“If you don’t mind me asking, how – how did you get out of Azkaban, if you didn’t use Dark Magic?"
Sirius replied:
“I don’t know how I did it...I think the only reason I never lost my mind is that I knew I was innocent. That wasn’t a happy thought, so the Dementors couldn’t suck it out of me ... but it kept me sane and knowing who I am ... helped me keep my powers..."
- Chapter 19, Harry Potter and the Prisoner of Azkaban
- Her parents' death (2:7)
- Her adoption by Mordechai (2:7)
- Being taken to the palace (2:8)
- Going to the King (2:16)
- Crowned as queen (2:17)
(13) Mordecai had this message delivered to Esther: “Do not imagine that you, of all the Jews, will escape with your life by being in the king’s palace. (14) On the contrary, if you keep silent in this crisis, relief and deliverance will come to the Jews from another quarter, while you and your father’s house will perish. And who knows, perhaps you have attained to royal position for just such a crisis.”
(15) Then Esther sent back this answer to Mordecai: (16) “Go, assemble all the Jews who live in Shushan, and fast in my behalf; do not eat or drink for three days, night or day. I and my maidens will observe the same fast. Then I shall go to the king, though it is contrary to the law; and if I am to perish, I shall perish!” (17) So Mordecai went about [the city] and did just as Esther had commanded him.
(1) On the third day, Esther dressed in royalty and stood in the inner court of the king’s palace, facing the king’s palace, while the king was sitting on his royal throne in the throne room facing the entrance of the palace. (2) As soon as the king saw Queen Esther standing in the court, she won his favor. The king extended to Esther the golden scepter which he had in his hand, and Esther approached and touched the tip of the scepter.
(29) Then Queen Esther daughter of Abihail wrote this second letter of Purim for the purpose of confirming with full authority the aforementioned one of Mordecai the Jew. (30) Dispatches were sent to all the Jews in the hundred and twenty-seven provinces of the realm of Ahasuerus with an ordinance of “equity and honesty” (31) These days of Purim shall be observed at their proper time, as Mordecai the Jew—and now Queen Esther—has obligated them to do...(32) And Esther’s ordinance validating these observances of Purim was recorded in a scroll.