Khác biệt giữa bản sửa đổi của “Harry Potter dành cho Muggle/Truyện/Hoàng Tử Lai/Chương 25”

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Dòng 37:
{{Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Intermediate Spoiler}}
 
At this point, we have the clue we need to determine why Harry was unable to get into the Room of Requirement while Draco was there, and Harry has the option of going in and finding out what Draco has been doing. Trelawney reveals that Draco was using the same form of the Room as she had been, in order to hide her sherry. We can quite easily guess, at this point, that the invocation "I need some place to hide my sherry" resulted in the appearance of the junk warehouse, the same one where Harry hid his Potions book in the previous chapter. It is likely that whatever Draco is working on is in that warehouse. The other revelations that Harry has received from Trelawney, however, are profound enough that he, and we, don't notice this clue appearing.
 
It is interesting to note that, after the publication of this book and before release of ''Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows'', many "good Snape" theorists based their opinions on the fact that Professor Trelawney identified Professor Snape as the intruder the night the prophecy was given. Since we know from Chapter [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Books/Prisoner of Azkaban/Chapter 16|16: Professor Trelawney's Prediction]] in ''Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban'' that Trelawney is unaware of her surroundings while in the midst of relaying a true prophecy, she could only have seen Snape before or after she relayed the prophecy to Dumbledore. This goes directly against [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Books/Order of the Phoenix/Chapter 37|Dumbledore's story]] that the intruder only heard the first half of the prophecy before being ejected from the Hog's Head. Furthermore, since we know from Voldemort's actions in ''Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix'' that Snape did, until that point, only know the first half of the prophecy, many people assume that Snape either heard all of the prophecy or none of it, and either way, only reported as much of it to Voldemort as Dumbledore ordered him to. This would certainly go a long way towards explaining why Dumbledore trusts Snape. However, it is also necessary to remember that in both the instances we have heard, Trelawney repeated the beginning of the prophecy. Therefore, the critical bit of the prophecy was, in fact, the middle, and so if Snape heard only the end, and carried as much as he had heard to Voldemort, that would be the same as carrying only the beginning.