Khác biệt giữa bản sửa đổi của “Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Characters/Albus Dumbledore”

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→‎Chamber of Secrets: than → then
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These revelations cause Harry to suffer another loss: his faith in Dumbledore, who he once believed embodied only goodness and wisdom. Hermione discredits Rita Skeeter's account and doubts that Dumbledore would oppress Muggles, despite what he professed at age seventeen. Instead he chose to fight evil his entire life. Hermione surmises Harry is really angry because Dumbledore never shared this information, which Harry acknowledges that might be true, but he wonders how Dumbledore could leave him such a mess. He is also left doubting Dumbledore's love for him.
 
Xenophilius Lovegood tells the Trio about the [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Magic/Deathly Hallows|Deathly Hallows]] and the three Peverell brothers. Harry guesses that his [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Characters/James Potter|his father's]] Invisibility Cloak that Dumbledore once borrowed is a Hallow, and the Ring Horcrux was a Peverell artifact, which Harry suspects may be hidden inside the Golden Snitch. Hermione and Ron, worried Harry is becoming obsessed with the Hallows, urge him to remain focused on only destroying the Horcruxes.
 
Harry ponders whether Dumbledore deliberately made everything so difficult to give Harry time to work things out. Meanwile, [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Characters/Ollivander|Mr. Ollivander]] tells Harry that the Elder Wand, a Hallow, is apparently undefeatable, though its owner is not. While its history suggests it was passed from wizard to wizard through murder, Ollivander claims only disarming its master is necessary.