|
INDEX
|
|
Magic
Magical
Theory:
Thoughts
About Wands
by
Amy Z.
-
Witches and wizards can identify their
own wand very easily, so easily that it seems to be done by a sense other
than sight: Harry knows his immediately when Amos Diggory holds it
up in GF.
-
They can also easily match up another
witch/wizard and her/his wand, or at least Lupin does in the Shrieking
Shack (he throws Harry, Ron, and Hermione their wands, the right one to
each). Again, is this done by some kind of magical sense that connects
a person to her/his wand? Could anyone have done this with a moment's reflection,
or is it because Lupin knows them? Or is it simply that he's seen their
wands in their hands many times, and the differences in size and color
are obvious to wizards and witches, though they might be too subtle to
your average Muggle? (I think of a fascinating study I saw on TV, of Australian
Aboriginal children whose ability to pick out which small rock or twig
was missing from an assortment they had just seen for 60 seconds was astounding
to someone from my culture.)
-
Every wand is unique and uniquely matched
to the witch/wizard (therefore, Ron would've had a hard time owl-ordering
one in CoS, even if he'd been willing to tell his parents he needed one),
and although you can use someone else's wand, it won't work as well
(Ollivander, 84 US ed. of SS, "Diagon Alley"). How can Ron use a hand-me-down
wand, then? Is this going to figure into a plot at some point? Someone
uses someone else's wand and the results aren't powerful enough to do what
she/he needs to do?
-
They are apparently quite easy to break;
Ron's snaps in the car accident and Hagrid's was broken when he was expelled.
The latter, being a deliberate attempt to deprive a wizard of his power
(unlike the intent-less violence that snapped Ron's), *might* take powerful
magic. If not, it's pretty scary, since in a duel one could easily render
one's opponent helpless by breaking his/her wand. Scary, also, because
we know that Harry's wand is one of the few weapons in the world that's
effective against Voldemort, certainly the only thing known that can block
his Avada Kedavra. That's a mighty fragile thing to have standing between
the well-being of the world and Voldemort. Maybe Fawkes could be persuaded
to donate a magical army's worth of feathers--hence the name, "The Order
of the Phoenix"?
copyright
2001 by Amy Z |