By popular demand (đ) Best Trope Ever rec list is back for Part 2: âJily from Snapeâs POVâ *everybody cheered*! (See Part 1 here)
change the prophecy by ninazenikcult
Severus overhears an intimate conversation between Lily and James at the end of Seventh Year that confirms his worst fear; that he has lost Lily Evans forever.
Eavesdropping by @sofargoneao3
Severus watches as Lily falls for James.
Slipping Away by @yallthemwitches
Snape didn't think his life could get much worse---until Lily was falling in love with James Potter right before his eyes. A compilation of 3 particular moments between 6th and 7th year.
Not a Bang, But a Whimper by yallofthemwitches
During their sixth year, Severus Snape goes out after curfew to give information to Lily that he thinks will bring them back together. Unfortunately, he finds her already with someone else. A companion piece to my other oneshot "Slipping Away" for Jily Week 2024, Day 7: Continuation Station
Legilimens by yallofthemwitches
Perhaps the real James was doing it on purpose--using memories of Lily to either drive him insane or to push away the real secrets that hid beyond. If it was true, he was succeeding on all accounts. During a duel, Snape attempts Legilimency on James. Canon compliant. Oneshot
Playing Dirty by yallofthemwitches (big thanks for feeding this trope!)
When Lily won against Potter during dueling practice, Snape couldn't think of a better way to finally rekindle their friendship. But Potter was a sore loser and Lily seemed far too willing to entertain him.
Rumor Has It by @tedwardremus
Severus doesn't believe the rumors that Lily finally agreed to go out with James Potter.
inevitability by peachiekeens
The snotty one tried to trip him on the way out, and Lily stamped on his foot hard enough to elicit a gasp as they emerged into the corridor. âThatâs what Gryffindors are like, Lily.â Severus said matter-of-factly as the door closed behind them. Lily nodded, but her eyes were far away. Severus had a sinking feeling in his chest. They didnât talk about the sorting again. OR The development of James and Lily's relationship, as seen through Severus Snape's eyes.
hereâs your not so gentle reminder harryâs not piteously pathetic at potions. hereâs a refresher:
fifth year, he sat for his owls and scored an exceeds expectations. not an acceptable, or poor, or dreadful, or troll (an ee in owls most probably equals a >75 in gsce oâs during the 90s)
he didnât duplicate hermione, shrink her, and sneak her into the exam hall to pluck answers off her brain. he didnât scribble a cheat sheet a la fa mulan on his arm
fifth year he has yet to clap eyes on the half-blood princeâs notes
as always, he didnât feel confident about his answers/abilities, but he bloody exceeded expectations
he got into newts potions, a class of only twelve students
so harry got an ee, ron got an ee, maybe everyone else got an oustanding. or maybe only half a dozen got outstanding, and the rest exceeds expectations.
it still means the entirety of hufflepuff sixth years arenât promising potioneers except ernie macmillan. poor boy probably tutors the others in the common room. all of the slytherin sixth years, excluding four, are absolutely worse off than harry and ron at potions. ravenclaw sixth years are shamefully inadequate at potions too, aside from four students.
harryâs not a marvel at potions. he doesnât enjoy potions. but heâs good at potions, heâs capable enough. he isnât blowing up cauldrons every month, thatâs seamus. he can differentiate the ingredients. he knows how to cut, dice, chop, and stir. the spirit of sixteen year old severus snape didnât possess him via the pages to help him brew his elixirs and essences in slughornâs class. harry deciphered snapeâs spidery, crammed annotations and executed them perfectly.
iâm bloody tired of these rancid âharry sucks so bad at potions except when heâs got the prince or hermioneâs helpâ takes.
So I saw many theories regarding how to make a Horcrux, but none of them really made perfect sense to me, so I decided to give it a crack myself as part of my mission to understand Lord Voldemort/Tom Marvolo Riddle (Which I think I did, big post coming about that at some point, this is but another piece of that puzzle of a man)
So this is my reverse engineering of a ritual to create Horcruxes based on book evidence, my knowledge of real-world alchemy, real-world ancient Greek cults and rituals and linguistic analysis.
