Chapters
Birthday Hogwarts

Keeper of the Keys

- Chapter 4

"Harry - yer a wizard."
-- Hagrid

PS4: The Keeper of the Keys

Hagrid arrives at the hut and informs Harry that he is a wizard and has been accepted into Hogwarts. Harry also learns the truth about the deaths of his parents and the origin of the scar on his forehead, much to the chagrin of his uncle.

Calendar and Dates

This Chapter takes place on July 31, just after midnight.

Interesting facts and notes

The title of this chapter is also one of Hagrid's titles at Hogwarts. He is the Keeper of the Keys, which means that he has a large ring of keys which can lock or unlock any door on the Hogwarts grounds. Presumably Filch has a similar set of keys, but only for doors inside the castle proper. Hagrid controls entrance to the grounds and to the buildings. Perhaps he would also be called the gatekeeper--his hut is fairly near the front gate judging by the sequence of events during the battle at the end of book six.

Rowling was asked about this title in an interview. She responded:

Just simply that he will let you in and out of Hogwarts, so it’s slightly more interesting than that but it’s not loads more interesting. So, again, that is something that people shouldn’t get too excited about (TLC).

Figuratively speaking, Hagrid here holds the keys to Harry's entry into the Wizarding World. When he breaks down the door into the hut on the rock, he bursts through into the Muggle world and opens the way for Harry to enter the Wizarding World and to find his true identity.

A giant of a man was standing in the doorway.

One of my favorite lines of the first film comes just at this point. Robbie Coltrane as Hagrid comes crashing through the door, flattening it in the process, and glowers. Then with a twinkle in his eye, he says "Sorry 'bout that." and picks the door back up. In that one brief moment we are introduced to the gentle giant of a man who will become Harry's first real friend.

It's hard to remember back to reading this passage for the first time, but even now I can still get a sense of the delightful anticipation Rowling creates in the previous chapter. I do remember a strong sense of someone or something being outside the house, watching the Dursleys and always aware of what was going on. When Hagrid first appears, the effect is thrilling.

Hagrid finds Harry and Dursleys.

Dudley squeaked and ran to hide behind his mother, who was crouching, terrified, behind Uncle Vernon.

The next time the three Dursleys come face-to-face with an adult wizard on their own turf - when the Weasleys come to pick Harry up for the World Cup - they take this same tack, and it works just about as well as it does here.

"Yeh look a lot like yer dad, but yeh've got yer mum's eyes."

This is our first encounter with this oft-repeated phrase. As Harry grows up, he looks more and more like his father, but many remark on the fact that he has his mother's eyes, which were green.

    • Ollivander tells Harry this when he comes in to buy his wand (PS5)
    • In a couple of years, during the Dementor attack on Sirius, he sees himself across the lake and thinks he is his father. When he relates this to Dumbledore, the elder wizard says:

      'I expect you'll tire of hearing it, but you do look extraordinarily like James. Except for the eyes... you have your mother's eyes.'

    • Members of the Order of the Phoenix, come to collect Harry from the Dursleys, discuss Harry's resemblance to James and Lily:

'Yeah, I see what you mean, Remus,' said a bald black wizard standing furthest back - he had a deep, slow voice and wore a single gold hoop in his ear - 'he looks exactly like James.'

'Except the eyes,' said a wheezy-voiced, silver-haired wizard at the back. 'Lily's eyes.' (OP3)

  • Slughorn is particularly affected by the fact that Harry has his mother's eyes:

    'You look very like your father.'

    'Yeah, I've been told,' said Harry.

    'Except for your eyes. You've got —'

    'My mother's eyes, yeah.' Harry had heard it so often he found it a bit wearing.

...they couldn't see what he was doing but when he drew back a second later, there was a roaring fire there...

Presumably Hagrid has just used an Incendio spell. Since there was no wood, however, he may have used something a bit more nuanced, similar perhaps to Hermione's Bluebell Flames. At any rate, the empty fireplace now contains a roaring fire, complete with wood to burn.

'Gallopin' Gorgons!'

Gorgons (singular: Gorgo) are fearsome female creatures from Greek mythology whose gaze can turn people to stone. The exclamatory used here was invented by Rowling to sound appropriately magical. As the series progresses, characters use the phrase "Merlin's Beard" more often.

Hagrid gives Harry his letter

Hagrid brings Harry the Hogwarts letter.

'Oh, she got a letter just like that and disappeared off to that - that school - and came home every vacation with her pockets full of frog spawn, turning teacups into rats.'

This has occasionally been used as an argument for Lily's having done underage magic, but given what we later learn about Lily and James, and what we know of Petunia, it bears another interpretation. We know Petunia doesn't approve of imagination, so the 'teacups into rats' incident probably happened. But who would have been likely to make it happen, and why?

