Khác biệt giữa bản sửa đổi của “Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Places/Platform 9 and Three Quarters”

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Rejected the last change (by 69.150.50.18) and restored revision 2073909 by Chazz
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The reverse transition, of course, happens in the other direction. Stepping off the train and onto the platform is a return to the world of the underage wizard, a return to the world where magic must be repressed or hidden for fear of frightening the Muggles. We see, in each of the first five books, Harry's reluctance to approach that transition, to return to the unexciting life he perforce must share with the Dursleys.
 
There is some question, of course, as to why so many students travel on the Express. London is in the south of Englandmainland Britain, and Hogwarts is in the north. Would it not make sense for students who live further to the north, like [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Characters/Seamus Finnigan|Seamus Finnigan]], who is apparently Irish (although we don't know where he lives over the summer), to travel directly to Hogwarts, rather than detouring far to the south of Britain to London and then heading backfurther north to Scotland? This question is never addressed, though it may be worth pointing out that a lot of the EnglishBritish rail network is what is called a "hub and spoke" topology. For reasons dating back to the early days of the railroads, it seems that almost all railroads run to or from one of the several London stations, with relatively few interconnections. It may be simpler to connect with the Express in London than to try and find a train that runs in a more direct manner, particularly since Hogsmeade, as an all-magical village, likely does not appear on many rail schedules.
 
== Questions ==