
…I'll resume posting at FFC. Been busy doing politics-related TV and radio stuff for the other blog, and working on bill-paying projects. I shall, as they say, return. Thanks for reading FFC.
SPOILERS BELOW!
Chapter 31-Epilogue
In Chapter 31, Voldemort makes an announcement to the school, loud-speaker style: “Give me Harry Potter, and none shall be harmed. Give me Harry Potter, and I shall leave the school untouched. Give me Harry Potter, and you will be rewarded.”
Slytherin Pansy Parkinson makes to seize Harry, now in the Great Hall, and the students point their wands at her. Still looking for Ron and Hermione, Harry sees Muggle-born Colin Creevey, who snuck into the school to fight. Harry sets out to look for the diadem Horcrux. Since Flitwick told him no one as seen it “in living memory,” Harry realizes a ghost might know what happened to it. He asks Nearly Headless Nick about the diadem, who tells him to ask the Grey Lady, Ravenclaw’s ghost.
The Grey Lady was Rowena Ravenclaw’s kid, and she’d stolen the diadem. Dying, Rowena sent the (Bloody) Baron to find her daughter, whom he loved. She refused to return with him, so he killed her, then himself. That’s how he became the Bloody Baron, Slytherin’s ghost. The Grey Lady hid the diadem inside a hollow of a tree in a forest in Albania. This answers a fandom question, “In Book 1, why was Voldemort hiding out in Albania?” The Grey Lady told a young Tom Riddle about the diadem. He found it and hid it in Hogwarts. After he tried to kill Harry, his half-self went back to the secluded forest to hide.
But where was the diadem now? In the hiding place version of the Room of Requirement. In Book 6, Harry hid his potions book in a room filled with dangerous and banned objects. He marked the spot by putting a wig and the diadem on a nearby bust.
Ron Speaks Parseltongue?
Deathly Hallows, like all of JKR’s books, is rich in detail. Asking and answering questions, making observations, and commenting on everything that made me stop and go, “Hmmm,” would fill up enough books to make a seven-part series of my own. Consequently, I’ve skipped over a lot of things I wanted to explore more fully, but I have to pause for this Ron-speaking-Parseltongue thing.
Starting with Book 2, it’s been drilled into our heads how rare this talking-to-snakes “gift” is. Harry can do it because some of Voldemort’s powers were transferred into Harry when he tried to kill him. We learn in Chapter 31 that Ron spoke Parseltongue to get into the Chamber to get the fangs. How? Did he fake it? If so, how was did his fakery fool the Chamber?
Three More Dead and Panic Attacks
Moving on…Ron tells Harry that Hermione destroyed the Hufflepuff Horcrux with one of the fangs. The trio enters the Room of Requirement (now the Room of Hidden Things) to find the diadem, and Harry’s ambushed by Draco, Crabbe, and Goyle. Spells start flying, and so does the diadem. Crabbe tries to kill Hermione and Ron with the Avada Kedavra curse, misses, and conjures a cursed fire that chases the trio.
Harry, Ron, and Hermione grab brooms to escape and double back to try to save Malfoy, Crabbe, and Goyle. All escape the flames except Crabbe, who’s killed. The fire destroys the diadem Horcrux. In the corridor, the Death Eaters attack. Fred is killed.
The diadem is destroyed, now it’s time to kill Nagini, the snake that contains part of Voldemort’s soul. Harry sees Voldemort and Lucius in the Shrieking Shake. He sends Lucius to fetch Snape. The trio head to the Shack.
I have to pause here to highlight a nice parallel JKR set up. In Book 1, Hermione panics when Harry and Ron are about to be suffocated by the Devil’s Snare on the way to the Sorcerer's Stone. She remembers that it doesn’t like fire. Ron tells her to make the fire, and she yells, “But there’s no wood!” In irritation, Ron says something like, “There’s no wood? Are you a witch, or not?”
In Deathly Hallows, they’re about to enter the Shrieking Shack but must get past the Whomping Willow. Ron says, “How’re we going to get in? I can—see the place—if we just had—Crookshanks again—”
In Book 3, Crookshanks the cat pressed a knob at the base of the tree to stop the branches from moving. Now it’s Hermione’s turn. “Crookshanks? Are you a wizard, or what?” Cool.