The first thing, is to define what we knew fore certain:
The name: "Horcrux"
The creator is an Ancient Greek wizard named Harpo the Foul.
A death is required in the making.
A Horcrux holds a piece of the casters soul that anchors them to life so they won't die.
I'll actually start with the third point.
Both Dumbledore and Slughorn mention a death being required to tear your soul to make a Horcrux, and that never really sat right with me. It magically doesn't make sense and even the canon examples we have for Horcrux murders make this statment iffy.
We have seven examples of murders used to create Horcruxs (thanks to one Tom Riddle being dramatic):
The Diary - Myrtle Warren - killed by a basilisk. Sure, Tom freed the Basilisk, but it hardly seemed targeted at Myrtle specifically and you can argue he didn't actually kill her (more a manslaughter by negligence). He didn't cast the spell, so how come this tore his soul?
The Ring - his father (Tom Riddle Sr) - Avada Kadevra.
The Cup - Hepzibah Smith - she was poisoned by her house elf. Sure, the elf was under the imperious, but it wasn't a first-degree murder, and like with the Basilisk I find it hard to consider this the same as casting a killing curse. Magically those are very different things.
The Locket - Muggle Tramp - Avada Kadevra
The Diadem - Albanian Peasant - Avada Kadevra
Harry Potter - himself - backfired Avada Kadevra
Nagini - Bertha Jorkins - Avada Kadevra
Now, I used the term "magically different" or "magically make sense" what do I mean by that?
Well, besides the fact I'm going to make a full post about how I see magical theory in the Harry Potter Wizarding World, I'll say it takes a lot after occult philosophies from Alchemy that are very old, Slughorn mentions as much in book 6 and there are a few other references to it. I'm just gonna cover the basics required for this theory.
In Alchemy, everything (people, animals, plants and rocks) are built of three base components:
The Salt - the body - the physical form.
The Sulfur - the soul - the self that holds the divine flame.
The Murcury - the spirit - the life essence that binds the salt and sulfer together.
Now, in Alchemy, the main study is in purifying and combining these different aspects of material. Let's look at a herb, for an example:
If we want to retrieve its salt, we'll dry the herb completely using fire to leave behind a fine light grey ash that represents only the physical form.
If we wanted its mercury we'd distill all liquids from it until we get a purified, clear liquid which in the case of plants would be alcohol (it's why alcohol is referred to as "spirit").
And if we wanted its soul, we would take the remains from the distillation and drying process which would be a kind of oil.
(it can get more complicated with different materials, but this isn't a post about Alchemy)
Now, back to Horcruxs.
So, if we would want to split a soul, Alchemecly, how do we go about it?
Well, we don't. Not really. See a soul can't really be split, as every part of it, every bit of that oil from our random herb represents the entire soul. It's why something like a Horcrux could theoretically work in giving a full life to the diary the way we see in Chamber of Secrets.
Additionally, to work with any material in Alchemy, you are required to purify it first. It means that to get a piece of soul to bind to a diary, you need a pure soul.
Killing someone else won't sever your own soul from the spirit and the body, it's not how this works. Killing someone severs their spirit and therefore splits their body, spirit, and soul. Besides, an Ancient Greek man, like Herpo was, would hardly consider murder as vile as we do today. It wouldn't even cross his mind that any murder (even an indirect one) could harm one's own soul.
No, the only way to "split" a soul is to first sever it from life, disconnecting the bond between soul and body. Essentially, the only way to promise you immortality is to kill yourself.
I know it sounds a little confusing, but, essentially, once the soul is severed from the spirit and body you can split it. Think of the herbal oil, once you have the oil, separate from the rest of the plant parts, you can combine it with new ingredients. You can only work on a specific aspect once you severed it from the other two and as what binds all three together is spirit â life â the only way to do it for a human soul â is death.
Well, here comes the second thing we know about making Horcruxs â that dear Herpo was Ancient Greek.
In Ancient Greece they had multiple different religious cults, some of which were Chthonic cults. Cults that dedicated themselves to death or ditties and heroes associated with death and more importantly â rebirth.
