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Chapter 15
Summary
Filch takes Harry, Hermione, and Ron to Professor McGonagall’s office
to be punished. She accuses them of concocting the whole dragon
story to lure Malfoy out of bed and get him into trouble. As punishment,
McGonagall deducts fifty points from Gryffindor for each of the
three wrongdoers. Harry is horrified that his house will lose 150 points.
When the bad news is circulated the next morning, Harry quickly
falls from his pedestal as Quidditch star. He considers resigning
from the Quidditch team, but Wood convinces him that doing so would
be useless.
Harry resolves not to get involved in any more suspicious
activities, but a week later he overhears a conversation in which
Quirrell appears to give in to someone, presumably Snape, as if
Snape is pressing him to do something. Harry and his friends try
to figure out what to do, but they cannot come up with a plan of
action. Harry, Hermione, and Neville are told to report to Hagrid
that night for their detention. When they show up, they are surprised
to find that detention will be held in the surrounding Forbidden
Forest. Malfoy, who has also been given detention, objects to being
forced outside like a servant.
Hagrid points to some traces of unicorn blood on the
ground and explains that they will be going into the forest to find
out what has been harming the animals. They split up into two groups:
Harry and Hermione with Hagrid, Neville and Malfoy with Hagrid’s
dog, Fang. They penetrate deep into the forest. Harry sees signs
that the other group is in trouble, but Hagrid discovers that Malfoy
has merely been playing tricks on Neville. Hagrid sends Harry off
with Malfoy, taking Neville along with himself. Harry and Malfoy
come across a mysterious cloaked figure drinking the blood of a
recently killed unicorn. Malfoy and Fang run away, leaving Harry
alone. A centaur named Firenze rescues Harry and carries him back
to Hagrid. On his way back, Harry learns that the cloaked figure
was Voldemort and that he was drinking unicorn blood to sustain
himself until he could obtain the Sorcerer’s Stone. Analysis
Death makes a sudden and violent appearance in these chapters. The
spectacle of the dying unicorn that Harry glimpses in the forest is
shocking not only because it is the first instance of death that
we actually witness, but also because the unicorn is a symbol of
innocence and purity. The murder of a unicorn, a harmless and delicate creature,
displays death not as a natural process in the cycle of life, but
as something wrongful and horrid. The death appears to be even more
evil when we find out that the unicorn has died so that an evil being
may live and that the wicked Voldemort drinks the unicorn’s blood
to sustain his own life while searching for immortality. Voldemort
has flown in to steal something that does not belong to him, as his
name reminds us: Vol de mort means either “flight of death” or “theft
of death” in French. Both names suit the unjust death he brings.
The spectacle of Voldemort’s exchange of death for life
in the forest is important for Harry personally because he is the
only one who witnesses it. We are reminded of another, much earlier
moment of life and death in Harry’s experience, also spent in the
presence of Voldemort: the moment when Harry’s life was saved in
infancy while Voldemort killed Harry’s parents. In medieval Europe,
the unicorn was often a symbol of pure and selfless womanhood. Like Harry’s
mother, the unicorn dies protecting her baby son, perhaps even giving
up her life so that her baby can live. Harry’s investigation of
the Hogwarts mystery is bringing him closer to his parents, unwittingly
bringing their killer, Voldemort, to some sort of justice. |
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