"I guess the real reason Ginny Weasley's like this is because she opened
her heart and spilled all her secrets to an invisible stranger." -Tom
Marvolo Riddle
Harry and the diary:
There lay Ginny Weasley, she was on the cold floor she looked so lifeless by the time I got there.
Ron had stayed back, and I saw her on the ground she looked so dead.
Something about her, I knew she was alive, I don't know how but I did. Emotionally though, she looked so drained so 'already dead.'
I guess alls well that ends well right?
Not for Ginny.
After the 'Chamber of Secrets' Ginny was never the same again. It was as though she was missing. Often she brought up 'Tom' in a very round about way.
"Yeah, I know, he was terrible but he really wasn't always so bad, he could be sweet to me sometimes-"
She was so vulnerable from that day on. It was as though a bit of her innocence about there 'not being evil in the world' was taken away.
Cynical she became.
The poor girl had lost so much pride I hear.
She gave her life to that small crimson diary. I hear she poured herself into it, she lost herself in it. Because she became so freely absorbed in it that nothing else mattered. Nothing.
Ginny told me a few things she wrote in it, it was normal stuff 'really', she had written a few things about me, and how about Fred and George were always playing jokes on her, and how she had second hand stuff. Normal things.
But then again, she didn't show me all of it either.
She told me she got carried away with the diary and that 'he' befriended her, that he really did like her as a friend.
I didn't see how she could've gotten caught up in it, it was a bloody diary not some person.
I hear he sweet-talked her quite a bit. Told her how great she was, and how much fun she was to talk to.
But in the end, you can't really justify Ginny's behavior either can you?
I mean, Voldermort's evil, believe me, but in the same token didn't Ginny do something equally as evil? She 'sold' her soul to someone/something.
It was innocent enough, but Ginny SOLD OUT.
You can't really dismiss that now can you?
She helped out the git, no matter which way you're planning to sugarcoat the matter.
And it was all her own folly, he certainly coaxed her, but it began with her. It began with Ginny and her insecurities.
What scares me though, is not the incident itself but how Ginny was so vulnerable she felt as though she had tell this diary things. How she felt as though she needed to sell her soul.
I guess, you can't really trust anyone or anything. Whether it be a diary, or your best friend sitting right next to you...
Harry and the diary:
There lay Ginny Weasley, she was on the cold floor she looked so lifeless by the time I got there.
Ron had stayed back, and I saw her on the ground she looked so dead.
Something about her, I knew she was alive, I don't know how but I did. Emotionally though, she looked so drained so 'already dead.'
I guess alls well that ends well right?
Not for Ginny.
After the 'Chamber of Secrets' Ginny was never the same again. It was as though she was missing. Often she brought up 'Tom' in a very round about way.
"Yeah, I know, he was terrible but he really wasn't always so bad, he could be sweet to me sometimes-"
She was so vulnerable from that day on. It was as though a bit of her innocence about there 'not being evil in the world' was taken away.
Cynical she became.
The poor girl had lost so much pride I hear.
She gave her life to that small crimson diary. I hear she poured herself into it, she lost herself in it. Because she became so freely absorbed in it that nothing else mattered. Nothing.
Ginny told me a few things she wrote in it, it was normal stuff 'really', she had written a few things about me, and how about Fred and George were always playing jokes on her, and how she had second hand stuff. Normal things.
But then again, she didn't show me all of it either.
She told me she got carried away with the diary and that 'he' befriended her, that he really did like her as a friend.
I didn't see how she could've gotten caught up in it, it was a bloody diary not some person.
I hear he sweet-talked her quite a bit. Told her how great she was, and how much fun she was to talk to.
But in the end, you can't really justify Ginny's behavior either can you?
I mean, Voldermort's evil, believe me, but in the same token didn't Ginny do something equally as evil? She 'sold' her soul to someone/something.
It was innocent enough, but Ginny SOLD OUT.
You can't really dismiss that now can you?
She helped out the git, no matter which way you're planning to sugarcoat the matter.
And it was all her own folly, he certainly coaxed her, but it began with her. It began with Ginny and her insecurities.
What scares me though, is not the incident itself but how Ginny was so vulnerable she felt as though she had tell this diary things. How she felt as though she needed to sell her soul.
I guess, you can't really trust anyone or anything. Whether it be a diary, or your best friend sitting right next to you...
