My prediction doesn’t seem to have paid off in anything but karma, so I’m wondering how Eliezer’s clue about Harry seeing the members of the Wizingamot as player characters has played out or if we’re going to see something of the sort in future chapters.
The problem is that he did not—he treated them as a passive audience without any consideration of how they view him. So now some of them have reached the same conclusion as Lucius, and think he is a case of bodysnatching.
Possession is a real possibility in the universe he inhabits, and he is showing all the signs. That is quite likely to get him killed by people with the best of intentions. At best, I am expecting kidnapping attempts aimed at extracting voldemort from his host.
Also, Harry really should listen to Malfoy. Scaring Lucius is not a good idea.
It seemed to me that in the chapter, Harry was trying to convince Lucius, while Lucius was performing debate-as-theater. Like Harry threatened Lucius because he thought Lucius would care, which was a bad move because Lucius would lose face by appearing threatened by a child. Lucius responded by calling Harry out on his “child” status, which would not serve to make Harry see his way, but would help sway the audience against Harry.
And so I had speculated that Harry’s solution would have to involve switching to a debate mode of discourse. Which may have had something to do with my ignoring the intended meaning of the title of the sequence, which suggests that he instead would find a compromise that Lucius would agree with.
My prediction doesn’t seem to have paid off in anything but karma, so I’m wondering how Eliezer’s clue about Harry seeing the members of the Wizingamot as player characters has played out or if we’re going to see something of the sort in future chapters.
The problem is that he did not—he treated them as a passive audience without any consideration of how they view him. So now some of them have reached the same conclusion as Lucius, and think he is a case of bodysnatching. Possession is a real possibility in the universe he inhabits, and he is showing all the signs. That is quite likely to get him killed by people with the best of intentions. At best, I am expecting kidnapping attempts aimed at extracting voldemort from his host. Also, Harry really should listen to Malfoy. Scaring Lucius is not a good idea.
That hadn’t been meant to be a clue—it’s fulfilled immediately after, when Harry starts seeing them as subjects of moral judgment.
I, for one, definitely read it as a clue.
It seemed to me that in the chapter, Harry was trying to convince Lucius, while Lucius was performing debate-as-theater. Like Harry threatened Lucius because he thought Lucius would care, which was a bad move because Lucius would lose face by appearing threatened by a child. Lucius responded by calling Harry out on his “child” status, which would not serve to make Harry see his way, but would help sway the audience against Harry.
And so I had speculated that Harry’s solution would have to involve switching to a debate mode of discourse. Which may have had something to do with my ignoring the intended meaning of the title of the sequence, which suggests that he instead would find a compromise that Lucius would agree with.