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Die Ron, Die
An original editorial by Maline Freden (From Mugglenet.com )
Continuing with the whole "twelve disciples" thing: Trelawney "prophesised"
in OotP that Harry would get twelve children. Could be a coincidence. Or not...
Okay, enough on that. Now, let's go on with today's article: Why Ron is probably
gonna get the axe before it's all over.
Let's start with killing off one myth: the Ollivander's anagram. Sure, it spells
out "Ronald lives" if rearranged. It also spells out "Ronald's evil" though, so
I don't think that's any guarantee our little redhead is going to make it
through…
There are two main reasons (and a bunch of smaller ones) to why I think that Ron
will die. Of course, I don't want him to - it would be completely horrible - but
I didn't want Sirius to die either and he did, so I figure, better be prepared
for the worst, eh?
Reason 1: The Stupid Joke
Those of you who frequent the HP Sleuth page are familiar with the theory that
when Ron makes a joke, it usually turns out to come true. I know that Galadriel
Waters writes about this in her books too, but since I haven't read them, I
can't make any parallels. I could repeat all the HP Sleuth arguments regarding
Ron, jokes and fortune telling, but since it's already online, I'll just refer
you to the HP Sleuth page instead.
To the point. In OotP, Ron makes a very stupid joke indeed: "And from now on, I
don't care if my tea-leaves spell die, Ron, die - I'm just chucking them in the
bin where they belong" (p. 633). What bothers me here is not only that it's one
of Ron's jokes, but that the "die, Ron, die" is emphasised by being put in
italics. JKR could have not done this. She could have used quotation marks
instead, or nothing at all for that matter. Also, the word "die" is duplicated
and put around the word "Ron", surrounding it. It doesn't look too good…
Reason 2: McGonagall's Chess game
This is a theory that I received quite some time ago from Dora and Gally. Clumsy
in general as I am, I lost their e-mail address, so I couldn't write them back
about it. I'll just hope that they don't mind me using it. :-) Everything in
italics is part of the message they sent me. (The passage is PS p. 204-206 UK
paperback edition by the way.)
"Rowling always had a good sense of humour ;-). She described the Second Wizard
War in the McGonagall's chess game. The chessmen (chessmen, figures...how
strangely she describes them, like real people, not like pieces of stone) are
black (Aurors) and white (Death Eaters). The white figures are scary, cus they
are "faceless" (white terrible masks of Death Eaters)
"Harry, Ron and Hermione shivered slightly -- the towering white chessmen had no
faces."
Then let's take a look at this:
"Well, Harry, you take the place of that bishop, and Hermione, you are next to
him instead of that castle."
"What about you?"
"I'm going to be a knight," said Ron."
That's a very strange choice, isn't it? Ron is very good at chess, he must knew,
that it's better to be a king, because kings can stay until the end of the game
without being taken, and they are the ones, who command. It would be much more
logical and safe to be a king. But Rowling likes symbolism, and everything in
this chess game is symbolical. Ron IS a knight, because this redhead boy is pure
in heart and brave as a real knight. He never was a king, or a commander."
Insert Maline: I agree with this. Ron is really the ideal Gryffindor, and in
turn the ideal knight (see NT 20 for arguments on this). Even his hair is the
Gryffindor colour (or almost) :-)
"Hermione is a castle, because castle walks straight, and Hermione is quite a
"straight" person. Harry is a bishop because bishop is the figure that is very
close to the King (Dumbledore). Harry is also not "straight" like Hermione, he
prefers "to walk diagonally," because he's self-effacing and a little secretive
(like confessors (bishop))."
Insert Maline: I'd rather compare the "walking diagonally" to Harry's disrespect
for rules and willingness to cross some lines for a good cause, but sure…
"Then the game (WAR) begins...
"Their first real shock came when their other knight was taken. The white queen
smashed him to the floor and dragged him off the board, where he lay quite
still, facedown."
Bellatrix Lestrange murdered Sirius Black."
Insert Maline: this is an excellent point. Especially when you take a look at
how much alike Ron and Sirius are. Both brave, both a bit reckless, Ron is
Harry's best friend, Sirius is James' best friend, both tend to act without
really thinking things over (contrast: Hermione and Lupin) and so on. From what
we know of Sirius, he's definitely a knight, too (e.g. Hagrid: "he died in
battle, an' tha's the way he'd've wanted ter go" OotP, p. 753), he fits the
parallel perfectly. So does Bellatrix Lestrange as "the White Queen". In her
trial (GoF), she is said to be sitting in her chair as if it were a throne, and
there's definitely something regal in the way she is portrayed. Furthermore,
she's the only prominent female Death Eater, and one who's totally loyal to
Voldemort at that. If Voldemort is the white king (just think of his
complexion), then surely Bellatrix is his queen. (Her husband is barely
mentioned.)
"Every time one of their men was lost, the white pieces showed no mercy. Soon
there was a huddle of limp black players slumped along the wall. Ron himself
darted around the board, taking almost as many white pieces as they had lost
black ones."
"The war plot of the sixth book. Aurors and Death Eaters are dying, many of
them. Mrs Weasley wasn't being silly. Book 6 spoiler."
"Yes..." said Ron softly, "It's the only way... I've got to be taken."
"No!" Harry and Hermione shouted.
