Monday 23 October 2023

THE DEATHLY HALLOWS (II), THE RESURRECTION STONE

Today, The Weasleys & The Grandma have been reading about the Resurrection Stone, the stone that allows the holder to bring back deceased loved ones, in a semi-physical form, and communicate with them.
 
Before this, they have been practising listening and some vocabulary to prepare their B1 Cambridge Exam.

 
 
 
The form of Sirius Black generated by the stone tells Harry that he and the other forms created by the stone are part of him and invisible to others.

This seems to suggest that these apparitions are conjured from memories and are not really resurrected people. According to the fairy tale concerning the origin of the Deathly Hallows, using the Resurrection Stone drove the owner to kill himself because he brought his late fiancée back from the dead, and she was very unhappy in the real world because she did not belong there. By the time the stone was seen in Marvolo Gaunt's possession, it had been set into a ring that bore the symbol of the Deathly Hallows, which the ignorant Gaunt believed to be the Peverell coat of arms; he used the ring to boast about his ancestry and blood purity.

Both Dumbledore and Grindelwald desired the stone, but for different reasons. While Dumbledore wanted it to communicate with his dead family, Grindelwald allegedly intended to use it to create an army of zombie-like Inferi. Harry said this is the Hallow he would desire most, as like Dumbledore he could name people he would like to communicate with again. Voldemort became aware of the ring's antiquity and eventually used it as a Horcrux, a container for part of his soul, being unaware of the stone's additional magical properties.

Dumbledore recovered the ring from Marvolo's estate, recognizing it as both a Horcrux and one of the Deathly Hallows. Forgetting that as a Horcrux, it was likely to be protected by curses laid by Voldemort, and blinded by personal desire, Dumbledore attempted to use the Resurrection Stone to talk to his deceased family. The curse destroyed his hand and began to spread throughout his body.

Though the spread was partly contained in the destroyed and blackened hand by Snape, Dumbledore was doomed, having, at most, a year left to live. In their Kings Cross encounter, Dumbledore told Harry that this proved he had learned nothing from his past mistakes and ambitions for using the Hallows, and was part of the reason for his fear that Harry might also become obsessed with their power if told of them.

The stone was later passed to Harry through Dumbledore's will, hidden inside the Golden Snitch Harry caught with his mouth, nearly swallowing it, in his first-ever Quidditch match. The Snitch revealed the message I open at the close when touched by Harry's lips. Harry is unable to open the Snitch until he is about to die in the Forest, and realises then the close means the end, or his death.

Harry uses the Stone to summon his deceased loved ones -his parents, his godfather Sirius Black, and Remus Lupin- to comfort him and strengthen his courage, before he goes to meet his death at Voldemort's hand. The stone falls unseen from Harry's numb fingers in the Forbidden Forest as he reaches Voldemort's encampment. Harry survives the encounter and he and Dumbledore's portrait later agreed that Harry will neither search for it nor tell others where it is.

More information: Wizarding World


Say the Cloak existed…
what about the stone, Mr. Lovegood?
The thing you call the Resurrection Stone?
 
Hermione Granger

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