Khác biệt giữa bản sửa đổi của “Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Places/House of Gaunt”

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Chazz (thảo luận | đóng góp)
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The Horcrux placed in this location was, of course, the Peverell ring that Tom Marvolo Riddle had stolen from Morfin Gaunt. Not having heard the story of [[Muggles' Guide to Harry Potter/Magic/Deathly Hallows|the Deathly Hallows]], it had never occurred to Voldemort that this might be the Resurrection Stone. Riddle was as infatuated with ancestry as were the Gaunts before him, and so chose to make Horcruxes out of things that would be proof of the antiquity of his line. As the ring was supposedly the signet of the Peverells, one of the most ancient Wizarding families known, his possession and use of the ring acted as proof that he was of an ancient tradition.
 
It may be interesting to take note of the differing condition of the house throughout the series. In its first appearance, although it is dirty and untidy on the outside, there is some vague semblance of cleanliness and order inside, probably due to the ministrations of Merope (as an unofficial domestic and probably only cook and cleaner). Following her abscondance, it would have been likely that neither Marvolo nor Morfin would have paid much attention to keeping the house in a good state. When Tom Riddle visits Morfin, it is filthy; when visited by Dumbledore, and later Voldemort, although still standing, it is beginning to fall into ruin.
 
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