Khác biệt giữa bản sửa đổi của “Harry Potter dành cho Muggle/Truyện/Tên Tù Nhân Ngục Azkaban/Chương 10”

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Chazz (thảo luận | đóng góp)
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Dòng 7:
Returning to classes on Monday is a relief, even with [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Characters/Draco Malfoy|Draco]]'s taunts. [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Characters/Remus Lupin|Professor Lupin]] also returns and cancels the [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Magic/Werewolf|Werewolf]] essay [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Characters/Severus Snape|Professor Snape]] assigned. After class, he tells Harry he is sorry that the [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Magic/Whomping Willow|Whomping Willow]] destroyed his broomstick. The willow was planted during his first year at Hogwarts. Lupin tells Harry that his reaction to the Dementors is not weakness. Dementors drain peoples' happiness and good memories, leaving only the bad. Harry's dreadful memories make him particularly vulnerable. Harry reveals he can hear [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Characters/Lord Voldemort|Voldemort]] murdering his mother whenever the Dementors are near him, leaving Lupin visibly shaken. Harry wants Lupin to teach him how to defend himself against the Dementors the way Lupin did on the Hogwarts Express. Lupin promises he will after the Christmas holidays.
 
With that promise, and Ravenclaw flattening Hufflepuff in Quidditch, Harry's outlook brightens. Also, Ron and Hermione are staying at Hogwarts over Christmas, further bolstering his morale. Even the prospect of missing yet another [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Places/Hogsmeade|Hogsmeade]] weekend hardly bothers him. Borrowing ''Which Broomstick'' from [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Characters/Oliver Wood|Oliver Wood]], Harry intends to spend the Hogsmeade weekend reading up on a replacement for his destroyed broomstick. [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Characters/Fred and George Weasley|Fred and George]], however, have other ideas. Claiming Harry's needs are greater than their own, they bequeath him their [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Magic/Marauder's Map|Marauder's Map]], a magical parchment they stole from [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Characters/Argus Filch|Filch]] their first year. The map, apparently created by Messrs. "Moony," "Wormtail," "Padfoot," and "Prongs," shows seven secret passageways in and out of Hogwarts, as well as every person's location within the castle. Fred and George say Filch apparently only knows about four tunnels. One of the remaining three has caved in, and one starts under the Whomping Willow, making it too dangerous. The passage at the One-Eyed Witch statue goes directly to [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Places/Honeyduke's Sweetshop|Honeyduke's]] Sweet Shop in Hogsmeade village. To activate the map, the user must say, "I solemnly swear that I am up to no good," and "Mischief managed" to make it blank again.
 
Harry opens the One-Eyed Witch's hump with [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Magic/Dissendium|"Dissendium!"]], a spell provided by the map, and heads down the passageway. He emerges in Honeyduke's basement. Upstairs, Harry sneaks up behind Ron and Hermione. Ron believes he [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Magic/Apparation|Apparated]], but Harry tells him about the Map. Ron is upset that Fred and George never gavetold him about the map. Hermione demands Harry turn it in to [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Characters/Minerva McGonagall|Professor McGonagall]], but Harry refuses, believing the Dementors swarming the village will prevent [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Characters/Sirius Black|Black]] accessing the two usable passageways. They set off for [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Places/The Three Broomsticks|the Three Broomsticks]]. Ron, who seems to have a slight crush on [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Characters/Madam Rosmerta|Madam Rosmerta, the pub's owner]], gets a round of Butterbeer.
 
