The Life and Lies of Albus Percival Wulfric Brian Dumbledore by Irvin Khaytman (good fiction books to read txt) š
- Author: Irvin Khaytman
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We will tackle the first book from two separate angles. First, we will look at the protections surrounding the Sorcererās Stone and see what we can glean of Dumbledoreās intentions from these protections. Once we know what he hoped to accomplish, we will look at all the events of Sorcererās Stone to see where itās possible to detect Dumbledoreās hand pulling the strings.
Protecting the Stone
Letās recap what the protections are:
Hagrid provided Fluffy, a gigantic three-headed dog, who could only be gotten past by playing music; a fact that ā[n]ot a soul knows except [Hagrid] and Dumbledoreā (SS232).
Sprout provided Devilās Snare, which Professor Sprout explained in class ālikes the dark and the dampā (SS278) and can therefore be fought off by fire. āConjuring up portable, waterproof fires was a specialty of Hermioneās.ā (CS183)
Flitwick charmed a bunch of flying keys, only one of which would open the door; Harry āhad a knack for spotting things other people didnātā as āthe youngest Seeker in a century.ā (SS280)
McGonagall transfigured a giant chess set to life, on which one had to win a potentially lethal match; wizard chess is Ronās specialty.
Quirrell provided a very large troll; Quirrell knocked it out so Harry and Hermione didnāt have to, but the Trio had already defeated a troll seven months prior.
Snape provided a logic puzzle; the brainy Hermione starts āsmilingā when she comes across a logic puzzle she doesnāt hesitate to solve (SS285).
Dumbledore himself hid the Stone within the Mirror of Erised so āonly one who wanted to find the Stoneāfind it, but not use itāwould be able to get itā (SS300).
Itās clear to any careful reader that protections two through six are meant to be gotten through specifically by the Trio. Four of the tasks play directly to the Trioās areas of expertiseāSeeking, chess, fire, and logic. The other one, the troll, is simply a repeat of what the Trio has already faced. Clearly, Dumbledore meant for Harry and Quirrell to get to the Mirror of Erised. The protections are even designed to be surpassed more than onceāhence the potions refill themselves and the chessmen reset themselves. They are also designed for a group of peopleāhence there are several brooms by the flying keys instead of just one.
Was the wooden flute that Hagrid gifts Harry for Christmas also part of Dumbledoreās design? Doubtful, because itās not necessary for getting past Fluffy ā itās just a convenience because Harry ādidnāt feel much like singing.ā (SS271) The flute we can chalk up to coincidence.
A common point Iāve seen made is that, far from saving the Stone, Harry actually endangered it. Quirrell could have stared into the Mirror of Erised until he turned blue, and he still would not have the Stone. But then Harry shows up, and the Stone ends up in his pocket, ripe for the taking by Quirrellmort. So if Dumbledore intended for Harry to go after Quirrellmort, why did he also endanger the Stone?
The answer is so simple, it was mostly overlooked until Josie Kearns made the connection. Dumbledore intended Harry and Quirrellmort to face off but for the Stone to remain safely inside the Mirror the entire time.1
Dumbledore himself says, āHarry, have you any idea how few wizards could have seen what you saw in that mirror?ā (HBP511) Dumbledore could not have known how pure of heart Harry was, how ridiculously selfless he was at the age of eleven. Moreover, Dumbledore had proof to the contrary! A scant five months earlier, Dumbledore watched Harry look into the Mirror of Erised at least twice and knows that Harry sees himself standing with his family. Surely, anyone reasonable would think that this poor boyās deepest desire for the next five months will continue to be to see his family and will not suddenly change to being Voldemortās undoing.
As an aside, itās worth wondering how Dumbledore came up with the idea to hide the Stone from any who would covet it for selfish means. He claims, āIt was one of my more brilliant ideas.ā (SS300) To be sure, Dumbledore has plenty of brilliant ideas, but his design for the Stone is awfully close to what he himself did for the Elder Wand.
Dumbledore explains, āI was fit to own the Elder Wand, and not to boast of it, and not to kill with it. I was permitted to tame and to use it, because I took it, not for gain, but to save others from it.ā (DH720)
Dumbledore had tamed the wand half a century prior because he knew that it was ādangerous, and a lure for foolsā (DH713). So Dumbledore knew what to do when presented with another dangerous magical object that was a lure for fools2: like the Elder Wand, only one who ātook it, not for gain but to save othersā (DH720) would be able to get it. Even the language Dumbledore uses is similar: āonly one who wanted to find the Stoneāfind it, but not use itāwould be able to get it.ā (SS300)
Inspired by what heād learned of the Elder Wand, Dumbledore hides the Stone in the Mirror of Erised, convinced that neither Quirrell nor Harry will get it out. Dumbledore intends for Harry to face off against Quirrellmort without endangering the Stone. But like most of Dumbledoreās best-laid plans, this goes terribly awry when Harry looks into the Mirror and gets the Stone, and suddenly Quirrellmortās attention is focused on Harry instead of the Mirror.
Why does Dumbledore orchestrate all of this? Because Harry needs the experience facing off against Voldemort. Dumbledore explains, āI knew not whether it would be ten, twenty or fifty years before he returned, but I
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