I don't think so. That was another way the world opened for Harry upon realizing he wasn't a normal human. For him, and for everyone who didn't already know what a wizard could expect out of life.
I remember wondering if Voldemort's longevity was unusual, and realizing that part actually wasn't. Hagrid is just two years younger than him (a third year when Tom was a fifth year), and the groundskeeper is hardly living an old man's life when Harry meets him! Hagrid is seventy years old when he fights in the battle of Hogwarts, interacts with Harry's children at Hogwarts nineteen years after that. And this is not exceptional. The books are full of people who knew the protagonists' parents as children and were already adults at the time, and they're peppered with people who are a good deal older than that. It gives the world a kind of warmth - the fact that the people in it get to watch multiple generations grow up, and they have about a century of active life to look forward to, if something doesn't kill them prematurely.
Muggles my parents' age ragged each other about being "old" at forty or fifty, because often their bodies declined noticeably from there on and they rarely clear a hundred. Wizards are "old" when they reach a hundred. And that's not even getting into the difference in health expectations.
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I don't think so. That was another way the world opened for Harry upon realizing he wasn't a normal human. For him, and for everyone who didn't already know what a wizard could expect out of life.
I remember wondering if Voldemort's longevity was unusual, and realizing that part actually wasn't. Hagrid is just two years younger than him (a third year when Tom was a fifth year), and the groundskeeper is hardly living an old man's life when Harry meets him! Hagrid is seventy years old when he fights in the battle of Hogwarts, interacts with Harry's children at Hogwarts nineteen years after that. And this is not exceptional. The books are full of people who knew the protagonists' parents as children and were already adults at the time, and they're peppered with people who are a good deal older than that. It gives the world a kind of warmth - the fact that the people in it get to watch multiple generations grow up, and they have about a century of active life to look forward to, if something doesn't kill them prematurely.
Muggles my parents' age ragged each other about being "old" at forty or fifty, because often their bodies declined noticeably from there on and they rarely clear a hundred. Wizards are "old" when they reach a hundred. And that's not even getting into the difference in health expectations.