|
Mr.
|
and
|
Mrs.
|
Dursley,
|
of
|
number
|
four,
|
Privet
|
Drive
|
were
|
proud
|
to
|
say
|
that
|
they
|
were
|
perfectly
|
normal,
|
thank
|
you
|
very
|
much.
|
They
|
were
|
the
|
|
|
last
|
people
|
you'd
|
expect
|
to
|
be
|
involved
|
in
|
anything
|
strange
|
or
|
mysterious,
|
because
|
they
|
just
|
didn't
|
hold
|
with
|
such
|
nonsense.
|
Mr.
|
Dursley
|
was
|
the
|
director
|
|
|
of
|
a
|
firm
|
called
|
Grunnings,
|
which
|
made
|
drills.
|
He
|
was
|
a
|
big,
|
beefy
|
man
|
with
|
hardly
|
any
|
neck,
|
although
|
he
|
did
|
have
|
a
|
very
|
large
|
|
|
mustache.
|
Mrs.
|
Dursley
|
was
|
thin
|
and
|
blonde
|
and
|
had
|
nearly
|
twice
|
the
|
usual
|
amount
|
of
|
neck,
|
which
|
came
|
in
|
very
|
useful
|
as
|
she
|
spent
|
so
|
|
|
much
|
of
|
her
|
time
|
craning
|
over
|
garden
|
fences,
|
spying
|
on
|
the
|
neighbors.
|
The
|
Dursleys
|
had
|
a
|
small
|
son
|
called
|
Dudley
|
and
|
in
|
their
|
opinion
|
there
|
|
|
was
|
no
|
finer
|
boy
|
anywhere.
|
The
|
Dursleys
|
had
|
everything
|
they
|
wanted,
|
but
|
they
|
also
|
had
|
a
|
secret,
|
and
|
their
|
greatest
|
fear
|
was
|
that
|
somebody
|
would
|
|
|
discover
|
it.
|
They
|
didn't
|
think
|
they
|
could
|
bear
|
it
|
if
|
anyone
|
found
|
out
|
about
|
the
|
Potters.
|
Mrs.
|
Potter
|
was
|
Mrs.
|
Dursley's
|
sister,
|
but
|
they
|
hadn't
|
|
|
met
|
for
|
several
|
years;
|
in
|
fact,
|
Mrs.
|
Dursley
|
pretended
|
she
|
didn't
|
have
|
a
|
sister,
|
because
|
her
|
sister
|
and
|
her
|
good-
|
for-
|
nothing
|
husband
|
were
|
as...
|
|
Was it intentional that you cut off right before the best word?