Khác biệt giữa bản sửa đổi của “Harry Potter dành cho Muggle/Truyện/Hòn Đá Phù Thủy/Chương 10”

Nội dung được xóa Nội dung được thêm vào
Dòng 43:
Harry receives his broom, which he becomes very attached to, as it is among the first wizard-related objects he ever owns, and flying is what he is best at in his first year at Hogwarts. A devastating moment in the third book is when his broom is destroyed. Throughout the series, he will be periodically deprived of flight, causing him to suffer due to it.
 
Hermione suddenly becomes more sympathetic and likable when, grateful that Harry and Ron saved her life, she lies solely to protect them, accepting the punishment on their behalf. This is a key hint showing how her caring and thoughtfulness becomes essential to the Trio's success across later years. The bond between the Trio, first formed here, is arguably the most important relationship in the entire story.
 
Although Harry suspects Snape set the troll loose into the castle, it was actually Professor Quirrell, who hoped to get into the forbidden corridor to steal the Philosopher's Stone tothat can restore Voldemort's body. It is learned later in the story that a troll is one of the security devices in the dungeon that protects the Stone, and that it was Quirrell hadwho provided it. Quirrell later tells Harry that he has a particular talent with trolls. SnapeThat certainly makes his panicked reaction at the feast suspicious and out-of-character, suspectingbeing as he has the most experience and ability in handling the fierce creatures. This may be why Snape suspects Quirrell was creating a diversion so he could get past the third-floor corridor, and attempted to head him off, getting his leg bitten by "Fluffy," the three-headed dog, in the process.
 
The troll in the castle is not the only time that Hogwarts' security is breached. In ''Prisoner of Azkaban'', Harry's fugitive godfather, Sirius Black, slips into the castle at night, apparently through a hidden passageway, and ostensibly to attack Harry, but actually for another reason. In ''Half-blood Prince,'' Death Eaters, aided by Draco Malfoy, are also able to secretly enter the castle through a Vanishing Cabinet connected to its twin in Borgin & Burke's shop in Knockturn Alley, resulting in a major battle between the invaders and the Hogwarts staff, Dumbledore's Army, and the Order of the Phoenix. In ''Deathly Hallows'', Voldemort and his Death Eater army assault Hogwarts near that book's end. Though the faculty temporarily fend them off, the protective charms surrounding the castle are eventually broken by the enemy.