Khác biệt giữa bản sửa đổi của “Harry Potter dành cho Muggle/Truyện/Hòn Đá Phù Thủy/Chương 5”
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Wizards have secretly co-existed alongside the Muggle world for centuries. To reflect this side-by-side (and also intersecting) existence with humans, the author has cleverly named the Wizard business district Diagon Alley (diagonally). Its seedy, dark underbelly is [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Places/Knockturn Alley|Knockturn Alley]] (nocturnally), where many Dark Wizards ply their trade or otherwise engage in unsavory or illegal activities. These dark and light areas come to represent themes of good and evil that permeate the series.
And as secret as the Wizard world is kept, some Muggles, such as the Dursleys, need to know that it exists, while
Harry is amazed by Diagon Alley, but also that everyone knows who he is and that he is so readily accepted and respected by other Wizards. Without ever knowing it or the reason, he has been famous almost since birth, an apparent hero to an entire population. Having been treated his entire life as if he barely existed, Harry's reaction to this fame is mostly astonishment at being acknowledged and also embarrassment, feeling he has done nothing special to deserve the adulation
Harry remains curious regarding what Hagrid removed from vault #713. While it is unknown yet what the packet contains, there are clues that it must be valuable. Hagrid's behavior suggests this, with the deliberate care and secrecy he shows when retrieving the package, and by his asking Harry to mention nothing about what he has seen. Also, there being nothing else inside except the packet indicates that it is probably a high-security vault protecting only that one item. Storing nothing else in it prevents anyone from having a reason, other than this particular object, to access the vault. Any break-in attempt would reveal what a thief was after.
As Harry learns about the Wizard world, so too does he discover more about his parents, his own past, and his relationship to Voldemort. Harry's wand plays an integral part in this relationship. A wand is a Wizard's most important possession, without it, it is nearly impossible to perform magic. Ollivander tells Harry that the wand chooses the Wizard, and a unique bond is indeed created between it and its owner; this ability to choose the Wizard indicates wands may be somewhat sentient. And while Harry's wand heralds his entry into the Wizarding world, its being related to the Dark Lord makes Harry uneasy. Not only does it tie him to his enemy, it may foreshadow his destiny with him. That it was Voldemort's wand that gave Harry his scar and killed his mother and father, further connects him to the Dark Lord and his parents. It also represents the dark, sinister side to what had initially seemed to readers like a magical paradise; the Wizard world actually may be far more dangerous than the unhappy Muggle one Harry is leaving behind. And while Ollivander may see the connection between the two wands as an indication that Harry will be a great Wizard, Harry is disturbed
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