Khác biệt giữa bản sửa đổi của “Harry Potter dành cho Muggle/Truyện/Bảo Bối Tử Thần/Chương 35”

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Dòng 57:
{{Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Intermediate Spoiler}}
 
While the story doesnever not statestates whether the other soul that we seeseen in what we are calling the Waystation is Voldemort's principal soul or the shard that was within Harry, evidence that it was Voldemort's soul, as stated by the author, will be seen in the next chapter. We will find that Voldemort was knocked out by the rebounding Killing Curse he cast on Harry; as it thrust Harry's spirit into the void that became King's Cross station, Voldemort's soul, tethered to Harry's by the blood bond they shared, was dragged along.
 
At last, [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Books/Goblet of Fire/Chapter 36|the victorious look in Dumbledore's eye]] when he heard that Voldemort had used Harry's blood to create his new body is explained: through the conversation in this chapter, it is clear that Dumbledore realized that this would help Harry more than it would help Voldemort. As Harry had been protected by [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Characters/Lily Potter|his mother]]'s blood, so now would he be shielded by his own blood, now coursing through Voldemort's veins. Dumbledore also knew, though Voldemort did not, that by using Harry's blood to re-animate himself, Voldemort had ensured that Harry's death would be impossible as long as this incarnation of Voldemort lived.
 
Regarding Harry's statement that Snape was meant to be the Elder Wand's master, Dumbledore admits that that had not worked out as planned. Harry sees this, but we do not as yet; in the next chapter, it will be learned that the Elder Wand never allied itself with Snape, and Snape's death, in turn, has not given Voldemort control over it. And though Harry confirmed this thought with [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Characters/Ollivander|Mr. Ollivander]], he is still at least a little unsure of himself. Dumbledore may have made the same misstep as Voldemort: despite the still-living (until Voldemort murdered them) [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Characters/Gregorovitch|Gregorovitch]] and [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Characters/Gellert Grindelwald|Grindelwald]] as evidence, Voldemort mistakenly believed that the Elder Wand would fully align itself with the wizard who kills its previous Master, rather than the wizard who forcibly removes the wand from its previous owner's possession. Ollivander was quite emphatic that murder is unnecessary, though with the Elder Wand, that trail does seem to have followed it. As the wand's allegiance was forcibly removed from Dumbledore's possession by Draco Malfoy, even though Dumbledore retained physical custody of it, Harry believes that it allied itself with Draco. It is uncertain whether Dumbledore shares this belief, but his admission that Snape does not currently master the Elder Wand would lead us to believe that Snape's death has given him a little extra understanding. The question remains whether the Elder Wand had aligned itself with Harry once it became "aware" (if a wand can be said to be aware) that Harry disarmed Draco, and was, in fact, using Draco's own wand, the one which had disarmed Dumbledore.