Aestu wrote:
Azelma wrote:
Both Neville Longbottom and Harry Potter fit the description of the prophecy. Voldemort then decides to kill Harry, who he feels is the greater threat (ironic given he is the son of a Muggle-born, while Neville is of pureblood ancestry), and thus inadvertently makes Harry fulfill the prophecy. The ironic thing, too, is that had Voldemort chose to ignore the prophecy outright, it would have never been fulfilled at all.
So, did Harry Potter fulfill the prophecy? Yes. But he only did so because Voldemort made him fulfill the prophecy.
Like most Harry Potter readers, you obviously never read
Oedipus Rex.
I actually HAVE read
Oedipus Rex, don't assume that just because I used a modern example that I am unfamiliar with the classics.
You forget that I had a classical education, probably because it doesn't coincide with your viewpoint of me being only slightly more functional than someone with down syndrome.
Yes I've translated Caesar's Gaelic Wars, Ovid's
Metamorphoses, Catullus' poetry, and my senior year I translated Cicero at Ohio State (after AP Latin my junior year, they didn't offer anything higher...so we had to go to OSU to continue our education).
I've also read many Greek tragedies.
Oedipus Rex and
Antigone are the two I remember best, though.
It's one of the reasons I enjoy Harry Potter - as JK Rowling is also quite familiar with Latin, and the Classics.