(This pertains to an earlier chapter, but discussion in its thread seems to have died down. Anyone got strong opinions on the proper etiquette in that situation?)
In chapter 91, we are told
that Harry tried to cast the Patronus charm (to ask his Patronus to go to Hermione) but “[t]he spell hadn’t worked though”;
that when McGonagall needed to send a message to Dumbledore “[h]er first try at casting the Patronus failed”.
Now, given the circumstances, it’s not that surprising that either of them had trouble with that particular charm. But isn’t it odd that Harry didn’t just try again? And we’re told that for McGonagall “[i]t wasn’t the first time she’d done it so, but she seemed to have lost some of the knack”.
Are we to infer that there’s some special Patronus-related weirdness going on? Or is it just ordinary grief and upset?
Harry’s Patronus can’t possibly work here. His “happy thought” is about facing death and destroying it rather than hiding from it; recall that he couldn’t cast Patronus v1.0 because it required thinking happy thoughts about something else rather than facing death, and Harry couldn’t do this. But the reason he’s casting the spell is to convince himself that maybe there’s a chance Hermione isn’t dead after all, which is pretty much exactly the not-think-about-the-bad-thing mindset that didn’t work for him then.
On the other hand, McGonagall is probably suffering from the typical problem of normal-Patronus casters: if your spell involves thinking about happy thoughts about something else other than death, then having evidence of death right in front of you is going to be a problem.
It’s possible that the “lost some of the knack” thing implies that prolonged exposure to Harry Potter is wearing away at McGonagall’s ability to think about something else. Of all the adult characters, McGonagall is probably the one most seriously thinking about Harry’s ideas.
(This pertains to an earlier chapter, but discussion in its thread seems to have died down. Anyone got strong opinions on the proper etiquette in that situation?)
In chapter 91, we are told
that Harry tried to cast the Patronus charm (to ask his Patronus to go to Hermione) but “[t]he spell hadn’t worked though”;
that when McGonagall needed to send a message to Dumbledore “[h]er first try at casting the Patronus failed”.
Now, given the circumstances, it’s not that surprising that either of them had trouble with that particular charm. But isn’t it odd that Harry didn’t just try again? And we’re told that for McGonagall “[i]t wasn’t the first time she’d done it so, but she seemed to have lost some of the knack”.
Are we to infer that there’s some special Patronus-related weirdness going on? Or is it just ordinary grief and upset?
[EDITED to fix a trivial and tangential mistake.]
Harry’s Patronus can’t possibly work here. His “happy thought” is about facing death and destroying it rather than hiding from it; recall that he couldn’t cast Patronus v1.0 because it required thinking happy thoughts about something else rather than facing death, and Harry couldn’t do this. But the reason he’s casting the spell is to convince himself that maybe there’s a chance Hermione isn’t dead after all, which is pretty much exactly the not-think-about-the-bad-thing mindset that didn’t work for him then.
On the other hand, McGonagall is probably suffering from the typical problem of normal-Patronus casters: if your spell involves thinking about happy thoughts about something else other than death, then having evidence of death right in front of you is going to be a problem.
It’s possible that the “lost some of the knack” thing implies that prolonged exposure to Harry Potter is wearing away at McGonagall’s ability to think about something else. Of all the adult characters, McGonagall is probably the one most seriously thinking about Harry’s ideas.
She’s getting more Harry and Godric like, but lacks Harry’s vision of a possible future defeating death to allow for an improved Patronus?