Not been reading the series recently… but I noticed that these are classical elements
Roughly fire, earth, sea, air and void. Which fits the japanese element system.
Unsure of the meaning though.
Edit: I’ve recently learnt that Voldemort real name was Tom Riddle, did he like riddles in canon? It could just be Voldy checking to see how strong his horcrux’s influence was on Harry?
Already the ancient Greeks extended their four elements with the fifth: quintessence, or æther, the substance of which the heavens are made. (So four elements in the world, a fifth in the heavens, and never shall they meet.) So I took Voldemort’s riddle as referring to Greek rather than Japanese elementology.
I don’t recall any Riddle riddles in canon. In Book 2, identifying Riddle as Voldemort is the riddle that the reader (or Harry, but he never did) must solve. Later on, Dumbledore considers the riddle of why Riddle became what he did.
Well, in book 2, it seems to be a point that the reader is supposed to solve a riddle based on his name. This is parodied in Barry Trotter where everything remotely connected to the villain is some anagram of the villain’s name.
Not been reading the series recently… but I noticed that these are classical elements
Roughly fire, earth, sea, air and void. Which fits the japanese element system.
Unsure of the meaning though.
Edit: I’ve recently learnt that Voldemort real name was Tom Riddle, did he like riddles in canon? It could just be Voldy checking to see how strong his horcrux’s influence was on Harry?
Already the ancient Greeks extended their four elements with the fifth: quintessence, or æther, the substance of which the heavens are made. (So four elements in the world, a fifth in the heavens, and never shall they meet.) So I took Voldemort’s riddle as referring to Greek rather than Japanese elementology.
I don’t recall any Riddle riddles in canon. In Book 2, identifying Riddle as Voldemort is the riddle that the reader (or Harry, but he never did) must solve. Later on, Dumbledore considers the riddle of why Riddle became what he did.
Well, in book 2, it seems to be a point that the reader is supposed to solve a riddle based on his name. This is parodied in Barry Trotter where everything remotely connected to the villain is some anagram of the villain’s name.
That is, it sounds like something Riddle would say.