We can see from her outburst here (as well as her treatment of Harry all his life) that Petunia resented Lily, and as we learn in PA, Petunia is "the nosiest woman in the world." Even though she hates magic, Petunia would have been bound to stick her nose into Lily's business and eavesdrop on any friends who came to visit. In fact, we know she eavesdropped Lily's conversations with Snape when they were children (DH33), and that's how Petunia first heard about the Dementors of Azkaban (OP2).

And as Mr. Ollivander tells Harry in the next chapter, James, not Lily, had a wand that was "excellent for Transfiguration", and from what we are to learn of him over time, Transfiguring a teacup into a rat would have been more his kind of joke than Lily's.

I think we can all agree that Fiona Shaw's rendition of this speech in the film was wonderful.

"How could a car crash kill Lily an' James Potter?"

The implication here is that nothing as mundane as a car accident could kill a Witch or Wizard. So how exactly does being magical protect someone from being killed in a car accident? Do wizards have some sort of built-in protective magical shield? Is this the same magical shield which protected Neville when his Uncle Algie accidentally dropped him from an upstairs window?

"Nah - can't spell it. All right -Voldemort." Hagrid shuddered. "Don' make me say it again."

Harry tends to think that before he met Remus Lupin, the only people he'd ever heard say the name were himself and Albus Dumbledore. This is the only time we've ever heard Hagrid say it.

Just a note on pronunciation: Rowling pronounces Voldemort with a silent 't' at the end--VOL-duh-more. Just about everyone else, including the cast of the films, says VOL-duh-mort. Jim Dale pronounced it Rowling's way until the recording of the fifth book, when he inexplicably changed to the incorrect pronunciation. My guess is that his producers wanted his reading to match the film. Sad, really.

Head boy an' girl at Hogwarts in their day!

James, however, was not a Prefect. Remus Lupin was the Prefect for Gryffindor during those years. How James became Head Boy is a bit of a mystery. Part of this mystery may have been explained when Harry became Captain of Quidditch in his sixth year:

The day after...their letters and booklists arrived from Hogwarts. Harry's included a surprise: he had been made Quidditch Captain.

"That gives you equal status with prefects!" cried Hermione happily. "You can use our special bathroom now and everything!" (HBP6)

Perhaps the Head Boy and Girl are chosen from the Prefects and the Captains of Quidditch.

...were too close ter Dumbledore ter want anythin' ter do with the Dark Side...

Voldemort's supporters themselves are called Death Eaters, although we don't learn this term until book four. At this point in the story, the enemy is referred to generically as the Dark Side. Interestingly, this term is never used in books five and six, when the war is begun and has become more personal.

"An' then - an' this is the real myst'ry of the thing - he tried to kill you, too."

Hagrid isn't speaking here as though he's trying to hide anything. It seems clear that Dumbledore kept Sibyll Trelawney's first prediction a secret from Hagrid, although Hagrid was and is a member of the Order of the Phoenix - and a good thing, too, since Hagrid has no talent for keeping secrets.

...he turned up in the village where you was all living, on Halloween ten years ago.

We're back to guessing dates for the attack on the Potters. As you will recall from the notes on chapter one, there is some debate as to whether the attack on the Potters actually happened very early in the morning on October 31. This passage, while not definitive, strongly suggests that Rowling intends the attack to have happened on the evening of Halloween, and therefore that the day of owls flying to and fro and Uncle Vernon encountering a cat on his garden wall was November 1.

That's what yeh get when a powerful, evil curse touches yeh -- took care of yer mum an' dad an' yer house, even -- but it didn't work on you...

Assuming that we can trust Hagrid's interpretation of events, we can see that the curse used against Harry caused the destruction of house in Godric's Hollow. To be precise, the massive energy released in the misfiring of the spell must be what caused such devastation. We do get the sense that the energy of spells causes physical damage to inanimate objects from the descriptions of battles elsewhere in the canon. However, this must have been an exceptional case to destroy an entire house.

What caused the spell to misfire? Just the words of a prophecy wouldn't be enough to protect Harry. After all, it could just as well have been Neville. Is there perhaps something like the Priori Incantatem effect between Harry and Voldemort? What causes this? What is the common factor between them--and between Voldemort and Neville--which made this spell misfire so spectacularly? With the wands, it was the pre-existing common core in the wands.

"No one ever lived after he decided ter kill 'em, no one except you, an' he'd killed some o' the best witches and wizards of the age - the McKinnons, the Bones, the Prewetts- an' you was only a baby, an' you lived."

