by Athena Appleton » Tuesday 4 May 2004 2:06:12am
This is really more of an observation thread than a theory thread... if it needs to be moved into the Books section you guys can...
Anyway...
I was thinking about the importance of the passwords in the books. Some of them are obvious, like Sir Cadogan whole thing with having to change up passwords repeatedly ultimately led to Sirius being able to enter Gryffindor Tower. Sirius didn't know the password on Halloween, and the Fat Lady got all messed up... In Chamber of Secrets, the trio realizes that the person who stole the diary is in Gryffindor, because no one else would know the password...
Then there are the kinda obvious ones, like the mimbulus mimbletonia served, at least partly, to remind us that Neville's birthday is right around the same time as Harry's.
But the other night I came across a paragraph in GoF, when Ron and Harry are walking up to Gryffindor Tower, and Ron stops mid-thought and says the password. Seems meaningless.
But the password at the time was "Balderdash," which I found out for sure by using a thesaurus, means "nonsense." The paragraph was when he says that Dumbledore has always done things his own way, and Moody is always getting into trouble anyway, acting first and thinking later. He reminds Harry of the dustbins and then says "Balderdash" immediately afterward.
This struck me as odd (finally, upon my, like, twenty-seventh time reading it), and I realized that that was a VERY obscure clue about Moody. What everyone thought about what happened with Moody and the dustbins was, indeed, nonsense. They didn't know it, and we didn't know it, but Moody was actually making more sense that night than he had for a long time.
Anyway... I don't really care to look through all the books right now, things are hectic around here... but if anyone else notices somewhere else that the password provide some hint or insight to the story, post it here.