Many of these cults were dedicated to figures like Orpheous, Dyonysus, Persephone, characters in mythology who are known for going through the underworld â through death â and coming back out. These cults were very secretive and not much is known about their practices, but some is.
What is known is that they had rituals were they reenacted a death and then rebirth (usually drinking wine â a water if life, was the representation of rebirth).
This created a very clear idea in my head â to split a soul, you'll have to ritualisticlly, magically kill yourself, severe a peice of your soul and then revive yourself with a water of life â a potion.
This potion is never mentioned, but I believe it exists due to these Chthonic cult rituals and how they were structured. Not only that, but the Greek underworld did have a river known for being incredibly painful to drink, literally made of fire, but being able to bring the dead back - The Phlegethon River.
Note: Lethe River Water (the river in the Greek Underworld that makes the drinker forget) is a canon ingredient in a Forgetfulness Potion.
Well, congratulations, you killed yourself to retrieve a sliver of your soul and revived yourself so you won't stay dead. You found an item you can keep secure to tie that sliver of soul, too. Now, how would you bind then? After all, the only thing meant to bind a human soul to a body is a human spirit - a human life... you get where I'm going with this.
This is why Tom didn't have to be the one to do the deed. As long as he had a recently deceased corpse to harvest the life from to use to bind his newly split soul and the item of his choice.
It explains why nothing was missing from the bodies. Myrtle and the Riddles were investigated by the Ministry of Magic. One would assume the aurors would've noticed if any corpse was missing a hand due to the killer eating it (as other Horcrux theories suggest).
Not only was nothing missing from the body, the soul was intact. Myrtle became a ghost after death, a ghost is quite literally, just the soul, no body, no spirit.
So the only thing that was taken from Tom's victims was their life, quite literally at that.
Not really. See, when analyzing spells in Harry Potter is their name.
Avada Kadevra - is a reference to an Aramaic healing spell "Abracadabra" pronounced in Aramaic as: "Avra Kadebra" and meaning "I will create as commanded". Merged with the Latin word "cadaver" meaning "corpse" to create -> "I will create dead bodies as commanded"
Or Wingardium Laviosa - is a cross of the English word "wing", the Latin word "arduus" (meaning "high, tall, lofty, steep, proudly elevated"), or "arduum"Â (meaning "steep place, the steep" and the Latin word "levo" (meaning to "raise, lift up"). So together the spell means -> "lift high up".
So, it's pretty clear spells, their names and incantations are very self-explanatory. So a Horcrux should be no different.
I've seen some attempts at translating the name Horcrux. Unfortunately, these attempts treated the name as Latin, modern Greek, or Old English. Herpo, was Ancient Greek, though, so I went and translated a few possible meanings from Ancient Greek (Classical Greek and Homeric Greek are what I looked at):
ᜠÏÎșÎżÏ (orkus, pronounced "hor-kus") - an oath, the object by which one swears, bound by oath (still used in modern Greek).
ÎșÏÏÎșÎ”Ï (crukes, pronounced "cru-kes") - saffron-colored (blood red in Greek), crocus flower. The crocus flower symbolizes both death (the saffron that is the spice) and rebirth (the golden crocus which brings renewal and joy) because Demeter wears them when Persephone returns from the underworld in myth.
So what we have is a spell called "binding oath of death and rebirth" which all around sounds fitting.
There might also be a "made in blood" tucked at the end due to the association of ÎșÏÏÎșÎ”Ï with the color of blood.
But what does it matter?
Well, somewhat. As now with this name, I expect the binding between the spirit from the victim, the split soul, and the item would be done in a sort of oath - an orkus.
The association with blood gives us another hint. Blood is the part of the human body most representative of life. Therefore, in Alchemy, your blood is your spirit. So it'll make sense that your own blood would be used in the binding process or more correctly in the process of turning another person's spirit into your own. Making the thread to bind the body (item) and the soul piece your own. As it also refers to just a red firey color, it can indicate the Phlagatton potion I hypothesize should be part of the ritual due to how Chthonic rituals usually went, as the Phlagaton river is made of fire.
So we have a general idea on how to make a Horcrux. You need an item of your choice to bind your soul to. You need a life (spirit) harvested from a human that you transformed into being your own using your blood. And you need a piece of your own soul, which you get by killing yourself and then reviving yourself. And you finish it off by binding it all together with an oath.