So the trio goes through the tunnel to the Shack and sees Voldemort and Snape, who keeps insisting that he must find Harry Potter for him. Voldemort believes Snape is the true owner of the Elder Wand, since he killed Dumbledore, the last holder. In a most inglorious and un-heroic scene, Voldemort sics Nagini on Snape, killing him with a bite to the neck.
And that’s it. The most intriguing character in the series, the double agent who risked his life spying for Dumbledore, who loved Harry’s mother, and who promised Dumbledore he’d protect Lily’s child, is snuffed out. I was hoping Snape would get his moment of glory, reveal his treachery, and stand physically between Voldemort and Harry in a duel, fighting alongside him. Can you picture it? Snake face, Snape, and Harry, dueling at Hogwarts. Alas, it was not to be. Snape drops like a sack of potatoes on the dirty Shack floor.
Continue reading Deathly Hallows: Final Third Cont'd
SPOILERS BELOW!
I’ve jotted down a few notes from Chapter 26 to the epilogue, which I’ll refer to as I prepare subsequent posts. "First Third" and "Second Third" are complete. Posts on Christian themes will follow. Read my first impressions of the book.
This last section is about 200 hundred pages but feels too short for me. I suspect JKR realized she still had to answer a lot of questions and wrap things up. Compared to the first part of the book, this one moves quickly.
Would you believe that the events in Chapter 26 through the next to last chapter happen in only one day? In a single day, the trio breaks into a highly secure bank, flies on the back of a blind dragon, faces Death Eaters and soul-sucking Dementors, and sneaks into Hogwarts for the epic battle with Voldemort? And I can't get through lunch without wanting a nap.
Chapters 26-30: Horcrux Hunt Heats Up
Second Third ended with Harry and Griphook working out a deal. He'll help the trio break into Bellatrix's bank vault, and Harry will give him the Sword of Gryffindor in exchange.
Harry and Griphook both have more than enough reasons not to trust each other. Harry promised Griphook the sword but he won’t (can’t, really) give it to him until the Horcrux-destroying is done, and who knows how long that will take? And goblins are shifty little creatures. Will Griphook renege at the last minute?
As the trio prepares to make a daring break into the vault, Hermione polyjuices herself into Bellatrix and Ron disguises himself as Death Eater. Harry and Griphook hide under the cloak. On the way to the bank, they run into a Death Eater, Travers, who knows that Harry escaped Malfoy Mansion, that Bellatrix’s wand had been taken, and that Voldemort had confined her and the others to the house.
At the bank, Harry ends up confounding the suspicious Travers and a couple of goblins, who suspect something is amiss. Harry casts another Unforgivable Curse, imperiusing Travers and a goblin. They get past the blind dragon into the vault and discover that the objects inside have been cursed to prevent theft. Touching Hufflepuff’s cup, Hermione’s hand burns, and the cup multiplies. In the tumult, Harry loses the sword, and Griphook grabs it, runs into the crowd of goblins coming to seize the trio, and shouts, “Thieves, Thieves!”
Harry, Ron, and Hermione escape Gringott’s on the blind dragon. Harry senses Voldemort’s rage over the stolen cup and realizes he's hidden a Horcrux at Hogwarts.
In Chapter 28, the trio Apparate into Hogsmeade and are immediately swarmed by Death Eaters and dementors. They’re rescued by Aberforth, Dumbledore’s brother, who lies to the Death Eaters and says it was his stag goat Patronus — and not Harry's stag — they saw. We learn that Aberforth bought Sirius's two-way mirror from Mundungus. He’d used it to keep track of Harry, sending Dobby to the Malfoy’s basement to rescue everyone. He tries to talk the trio out of going to Hogwarts and expresses bitterness over his brother. Aberforth fills in more blanks about Dumbledore’s life and how their sister died.
Aberforth sees that Harry is determined, so he decides to help. His sister’s portrait, sitting on the fireplace mantle, actually is an entrance into a tunnel leading to Hogwarts. Ariana leaves the portrait and returns with a battered, bruised, and smiling Neville Longbottom.
Continue reading Deathly Hallows: Final Third


Maintained by La Shawn Barber, this site is not affiliated with Time Warner Entertainment Company, LP, Warner Brothers, The Walt Disney Company, Walden Media, Scholastic, Inc., or Bloomsbury Books. Copyrights and trademarks for books, films, articles, and other promotional materials are held by their respective owners. Their use is allowed under Fair Use.
Unless otherwise noted, site design modifications, original writing, and photography are copyrighted by LBC Media, All Rights Reserved.
Original WP theme Copyright Mike Little