All these people were members of the original Order of the Phoenix and their families. Harry will learn more about them, and how they died, from Mad-Eye Moody at the prefect party in Grimmauld Place, a little over four years from now.

This should also start first-time readers thinking: Harry's family were only the last in a long line of victims. There must be other kids his age and older in Hogwarts who have lost family members. Neville Longbottom and Susan Bones are the only two obvious candidates during Harry's sorting - Neville since his grandmother is bringing him up rather than his parents, Susan because we know about the Bones family from Hagrid. Harry only learns about Neville's family in their fourth year, and Susan and the Prewetts in their fifth.

The Prewetts, incidentally, are Molly Weasley's brothers, Fabian and Gideon (JKR).

...there was a flash of violet light, a sound like a firecracker...

Hagrid is trying to perform a bit of transfiguration magic here. He tells us in a few moments that he was actually trying to turn Dudley into a pig, but the spell wasn't powerful enough coming from an untrained wizard with a broken wand.

I was allowed ter do a bit ter follow yeh an' get yer letters to yeh an' stuff...

So does this mean that all the magic by which the letters found their way into the Dursley home was performed by Hagrid? It seems unlikely, given the cleverness of those spells and Hagrid's lack of magical skill. Hagrid may only be referring to the Sunday and Monday when Uncle Vernon drove around the countryside looking for a place to hide. Hagrid probably tailed them on a thestral, using that animal's magical ability to find things.

I -- er -- got expelled, ter tell yeh the truth. In me third year. They snapped me wand in half an' everything. But Dumbledore let me stay on as gamekeeper. Great man, Dumbledore."

At this point, Hagrid was fourteen years old. That's a bit young to become a full-fledged gamekeeper. Probably Hagrid worked under the existing gamekeeper first. However, the actual timeline for all of this is complicated by a reference to this previous gamekeeper in book four.

Let's take a look at what we know. Rita Skeeter writes about Hagrid's past:

Rubeus Hagrid, who admits to being expelled from Hogwarts in his third year, has enjoyed the position of gamekeeper at the school ever since, a job secured for him by Dumbledore.  (GF24)

This suggests that Hagrid has been a gamekeeper right from the start. However, Molly Weasley remembers another gamekeeper before Hagrid, and she and Arthur were at Hogwarts much later than Hagrid, probably in the mid-1960s.

Mrs. Weasley was intrigued by the Whomping Willow, which had been planted after she had left school, and reminisced at length about the gamekeeper before Hagrid, a man called Ogg. (GF31)

The exact details of Hagrid's history are hazy, then, but it would seem that he left school at the age of 14, in 1943, and was given the job of gamekeeper as an apprentice or assistant to Ogg. When Ogg retired in the early 1970s, Hagrid took over the position exclusively. It is also possible that Molly and Arthur were students much earlier than the 1960s, but in book six we learn that they eloped during the first rise of Voldemort to power. This would put their wedding around 1970. It's also possible that Ogg was not the gamekeeper anymore when Molly and Arthur were at school, but that they knew him anyway. That's not really the way this passage reads, however. Molly does seem to be reminiscing about her own school days here, and Ogg would seem to have been part of that.

"Why were you expelled?"

Harry learns more than he wanted to know about this in his second year, when he and Ron meet Aragog.

"You can kip under that..."

The contrast between Harry's circumstances at the beginning of this chapter and now is startling. Where before he was forced to find a soft bit of floor and shiver under the thinnest blanket, with a cold empty fireplace and his snoring cousin for company, now he snuggles in front of a roaring fire under a thick warm coat. The world that Harry knows is changing fast.

Exceptional character moments

Petunia has her say as she rails on her sister's "abnormality" and how her parents seemed taken in by it all. She comes across as having been extremely jealous of Lily - not for being a witch as such, necessarily, but for being their parents' pride and joy.

Memorable lines

Mr H. Potter, The Floor, Hut-on-the-Rock, The Sea.

"Ah, shut up, Dursley, yeh great prune."

"Yer great puddin' of a son don' need fattenin' anymore, Dursley, don' worry."

"A wizard, o' course, an' a thumpin' good'un, I'd say, once yeh've been trained up a bit."

Words and phrases

Characters Introduced

Commentary

Related images:

Hagrid brings Harry the Hogwarts letter. Hagrid finds Harry and Dursleys.

 

In this chapter, Hagrid says this famous line: "Harry, yer a wizard." Of course, fans always remember it as "Yer a wizard, Harry" said in Robbie Coltrane's voice, since that's the way it was done in the film. The actual line, however, is reversed: "Harry, yer a wizard."

Pensieve (Comments)

Tags: expelled eyes famous history rainstorm revelations temper truth

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The Harry Potter Canon