So, everyone knows Voldemort succeeded in somehow making a Horcrux accidentally, something a lot of theories I saw don't account for. Becouse whatever process you need to go to to make a Horcrux, Voldemort went through all of it the night he died the first time and marked Harry.
All the steps for my method of making a Horcrux were met that night.
The item in qustion is baby Harry, nothing interesting there.
The soul sliver was split the way it always is â through death. Voldemort dies, killed by his own killing curse and that is what splits his soul.
The life or spirit that then binds his soul to Harry isn't Lily's spirit or James'; it's his own spirit that acts as a binder between Harry and Voldemortâs split soul. Because the spirit was already his, there was no need to transform it by blood.
I'm not going to actually give the full step-by-step least a budging dark lord is looking for this information. I do have notes about exact incantations and even the full recipe and instructions for the Phlagaton potion I'm going to mention. These instructions won't be here since they are more in the realm of speculation and headcanon. This is just the overview of the ritual based on canon information and the occult philosophy I mentioned above.
Get access to a recently deceased human and extract their Mercury (Spirit or Life Essence).
Submerge the retrieved life essence with your own blood on a new moon (life and vitality). (7 drops of blood will probably do)
To complete the cycle of death and rebirth youâll need the Phlegeton Water potion to return you to life at the end of the cycle.
As you brew the potion, it must be brewed in a dark room, preferably underground to remind as much of the underworld as possible.
While brewing the potion one must be in the mindset of the Phlegeton, must be willing to go through agony to achieve eternal life and imbue these thoughts in their potion. (In alchemy, when working, it is believed you imbue your work with your thoughts during the Alchemical process. As an Alchemical process affects both the material being worked and the Alchemist themselves)
Likley Ingrediants:
Saffron spice
Golden crocus flower juice
Pomegranate juice
Set up your space so none of the components may escape the ritual space and so the ritual will not be interfered with.
Make sure the spirit you retrieved is within reach.
Make sure the item you desire will hold the Horcrux will be within reach as well.
Coax the spirit into the item and prepare it to tie your soul to the next step.
To create a thread of your soul to tie to the ritual, you must die figuratively. Go through death to return stronger from the underworld.
Once you feel like death has reached you and your soul is separated you should heal your soul and finish the cycle, bringing you out of death and back to life by drinking the Phlegeton potion.
After the pain subsides you will feel healthier than before, stronger than before, and youâll have an additional thread of sulfur (soul) in your chest to be pulled out and placed into the Horcrux.
The split-off soul should, on its own, try to search for life and a body to be bound to. If it doesn't, coax it out yourself and bind it to the Horcrux with the spirit you made in step 1.
The connection between the body (the item), soul, and spirit is still unstable, if most likely strong enough to hold.
Swear the oath of life to finalise the bound between you, the Horcrux, and the soul thread together to ward off death.
I don't know what all goes into the process of making a Horcrux but I don't believe a person who truly likes themselves and doesn't want to inflict pain on themselves could make a Horcrux. Tearing up your soul is an act of arrogance above nature, sure, thinking you deserve to change the laws of the world and be the exception is part of it, but it's also an act of self-hatred. You need to hate yourself enough to be willing to kill yourself, hurt yourself, and tear yourself up in the most unnatural ways â hence why so few can do so, let alone more than once.
And Tom Riddle does seem to have that exact mix of arrogance, spite, and low self-esteem that would allow it.
Part 2. Intelligence and recklessness. Sirius Black (and James Potter, with a bit of Remus and Peter too)
Or who is the smartest of the Marauders?
Sirius and James are described multiple times as exceptionally intelligent. They didnât need help from Remus or Lily to pass their exams. James didnât envy Sirius for being ahead academically, and Sirius didnât ask Remus for help. They could handle everything on their own.
For example, McGonagall rarely gives praise without good reason. Here are her words about James (often unfairly depicted as less intelligent than Sirius or Remus) and Sirius:
âPrecisely,â said Professor McGonagall. âBlack and Potter. Ringleaders of their little gang. Both very bright, of course â exceptionally bright, in fact â but I donât think weâve ever had such a pair of troublemakers ââ
Being "exceptionally bright" is an extremely high praise for intellectual ability from McGonagall.
