HAGRID: Where’s me manners? A very happy birthday to yeh. Got summat fer yeh here — I mighta sat on it at some point, but it’ll taste all right.
YOUNG HARRY: Who are you?
HAGRID
YOUNG HARRY: Hogwhere?
HAGRID: Hogwarts. Yeh’ll know all about Hogwarts, o’ course.
YOUNG HARRY: Er — no. Sorry.
HAGRID: Sorry? It’s them as should be sorry! I knew yeh weren’t gettin’ yer letters but I never thought yeh wouldn’t even know abou’ Hogwarts, fer cryin’ out loud! Did yeh never wonder where yer parents learnt it all?
YOUNG HARRY: Learnt what?
HAGRID: Do you mean ter tell me, that this boy — this boy! — knows nothin’ abou’ — about ANYTHING?
UNCLE VERNON: I forbid you to tell the boy anything more!
YOUNG HARRY: Tell me what?
HAGRID: Harry — yer a wizard — yeh changed everything. Yer the most famous wizard in the whole world.
ACT ONE, SCENE NINE
HARRY AND GINNY POTTER’S HOUSE, BEDROOM
GINNY: Harry . . .
HARRY: It’s fine. Go back to sleep.
GINNY: Lumos.
A nightmare?
HARRY: Yes.
GINNY: About what?
HARRY: The Dursleys — well, it started there — then it became something else.
GINNY: Do you want a Sleeping Draught?
HARRY: No. I’ll be fine. Go back to sleep.
GINNY: You don’t seem fine.
HARRY: The anger I can cope with, the fact he’s right is harder. Amos lost his son because of me —
GINNY: That doesn’t seem particularly fair on yourself . . .
HARRY: — and there’s nothing I can say — nothing I can say to anyone — unless it’s the wrong thing, of course . . .
GINNY: So that’s what’s upsetting you? The night before Hogwarts, it’s never a good night if you don’t want to go. Giving Al the blanket. It was a nice try.
HARRY: It went pretty badly wrong from there. I said some things, Ginny . . .
GINNY: I heard.
HARRY: And you’re still talking to me?
GINNY: Because I know that when the time is right you’ll say sorry. That you didn’t mean it. That what you said concealed . . . other things. You can be honest with him, Harry . . . That’s all he needs.
HARRY: I just wish he was more like James or Lily.
GINNY
HARRY: No, I wouldn’t change a thing about him . . . but I can understand them, and . . .
GINNY: Albus is different and isn’t that a good thing. And he can tell, you know, when you’re putting on your Harry Potter front. He wants to see the real you.
HARRY: “The truth is a beautiful and terrible thing, and should therefore be treated with great caution.”
Dumbledore.
GINNY: A strange thing to say to a child.
HARRY: Not when you believe that child will have to die to save the world.
GINNY: Harry. What’s wrong?
HARRY: Fine. I’m fine. I hear you. I’ll try to be —
GINNY: Does your scar hurt?
HARRY: No. No. I’m fine. Now, Nox that and let’s get some sleep.
GINNY: Harry. How long has it been since your scar hurt?
HARRY: Twenty-two years.
ACT ONE, SCENE TEN
THE HOGWARTS EXPRESS