by highsorcerer » Sunday 3 August 2003 10:25:09am
Neville's behavior shows the exact opposite - he can't forget what happened to his parents. It's why he was so afraid of having magical power for so long - and when Bellatrix Lestrange jailbroke from Azkaban, he was so afraid not to have magic to defend himself. Neville's character respresents the balance between power, and it's utlimate responsibilites. Harry never really understood what being brave was. He knew he parents died fighting evil, and that was it. Neville faces a living reminder that there are some things worse than death. He's brave because when it come down to it, he took on his parent's attacker (Bellatrix Lestrange) knowing he was almost powerless against her.
Neville also shows that the Sorting Hat is almost never wrong. His initial apperance makes him too cowardly for Gryffindore, and not smart enough for Ravenclaw. While he is pure blood, he also didn't fit in with Slytherin. In the end, he is brave enough to side with Harry even without his wand or the ability to speak a spell. He'll give his life for his friends willingly. Apart from Harry, he was the last student Wizard standing at the battle of the Department of Mysteries. With almost nothing left (his wand, his speech, etc all destroyed), he still stood by Harry, wiling to die if that was the only thing he could do to stop evil.