As for Peter, she speaks rather average of him:
âPettigrew... that fat little boy who was always tagging around after them at Hogwarts?â said Madam Rosmerta. âHero-worshipped Black and Potter,â said Professor McGonagall. âNever quite in their league, talent-wise. I was often rather sharp with him. You can imagine how I â how I regret that now...â She sounded as though she had a sudden head cold.
Moreover, Peter "was always hopeless at duelling," according to McGonagall. This means that over 7 years, Peter failed to impress McGonagall with his academic achievements. As the head of his house, she was aware of all his grades. Perhaps he was just an average student, but then it's unclear why McGonagall was "often rather sharp with him." She doesn't seem like the type to be sharp over trivial matters.
Slughorn:
âWell, anyway, he (Sirius) was a big pal of your fatherâs at school. The whole Black family had been in my house, but Sirius ended up in Gryffindor! Shame â he was a talented boy. I got his brother Regulus when he came along, but Iâd have liked the set.â
While Lupinâs words might be biased, he often speaks quite judiciously about people around him, thus:
"Look, Harry, what youâve got to understand is that your father and Sirius were the best in the school at whatever they did â everyone thought they were the height of cool â if they sometimes got a bit carried away â"
He confirms that Sirius and James were the best at everything in school. Meaning academically first of all, because school is primarily about studying.
"It took them the best part of three years to work out how to do it. Your father and Sirius here were the cleverest students in the school, and lucky they were, because the Animagus transformation can go horribly wrong â one reason the Ministry keeps a close watch on those attempting to do it."
And a bit more praise from Lupin towards Sirius and James' giftedness. They were both gifted â Sirius and James.
Even Dumbledore acknowledges:
âSirius told me all about how they became Animagi last night,â said Dumbledore, smiling. âAn extraordinary achievement â not least, keeping it quiet from me.â
So, not only did they become Animagi (Peter wasnât much help, according to Lupin), created the Marauder's Map, which contained very unusual magic (they, of course, all created the Map together, but based on the description above, I can assume that the main magical component of the map was the responsibility of James and Sirius), excelled in their studies, created a magical FaceTime â an artefact for communication among themselves, they also managed to keep a lot from the school's headmaster and other teachers. Intelligence plus cunning.
Sirius and James' reaction to others' "stupidity":
âHow thick are you, Wormtail?â said James impatiently. âYou run round with a werewolf once a month ââÂ
âKeep your voice down,â implored Lupin.Â
âWell, I thought that paper was a piece of cake,â he heard Sirius say. âIâll be surprised if I donât get âOutstandingâ on it at least.âÂ
âMe too,â said James.
Here, I donât want to dwell on their rudeness, but rather on the reaction itself. Often Lupin is seen studying more than anyone (I too like to see him buried in books), but perhaps Lupin simply needed to study more to pass his exams. He buried himself in textbooks not because he was the smartest, but because it was necessary for him. Remus is clearly not dumb; he became a professor at Hogwarts, heâs also described as intelligent in the canon, but things came much easier to James and Sirius, and they were well aware of how smart they were. Hence their reaction. When a teenager is confident in their superiority, and their intellect is often validated by external factors (grades, teachers' praise), such a reaction from James and Sirius, considering their personalities, is quite expected for their still maturing characters.
âWeâve still got Transfiguration, if youâre bored you could test me. Here...â and he (Lupin) held out his book.
But Sirius snorted. âI donât need to look at that rubbish, I know it all.â
Sirius' reaction is unequivocal. He doesnât need to read anything like Lupin, memorising paragraphs. To him, itâs all "rubbish" that he already knows. Sirius likely had a very good long-term memory.
Sirius' memory and attention to detail even after 12 years in Azkaban are also quite remarkable.
"Congratulations on getting past the Horntail, whoever put your name in that Goblet shouldnât be feeling too happy right now! I was going to suggest a Conjunctivitis curse, as a dragonâs eyes are its weakest point â"
âThatâs what Krum did!â Hermione whispered.