Professor McGonagall, [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Characters/Filius Flitwick|Professor Flitwick]], [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Characters/Rubeus Hagrid|Hagrid]], and [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Characters/Cornelius Fudge|Cornelius Fudge]], the Minister for Magic, enter. Ron and Hermione quickly hide Harry under the table. The four, plus Madam Rosmerta, sit down at an adjacent table. When Rosmerta complains the Dementors are affecting her business, Fudge explains they are necessary because Black is so dangerous. Rosmerta mentions that Sirius and [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Characters/James Potter|James Potter]] were great friends once, always in the Three Broomsticks together. This surprises Harry. Fudge says that not only was Sirius James' best friend, but also best man at his wedding and Harry's godfather. James and Lily knew Voldemort was hunting them and went into hiding. They used the [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Magic/Fidelius|Fidelius charm]] to conceal themselves and appointed Sirius their Secret-Keeper. [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Characters/Albus Dumbledore|Dumbledore]], aware someone close to them was leaking secrets, offered to be their Secret-Keeper, but they declined. Barely a week later, Voldemort killed James and Lily, although he met his own demise in baby Harry. Obviously Black, tired of playing double agent, had thrown his lot in with Voldemort but, after his defeat, fled for his life. [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Characters/Peter Pettigrew|Peter Pettigrew]], another Potter friend, caught up to Black the next day and accused him of betraying James and Lily. Black killed him and twelve Muggle bystanders with a single curse. Only Pettigrew's bloodstained robes and a severed finger remained. Black was sentenced to [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Places/Azkaban|Azkaban]]. It is believed he is trying to reunite with Voldemort, perhaps after killing Harry to prove his loyalty. The teachers depart; Harry, Ron, and Hermione are too stunned to speak.
Dòng 19:
Professor Lupin seems particularly, though momentarily, taken aback when Harry mentions hearing his mother's screams. Though he never explains why it affects him, it seems more emotional than just a teacher reacting sympathetically to his student's misfortune; it could indicate that Lupin has some prior connection to James and Lily. He also expresses remorse about the Whomping Willow destroying Harry's broomstick. Curiously, the Marauder's Map shows a secret passageway starting at the Whomping Willow's base, though no reason has been given as to why a tunnel would be located next to such a dangerous tree or where it might lead. Lupin tells Harry that the willow was planted the year he started Hogwarts. If there is any correlation to the willow being planted next to a tunnel the same year Lupin arrived at Hogwarts, nothing is mentioned here, but it should perhaps be considered. This is, obviously, no ordinary tree; given its massive size, it should be much older, and it is probable that magic accelerated its growth in addition to making it "whomping," for some as-yet unknown purpose.
 
Whoever Padfoot, Moony, Wormtail, and Prongs may be, they were obviously exceptionally talented Wizards to have created such a map. Since the map shows Hogwarts, it can be presumed they were students there, though when is unknown. The Twins' gift gives Harry new-found freedom and power over his own actions, and he feels no hesitation in using the map to dodge school rules, with Ron's encouragement, and over Hermione's usual objections,. As usual, even though Hermione strongly objects to Harry having the map, she refrains from reporting him.
 
While the Marauder's Map is an extraordinary magical creation, it is even more extraordinary that the Twins willingly give it up. This certainly shows how much they care about and respect Harry to part with such a valuable artifact. It is also a testament to their superior magical abilities that they apparently feel they can continue their "extracurricular" activities unimpeded without this document.
Dòng 27:
Just how the previous Wizarding war has scarred Fudge with lingering fears is evident to us here, and also that he suffers ongoing nightmares about the events surrounding Sirius Black's capture. With Sirius' escape following Fudge's recent meeting with him, Fudge seems afraid that Voldemort's previous reign of terror will be revived, and he does everything he conceivably can, with his limited imagination, to protect the Wizarding world from that reoccurring.
 
Also, when Snape substituted for Lupin in the [[Muggles's Guide to Harry Potter/Magic/Defence Against the Dark Arts|Defence Against the Dark Arts]] class, he assigned a paper on Werewolves; while there is still too little information to understand why Snape chose this particular subject, Hermione may have some idea.
 
== Questions ==
Dòng 33:
=== Review ===
# What is the Marauder's Map and how does it work?
# How did Fred and George come into possession of the Marauder's Map? Why are they willing to give it up to Harry?
# How could the Twins know what the map was when they stole it? How were they able to figure out how to use it?
# What was Sirius Black's relationship with James and Lily Potter?
Dòng 51:
{{Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Intermediate Spoiler}}
 