"That's chess!" snapped Ron. "You've got to make some sacrifices! I take one
step forward and she'll take me -- that leaves you free to checkmate the king,
Harry!"
"But --"
"Do you want to stop Snape or not?"
"Ron --"
"Look, if you don't hurry up, he'll already have the Stone!"
There was no alternative."
Ron sacrifices himself to let Harry kill Voldemort. There is NO alternative, he
has to die anyway. The book 7 spoiler.
"He stepped forward, and the white queen pounced. She struck Ron hard across the
head with her stone arm, and he crashed to the floor - Hermione screamed but
stayed on her square - the white queen dragged Ron to one side. He looked as if
he'd been knocked out."
Bellatrix Lestrange murders Ron Weasley.
"The white king took off his crown and threw it at Harry's feet. They had won.
The chessmen parted and bowed, leaving the door ahead clear."
Harry kills Voldemort and survives. The Second Wizard War ends.
Additional information:
During the chessgame, the author writes:
"Twice, Ron only just noticed in time that Harry and Hermione were in danger."
What's going to happen in Books 6 and 7 with the trio? Where are they going to
go, how are they going to be in danger? Something wicked this way comes."
I just love when people send me things like this. Personally, I find it
mind-blowing. Thank you so much girls!
I want to add a few things to this theory:
1) "Their first real shock came when their other knight was taken /.../ 'Had to
let that happen,' said Ron, looking shaken. 'Leaves you free to take that
bishop, Hermione, go on'"
This could refer to something I think is important to the plot as a whole: some
things need to happen. Sirius had to die for some reason, or several reasons,
and one might be included in this line: the capture of Lucius Malfoy (and the
other DEs). As was pointed out above, Harry is a fitting bishop because he's
close to the king and he doesn't hesitate to disregard rules (i.e. not "walk
straight") when it serves his interests. Malfoy is quite similar if you think
about it, he also disregards rules and laws for "the greater good;" it's just
that "the greater good" is two very different things for the two men, and Malfoy
is very close to Voldemort (who'd be the white king). Now, of course things
didn't happen exactly as in the chess game, some things have to be taken
symbolically. Meaning that it wasn't Ron who decided Sirius should die (Rowling
did), Hermione didn't capture Lucius and it wasn't because Sirius died that
Lucius was arrested (it was because Dumbledore showed up with the rest of the
Order). The fight in the DoM allowed for both things to happen, like the chess
game allowed for the corresponding "game deaths" to occur. If you look at the
structure of this passage (the game of chess), you'll notice that the timeline
is very straight. The game progresses all the time and has a definite start and
finish point. The HP series works in a similar way. There are flashbacks and
some foreshadowing to be sure, but the plot is basically one of progression.
It's like building a tower of Lego: you start from the bottom and work your way
up, and you need all the pieces to get to the top.
What do I want to say her? That everything in JKR's books happens for a reason
and the fun part is to try and figure out what that reason may be. I think that
Lucius needed to be exposed as a DE to get things moving. Acting in the shadows
is a slow process and the story needs action to get to the end. Solution: Lucius
goes to prison and leaves room for Draco and Narcissa to take a step forward.
This also gives him (Lucius) freedom to act in the open as he has very little to
lose now that his cover as a good respectable man has been blown. Could turn
interesting.
Reason 3 - The thing Harry would miss the most
When writing "Beyond the Veil" (NT 9), I started thinking about how Sirius's
death could be of use to the plot as a whole and came up with the following
thoughts:
1) Voldemort fears death more than anything ("There's nothing worse than death,
Dumbledore!" OotP) and thinks that this is the worst thing in the world.
2) Voldemort doesn't know love (that we know of, but I think it's a fundamental
trait to his character, so I'll just suppose he doesn't).
3) Harry loves a lot of people and Sirius's death, in combination with Voldemort
possessing him, seems to have made him realise that there are worse things than
death. In fact, it's at the moment when he, to get away from the pain and out of
love for Sirius, embraces death that Voldemort can no longer keep his power over
him.
This leads me to believe the following: Harry needs to stop fearing death in
order to destroy Voldemort. He needs to know two things: that there are things
in the world worth dying for and that he no longer has anything (or very little)
to lose in this world. He's already lost his parents and the closest thing to a
father he's ever known. What could he possibly lose to make his ties to the
world thin enough not to fear death? Ron, of course. The thing he would most
miss according to whoever did the choosing of the hostages for the second task
of the Triwizard Tournament.
If Ron were to die, Harry would have a lot less reason to "stick around"
himself, especially if we take into account that a lot of other people that he
cares about will die too (all the lost pieces on the chessboard, plus
Trelawney's prophecy that the Dark Lord would rise to be more terrible than ever
before). He'll soon have most of the people he loves on the other side of that
veil in the DoM, and seeing how drawn he was to it even before Sirius died,
he'll probably want to go through it himself in a book or two. (Also, remember
whose name he first spoke when hearing the voices behind it - Ron's.) In the
chess game, it's the taking of the last knight (Ron) which enables Harry to kill
the king (Voldemort), and I have a feeling that these two events might be linked
a lot more closely than the taking of the first knight (Sirius) and the taking
of the bishop (Lucius). I think that Ron needs to die for Harry to defeat
Voldemort.
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