worst Memory)

colebiancardi muellem at bc.edu
Wed Sep 7 13:51:53 UTC 2005


No: HPFGUIDX 139733

--- In HPforGrownups at yahoogroups.com, "two_flower2" 
<two_flower2 at y...> wrote:
 > 
> True, and what is also interesting here, that Dumbledore is 
> interrupted when he is about to state exactly where Snape returned 
> to.  Where, indeed.  I think everyone assumes that he returned to 
> the good side, of course.  But what if Dumbledore was about to say 
> something else entirely, something revealing about Snape?
> 
> 
> Cheers, 
> 
> Two2

I wrote the same thing a few days ago:
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/HPforGrownups/message/139589

bit of a snip from my post here, but read the full post - it makes 
more sense:
Usually, when you see that dash(-) at the end of a sentence, it means
that someone is interrupted before the sentence could be completed or
the person's train of thought has just trailed off.

Break down DD's sentence into 2 parts
"I believe it to be the greatest regret of his life" <== the telling
of the prophecy to Voldemort.

"The reason he returned-" <== DD was beginning to tell Harry why Snape
truly returned - The reason he returned was because of something or
other...

colebiancardi







More information about the HPforGrownups archive