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Harry's Dreams
"It does not do to dwell on dreams and forget to live, remember that."
-- Albus Dumbledore
While Dumbledore's statement above makes good sense, it wouldn't do Harry any
harm to try to analyze his dreams a little more than he does. Often there
are important clues in his dreams to what's going on. As a matter of fact,
Harry's extra-sensory powers are not limited to prescience. Besides the
dreams, he often senses the presense of another person even when they aren't
visible to him, hidden in the dark
(PA3).
Harry's dream diary assignment for Trelawney in his fifth year would
have been ideal for him to become more analytical on the subject of
his dreams, of course. Unfortunately, given Trelawney's preferred
teaching style of reading students' homework aloud in class, Harry
knew better than to make the contents of his mind public property
by writing an honest assessment of his dreams for her.
Dreams
Harry made
the mistake of telling Mr. Dursley about a dream he'd had about a flying
motorcycle. His Uncle nearly crashed the car from hollering at him; the
Dursley hated to hear about anything acting in a way it shouldn't
(PS2).
When he was younger, Harry had dreamed and dreamed of an unknown relation
coming to take him away (PS2).
Although at the time he had no idea, this dream would come true beyond his
wildest imaginings on his eleventh birthday
(PS4).
After his first trip on the Hogwarts Express, his introduction to school,
and the Sorting, Harry had a strange dream.
He was wearing Quirrell's turban, which spoke
to him, telling him to transfer into Slytherin. The turban got heavier
and heavier and tightened on his head. He saw Malfoy laughing at him, who
turned into Snape, whose laugh became high and cold. He awoke after a flash
of green light. The connections to Voldemort are obvious: the turban speaking
to him, the high cold laugh, the green flash of light. It's interesting
that Malfoy and Snape are connected to Voldemort in the dream, one transforming
into the other (PS7).
This foreshadows Harry's dream in Divination class
several years later, when an eagle owl flies into a chair and Voldemort
is revealed there; the Malfoy family has an eagle owl
(GF29).
After spending three nights staring at the image of his family in the
Mirror of Erised, Harry began having nightmares of his parents disappearing
in a flash of green light while a high voice laughed
(PS13). Voldemort's voice is
described as high and cold.
For several weeks after facing Voldemort for the second time in his
life, this time at Hogwarts, Harry would wake up in the night in a
cold sweat, worrying that the Dark Lord was coming back
(CS1).
When Uncle Vernon had locked Harry in his room and barred the windows,
Harry dreamed that he was on show in a zoo with a sign saying
UNDERAGE WIZARD on it attached to his cage. He lay on a bed of straw
being stared at by people and also by Dobby, who refused to help him,
responding instead that "Harry Potter is safe!" Then the
Dursleys were staring at him and rattling the bars of his cage. When
he woke up, Ron was outside his window, shaking the bars
to get his attention (CS2).
Given what Dumbledore explained nearly four years later about the Dursleys'
role in his long-range plans to protect Harry, note the association in
Harry's mind with safety and being trapped with the Dursleys.
After winning the Quidditch match against Ravenclaw in his third year, when
Harry used a Patronus Charm to ward off what he thought were a couple of
Dementors, Harry had a dream. He was walking through a forest carrying his
Firebolt, following something that was silvery-white, like his Patronus. He
could only catch glimpses of it and when he tried to catch up, he heard the
sound of hooves. He woke up before he had a chance to dream more. The
Patronus he was following was his own, which took the form of a stag, which
was also the Animagus form his father had taken. Of course, he didn't know
either of these facts at this point
(PA13).
The night before the crucial Quidditch match with Slytherin in his
third year, Harry dreamed first that he'd overslept and that his
team had had to use Neville instead and had lost
(PA15). Revisiting
this after Harry's problems with his dreams in
OP, and in particular
the lost prophecy, it's interesting that Neville is the chosen substitute,
and that the reason Neville had been needed was that Harry had overslept.
After the dream about Neville having to substitute for him, Harry
then dreamed that the Slytherin team was riding dragons and that he
had forgotten his broom (PA15).
Less than a year later, of course, Harry had to pass a dragon in the air
with his Firebolt (GF20).
Falling asleep in the library studying water-related spells for the
second task, Harry dreamed that
the mermaid from the painting in the prefects' bathroom was laughing
and holding his Firebolt over his head while he bobbed like a cork in
bubbly water next to her rock. She taunted him to come and get it,
while he said he couldn't, fighting not to sink while snatching at
it (GF26).
The mermaid dream is interesting because at that point Harry knows from the
egg clue (although maybe not consciously) that the second task involves the
merpeople taking his most valuable possession and he has to go fetch it back;
since he's thinking in terms of material possessions rather than risking the
lives of living people, naturally the Firebolt is the symbol of what he
values most, an interesting point when considering some of Harry's other
dreams in which the Firebolt appears.
In Trelawney's Divination class, Harry fell asleep and dreamed that he was
flying on the back of a huge eagle owl. He flew toward an old, ivy-covered
house on a hill and entered an upstairs window. He flew on the owl along
a passageway to a room which was dark because its windows were boarded
up. He left the owl's back. The owl went to a chair with its back to Harry,
out of sight. Harry saw two things on the floor: a large snake and Wormtail.
