Khác biệt giữa bản sửa đổi của “Harry Potter dành cho Muggle/Truyện/Tên Tù Nhân Ngục Azkaban/Chương 12”

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== Analysis ==
 
While Harry is dejected over his destroyed Nimbus 2000 and angry about the confiscated Firebolt, these are losses he could easily afford to replace with the considerable fortune his parents left him. However, he refusesis reluctant to do so and remains upset over his lost brooms. Rather than finding a workable solution, his anger, stubbornness, and emotional immaturity delays his taking action, and he instead slips into a temporary, self-pitying state-of-mind. Underlying all this is Harry's strong emotional attachment to these two magical objects that he believes cannot be replaced merely by buying substitutes,. andThis itreaction shows how our most valuable possessions are often not the most expensive thingthings we canbuy affordfor ourselves, but is usually something thatassociated someonewith hasanother given as giftperson. The Nimbus, like his wand, was among the first magical objects Harry owned. It not only heralded hisHarry's entry into the Wizarding world and his becoming the youngest Seeker at Hogwarts in over a century, but it was a gift (also an anonymous) gift from someone (McGonagall) who cared about him. The Firebolt, in particular, is meaningful because he convinces himself that it also must have been sent by someone who secretly cares for his well being, rather than by an enemy wanting to murder him, although he lacks proof for either possibility. However, Harry will overcome this emotional state whenWhen the Firebolt is returned jinx free, it further bolsteringbolsters his belief that someone may be watching over him.
 
Although the Firebolt's return patches the rift between Hermione and the boys, a new one erupts over Scabbers's apparent killing by Crookshanks. While the evidence is only circumstantial, it doesstrongly seemsuggests that Crookshanks is guilty. This rift is perhaps even harder on Hermione, who, already massively overburdened by her schoolwork and only recently reconciled to Harry and Ron, reacts indifferently. This time, however, only Ron is upset with her.
 
There is yet another of the series' endemic date and schedule contradictions here. The anti-Dementor lesson that Harry is leaving when he runs into McGonagall on her way to return his Firebolt to him is said to be his fifth – he has been unable to produce more than a faint mist in the four lessons since the first successful one; and the first lesson was in the first week of classes, "soon after the New Year". As these lessons are supposed to be every week, by that count, it can be no later than early February. However, it is only two days later that they have the match with Ravenclaw. Less than a week later, Harry and Ron visit Hagrid and find that they are only a day away from the hearing at the Committee for the Disposal of Dangerous Creatures, which is April 20th. By that count, Scabbers should have vanished about 12 April, and Harry should have had about 12 lessons rather than 4; with perhaps three of them interrupted by Professor Lupin's "illness", there should still have been at least nine anti-Dementor lessons. While it's certainly true that as a teacher, Lupin will have had other things to deal with and would likely not have been able to fit twelve lessons in, still we are left with the impression that these lessons are meant to be every week, rather than every three weeks. In this case, the schedule confusion does cause a small problem in the story, as the compression at this point leads us to believe that the end-of-term exams are happening in about March.