Unknown to Harry, he has just inherited another relic that belonged to his father: the Marauder's Map. James Potter, along with Sirius Black, Remus Lupin, and Peter Pettigrew, created it in their sixth year using their combined knowledge about Charms and Hogwarts' grounds. This map not only symbolizes Harry navigating his way through the many turmoils he encounters throughout the series, but it aids him in more practical ways, usually by helping him avoid detection during his night-time sojourns around Hogwarts, and to guard against and spy on Malfoy in [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Books/Half-Blood Prince|''Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince'']]. It also plays a role in [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Characters/Barty Crouch Jr.|Barty Crouch Jr.]]'s plot to murder his own father during Harry's [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Books/Goblet of Fire|fourth year]]. It keeps Harry aware of Malfoy's activities in [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Books/Half-Blood Prince|''Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince'']]. Finally, in [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Books/Deathly Hallows|''Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows'']], Harry carries the map with him when he leaves Hogwarts to hunt Voldemort's Horcruxes. Though the map is less useful while he travels the countryside, it becomes like a talisman that bolsters his morale, provides a source of familiarity and comfort, and is a means to remain connected to Hogwarts and his friends, as well as to his late father, who helped create it. Most importantly for Harry, it allows him to gaze at [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Characters/Ginny Weasley|Ginny]]'s name, thus allowing Harry to retain his connection with her while she is at Hogwarts, and confirming for the reader the ongoing romantic attachment between them.
 
Lupin's reaction to Harry's revelation that he hears his mother's screams deeply affects Lupin because he was close friends with James and Lily Potter. Lily was particularly accepting and kind to him when they were at school together. Lupin is also shaken that this is Harry's only memory about his lost mother, and he will do much to help him come to know the person she, and also James, were. Also, his response about Harry's broom is more than mere sympathy. He likely feels partially responsible for the Whomping Willow destroying it because it was on his behalf that the dangerous tree was planted when he first arrived at Hogwarts as a student. The Willow's purpose is to protect the entrance to a secret passage at its base that leads to the [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Places/Shrieking Shack|Shrieking Shack]]. This is where Lupin, who is a Werewolf, was confined during the full moon, to protect students and staff during his transformations. This protection is no longer needed as [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Magic/Wolfsbane Potion|a potion]] is now available that allows a transformed Werewolf to retain his human awareness during the lunar cycle. Lupin is seen drinking this potion, that Professor Snape prepares for him each month.
 
Except for Lupin, the Hogwarts faculty are unaware that the One-eyed Witch tunnel exists. It is revealed later, however, that Dumbledore, and several other faculty, do know about the tunnel leading from the Whomping Willow. Also, Snape is aware that Sirius Black knows it exists. Regardless, it appears that this passageway, which the Trio uses later in the story, was never monitored or sealed off after Black's escape. It is unclear why Dumbledore never considered this a necessary precaution, especially after Black by-passed the castle's security. Perhaps because the tunnel startsstarting outside the castle proper, and endsending inside a boarded-up house, leads to a false sense of security. It is also curious as to why the tunnel was never blocked or eliminated entirely following Lupin's departure from Hogwarts, being as it was no longer needed for his benefit. It would have eliminated the Whomping Willow's purpose, though it has been left active.
 
According to Minister Fudge, Sirius Black was the Potter's Secret Keeper to hide them from Lord Voldemort, but Black betrayed them and later murdered Peter Pettigrew, leaving only Pettigrew's finger behind. This ties in to another fact: [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Characters/Scabbers|Scabbers]], Ron's pet rat, lacks a toe on one paw. It will be discovered that Scabbers is actually Peter Pettigrew, who, like Black and James Potter, is an [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Magic/Animagus|Animagus]], his rat form prompting the nickname, "Wormtail." Pettigrew severed his own finger to make his faked death appear more convincing. Black, seeing the Weasley family's picture in [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Magic/The Daily Prophet|the ''Prophet'']] while they were in Egypt, recognized Pettigrew's rat shape and the missing finger, thus realizing Pettigrew was alive and what he had done; Pettigrew is why Black has come to Hogwarts. In the next book, Pettigrew will be forced to sever another body part.
 
It is interesting to note that Fudge seems to believe here that a re-animated Voldemort is possible; when Madam Rosmerta suggests that as a horrible possibility, Fudge admits that they believe that is Black's plan. Yet, in the next book, when Dumbledore asserts that Voldemort ''has'' returned, Fudge rejects this claim. One must wonder what has happened in the meanwhile to cause Fudge's beliefs to change so wildly.