Harry watched as someone in the chair tortured Wormtail with the Cruciatus
Curse after telling him that his blunder hadn't ruined everything after
all. When Harry woke from this dream, he knew it was significant and he
immediately left to tell Dumbledore
(GF29).
During the summer after his fourth year, Harry had nightmares for weeks in
which he revisited the graveyard in which Cedric had died, and 'even when
he escaped nightmares about Cedric he had unsettling dreams about long dark
corridors, all finishing in dead ends and locked doors, which he supposed
had something to do with the trapped feeling he had when he was awake
(OP1).'
Harry hadn't even committed the offense for which he had the disciplinary
hearing at that point, let alone had he visited the Ministry and seen the
door in question. Those dreams, of course, could have been caused either
by feedback from his connection with Voldemort, or by his own unusual
talent.
On Harry's first night in Grimmauld Place, he fell asleep thinking he
heard 'others making their way upstairs...In fact, many-legged creatures
were cantering softly up and down outside the bedroom door, and Hagrid...
was saying, 'Beauties, aren't they, Harry? We'll be studyin' weapons
this term...' And Harry saw that the creatures had cannons for heads and
were turning to face him' and ducked. Cantering is something either
centaurs or thestrals might be expected to do, and both are later
involved with the Battle of the Department of Mysteries - centaurs in
both the confrontation with Umbridge and the Fountain of Magical
Brethren, thestrals as transportation to the battle
(OP6).
Through the days in Grimmauld Place prior to his disciplinary hearing,
Harry slept badly, and continued having dreams about corridors and
locked doors that made his scar prickle, although he'd never seen the
door in waking life until the morning of his hearing
(OP6).
On the night before catching the
Hogwarts Express
at the start of his fifth year (also, unknown to
Harry at the time, the night Sturgis
Podmore was arrested), Harry had a troubled night's sleep.
'His parents wove in and out of his dreams, never speaking; Mrs.
Weasley sobbed over Kreacher's dead body watched by Ron and
Hermione, who were wearing crowns, and yet again Harry found himself
walking down a corridor ending in a locked door'
(OP10). On
the surface, the crowns are a symbol of the newly awarded
prefects' badges, but it seems significant that Hogwarts will
be spending most of the year listening to 'Weasley Is Our King' - especially since
Draco hadn't even written it yet. (He wrote it specially when Ron became Keeper.)
Interesting, in that light, that Hermione would be crowned alongside Ron.
Kreacher seems like a symbol of Sirius' ultimate fate in this context.
Next we come to a dream that Harry himself thought was complete
rubbish: the dream interrupted by his vision of Voldemort's
giant snake. Harry dreamed he was back in the Room of Requirement
with Cho, who was accusing him of luring her there under false
pretenses, saying that he had promised her 150 Chocolate Frog
cards if she showed up (same as the number of points a successful
Seeker scores in a match - Harry, Cho, and Cedric, of course,
were all Seekers for their respective teams).
Harry protested...
Cho shouted,
'Cedric gave me loads of
Chocolate Frog cards, look!' And
she pulled out fistfuls of cards from inside her robes and threw them into
the air, and then turned into
Hermione, who said, 'You did
promise her, you know, Harry...I think
you'd better give her something else instead...How about your
Firebolt?' And
Harry protested that he couldn't give
Cho his
Firebolt because
Umbridge had it,
and anyway the whole thing was ridiculous,
he'd only come to the DA room to put up
some Christmas baubles shaped like Dobby's
head...
Given the previous (GF29)
dream's Firebolt symbolism, interesting
that Hermione would say
that Harry should give
Cho the
Firebolt instead.
The famous witches and wizards cards resonate with
the wizarding portraits; the image of them being thrown into the air is
reminiscent of the ending of Alice in Wonderland,
as Alice screamed that they were nothing
but a pack of cards as they flew at her,
waking to find her sister brushing leaves
off her. Harry would have reason to
associate Cedric with the portraits,
given Vi running around the portraits
on the night of their selection as
Triwizard champions.
Given Dobby's decoration of
the Room of Requirement
for Christmas, the dream's inverted decorations are a neat touch, but
consider the stuffed house-elf
heads decorated for Christmas at
Grimmauld Place where
Harry actually did spend
Christmas later, although he thought at the time he fell asleep that night
he'd be spending Christmas at the
Burrow.
Early in his sixth year,
Harry dreamed of
Ron chasing him with a
Beater's bat the night
after he began realizing that his own feelings for
Ginny were less than platonic
(HBP14). This was followed
by dreams about Ginny herself
(HBP15), but these don't
seem to require a Seer
to interpret them.
On the other hand, Harry's dreams
were "broken and disturbed by images of
Malfoy, who turned into
Slughorn, who turned into
Snape..."
(HBP21)
After Dumbledore's death,
Harry's dreams "were thick
with cups, lockets, and mysterious objects that he could not quite
reach, though Dumbledore
helpfully offered [him] a rope ladder that turned into snakes the
moment he began to climb..."
(HBP30)
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