I’ve brought it up before here at The Hog’s Head and never received an answer satisfactory enough: Why didn’t Fake Moody just make a portkey out of Harry’s broomstick or pumpkin juice at the beginning of the year? Why the long, elaborate, risky plan?
I may have been thinking too hard about it. At the book table after the event in NYC last night, Melissa Anelli, webmistress of the Leaky Cauldron, said, very simply, “Dumbledore wouldn’t have allowed that kind of magic except in that particular instance – at the end of the tournament.” That didn’t seem like a strong enough argument to me at first, but I asked her a few clarifying questions, and three things struck me in our discussion:
- Portkeys are highly regulated in the Wizarding World.
- The Ministry of Magic may not know who is casting a spell, but they always know which spell is cast.
- A portkey is a perfect way to finish the tournament: The winner is zapped back to the start of the maze.
With these thoughts in mind, the answer might be as simple as this: Fake Moody couldn’t randomly create a portkey. It would be noticed by the Ministry. But since the final trial of the TriWizard Tournament was set to end with a portkey, the plan was hatched that Harry would make it to that portkey, that Fake Moody would be the one to make that portkey, but that instead of sending the tournament’s winner back to the beginning of the maze, it would send him to the graveyard instead.
Even if the whole plan is still a little bit too elaborate and perhaps risky, it’s the best explanation I’ve heard! (My apologies, by the way, if someone here suggested this and I’m forgetting it. Please step up and take credit if you did.)
Thoughts?
Leaky’s headmistress reports that in one of her interviews with Rowling, she was told that Harry Potter and the Hallows of Hogwarts was the working title of Book 7 “for years.”
I find this a fascinating revelation, because it lends credence to my theory that the Hallows are deeply steeped in Arthurian legend, and that the four founder’s relics were always considered by Rowling to be “Hallows,” though they are not expressly called such in the book.
I wrote about this shortly after Deathly Hallows’ release in a post called, 7 Hallows, 3 of Which are Deathly, and I expounded on it in chapter 4 chapter 5 of my book.
We Are Wizards is a glimpse into the world of fans inspired by Harry Potter and who have taken their love for the series a step further by creating songs, forming bands, establishing fan sites, and organizing campaigns in the name of fandom. Josh Koury’s documentary mainly pays homage to the small musical genre known as “wizard rock” [click to continue…]
John Granger quotes a section of one of Melissa Anelli’s interviews with J.K. Rowling in which she talks about the veil and the afterlife:
But when they surround that veil [in Order of the Phoenix], I was trying to show that depending on their degree of skepticism or belief about what lay beyond – because Luna, of course, is [I believe this is meant to be ‘isn’t,’ but will check audio] a very skeptical character. Luna believes firmly in an afterlife. She’s very clear on that. And she feels them speaking or hears them speaking much more clearly than Harry does. This is the idea of faith. Harry thinks he can hear them; he’s drawn on. But Harry’s had a life that has been so imbued with death that he now has an uncharacteristically strong curiosity about the afterlife, especially for a boy of 15, as he is in Phoenix. Ron’s just scared, as I think Ron would be – he just knows this is something he doesn’t want to dabble with. Hermione, hyper-rational Hermione – ‘can’t hear anything, get away from the Veil.’ So if you walk through the veil, you’re dead.You’re dead. What you find on the other side, well, that’s the question.
If you’re inclined to think that what Rowling intended is the real meaning, then we’ve got some pretty clear evidence that she constructed her world with a real afterlife in mind. This would tend toward the interpretation (which I share) that at King’s Cross, Harry wasn’t having a conversation just with himself, and that his parents, Remus, and Sirius all really were called from the dead during the walk through the forest.
There will likely be a few more gems like that one in Anelli’s forthcoming book, Harry, A History, which can be pre-ordered.