![]() Since Harry was looking at the mirror shard before Snape's Patronus appeared, and the inside of the Hog's Head was seen, the most likely explanation is that Aberforth was working with Snape, and that Albus may have told him of Snape's true allegiance before he died.The third day of the High Court hearing over alleged phone hacking claims against Mirror Group Newspapers (MGN) has wrapped up. Hence, it is unclear how Severus Snape found Harry and Hermione in the Forest of Dean. Phineas Nigellus Black was cut from the film adaptations of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows.Two-way mirrors may be considered a subtype of enchanted mirrors.The two-way mirror was never seen in the films before Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows: Part 1, and its origin and significance are not explained.The mirror could possibly be charmed with a Protean Charm, like the one used by Hermione on the Dumbledore's Army Galleons, or at least a variation of the same spell.Also, there is no way of knowing if using the mirror would have helped, unless Sirius kept it on his person at all times. This unhappy truth does not seem to occur to Harry in the novel (and the mirror is not in the film version), though arguably, he needs no more reasons to lay blame for Sirius's death at that point. Ironically, if he had used it rather than Dolores Umbridge's fire to contact his godfather, Kreacher would not have been able to lie to Harry about where Sirius was, and thus Harry would never have gone to the Department of Mysteries and Sirius would not have died. When Sirius gives Harry the mirror in a badly wrapped package, Harry vows to himself he will never use it, not wanting to lure Sirius from his place of safety.The mirror does not appear directly in Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, but Harry and his friends see Aberforth buying it from Mundungus Fletcher.Ī two-way mirror as seen in Harry Potter: Puzzles & Spells ĭuring the Calamity, which affected the International Statute of Wizarding Secrecy in the 2010s, two-way mirrors were turned into Foundables during the Calamity, which subsequently had to be returned by volunteer members of the Statute of Secrecy Task Force. Harry later discovered that it was Aberforth with whom he could communicate with in the mirror and who saved them from Malfoy Manor, when he, Ron and Hermione took shelter inside the Hog's Head Inn, Aberforth's pub in Hogsmeade. He called for help, and Aberforth managed to send Dobby to rescue them. ![]() Experiencing no success with his Golden Snitch and his broken phoenix wand, Harry grabbed the mirror shard and saw a gleam of bright blue eye and thought that it was Dumbledore's. After being kidnapped by the Snatchers and brought to Malfoy Manor, Hermione was tortured by Bellatrix Lestrange, who wanted to know how Godric Gryffindor's Sword had come into their possession. Īberforth Dumbledore looking out of the mirror fragmentĪberforth's possession of one of the two-way mirrors became a great help to Harry and his companions in 1998. Despite the apparent uselessness of this shard, Harry kept it with him in his mokeskin pouch during his search for Voldemort's Horcruxes. In 1997, before Harry left the Dursleys' house, he emptied his school trunk and cut his right ring finger twice on a shard of the mirror. Harry smashed his mirror in 1996, after finding that he could not contact Sirius's spirit using it, since Sirius did not have his mirror with him when he died. Harry Potter examining a shard of the two-way mirror After Sirius' death, his mirror came into the possession of Mundungus Fletcher, who sold it to Aberforth Dumbledore. ![]() ![]() Sirius later gave James's mirror to Harry in 1996. " James and I used to use them when we were in separate detentions." - Excerpt from a note of Sirius Black to Harry Potter ĭuring their years in school, James Potter and Sirius Black used a pair of two-way mirrors so they could talk to each other while they were in separate detentions.
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