The Keeper of the Keys: In Depth
Probably the bit of fore-shadowing that screams right out at me here in chapter 4 is about Voldemort himself. Hagrid is describing how Voldemort disappeared, but that he doesn’t think that he’s dead. About how he doesn’t think there was enough human left in him to die. How very right Hagrid was. Starting with this first book we learn that Voldemort has been hiding out for 11 years waiting to get just enough strength to take up in one of his followers bodies. He spends time while there drinking the blood of unicorns just to keep him alive long enough to find the Sorcerer’s Stone. This act of horror clearly shows his lack of humanity, but does not reveal the deepest secret truth. Hagrid is completely right, Voldemort does not have enough human in him to die, and it’s not until book six that we find out exactly what that means. When we do discover the startling, terrifying truth about how Voldemort has been systematically removing parts of his soul in order to attain immortality, we forget this simple statement made by Hagrid waaaay back in book one.
In this chapter we also see more foreshadowing of Chamber of Secrets. Hagrids wand is, for some strange reason, a pink umbrella. In this chapter we don’t understand how important a wand is, or how unbearable it would be for a wizard for his to be broken and removed from him. In this we see some of Dumbledore’s beneficence. This giant was expelled, done something so wrong that his wand was snapped in two and he’s not allowed to do magic, but Hagrid is not in Azkaban… He is working at Hogwarts, with the very children he is accused of attempting to murder. Did Dumbledore really have that much power with the former Minister of Magic? I think he did. One thing I wonder about this entire situation is why the Death Eaters, upon capture and conviction, didn’t have their wands broken, or better yet burned? They all break out of prison, and there are their wands, safe and whole as the day they got them… To get back to the first part of this section, though, here is another little nugget. Hagrid is not allowed to do magic. There is not a big deal made out of it. It’s not a big shocking revalation. It is simply a fact, but then we move on to Chamber of Secrets and find out why. And that IS a big shocking revalation. Just another way of telling us that J.K. Rowling planned out these books from beginning to end, literally, before the first one was ever published.

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