Clearly, during his 12 years in Azkaban, he didnât need this knowledge. Itâs unlikely he ever used this knowledge in practice. But he remembered it, ready to mention it right away, not having peeked in any books. Even Hermione didnât know.
âMy God,â said Lupin softly, staring from Scabbers to the picture in the paper and back again.
âHis front paw...â
âWhat about it?â said Ron defiantly.
âHeâs got a toe missing,â said Black.
And this is about his attentiveness. To notice that a rat is missing a toe from a small photograph while sitting in Azkaban⊠I wouldnât have noticed even without Azkaban.
As for adult Sirius, the fourth book shows many of Sirius' reasonable assumptions that eventually are confirmed. What people mistake for stupidity is his recklessness, as well as his willingness to die for those he loves, to protect them at any cost. His recklessness is usually related to this.
âThe Ministryâs forced through another decree, which means weâre not allowed to have Quidditch teams ââ
âOr secret Defence Against the Dark Arts groups?â said Sirius. There was a short pause.
âHow did you know about that?â Harry demanded.
âYou want to choose your meeting places more carefully,â said Sirius, grinning even more broadly.
âThe Hogâs Head, I ask you.â
âWell, it was better than the Three Broomsticks!â said Hermione defensively. âThatâs always packed with people ââ
âWhich means youâd have been harder to overhear,â said Sirius. âYouâve got a lot to learn, Hermione.â
Hermione is very smart, but Sirius immediately explains their tactical mistake. But it still sounds somewhat condescending.
âBut, Sirius, this is taking an awful risk ââ Hermione began.
âYou sound like Molly,â said Sirius. âThis was the only way I could come up with answering Harryâs letter without resorting to a code â and codes are breakable.â
It might seem reckless, but he's right, codes can be cracked. And he really wanted to reply to his godson â it's more about his inability to refuse the only living person he loves now and his desire to protect him.
Sirius repeatedly makes correct deductions in the fourth book, here are a couple of examples, but generally, the fourth book is full of rational remarks, assumptions, and overall, he's ready to provide Harry with information, especially in the fifth book, when Harry is having the toughest time and most people simply refuse to tell him anything.
âYeah, and Dumbledore said it happened whenever Voldemort was feeling a powerful emotion,â said Harry, ignoring, as usual, Ron and Hermioneâs winces. âSo maybe he was just, I dunno, really angry or something the night I had that detention.â
âWell, now heâs back itâs bound to hurt more often,â said Sirius.
âSo you donât think it had anything to do with Umbridge touching me when I was in detention with her?â Harry asked.
âI doubt it,â said Sirius. âI know her by reputation and Iâm sure sheâs no Death Eater ââ
âNow, Iâve been keeping an eye on the Daily Prophet, Harry ââ
âYou and the rest of the world,â said Harry bitterly.
ââ and, reading between the lines of that Skeeter womanâs article last month, Moody was attacked the night before he started at Hogwarts. Yes, I know she says it was another false alarm,â Sirius said hastily, seeing Harry about to speak, âbut I donât think so, somehow. I think someone tried to stop him getting to Hogwarts. I think someone knew their job would be a lot more difficult with him around. And no oneâs going to look into it too closely, Mad-Eyeâs heard intruders a bit too often. But that doesnât mean he canât still spot the real thing. Moody was the best Auror the Ministry ever had.â
And much more.
For Harry in the fourth and fifth books, Sirius became the one who supported him and provided information, and all his attempts to break through to Harry, risking being caught â this is an expression of love and desire to help his godson. It's precisely in such moments that his recklessness is revealed â when he wants to help.
Moreover Sirius often gives Harry good advice, there is just one example:
âDonât lose your temper,â said Sirius abruptly. âBe polite and stick to the facts.â
âGood luck,â said Lupin.
âIâm sure it will be fine.â âAnd if itâs not,â said Sirius grimly, âIâll see to Amelia Bones for you...â
Here's the interweaving of Sirius' rationality and recklessness. He knows the right way. But he himself is ready to throw himself into the line of fire. He never gave Harry impulsive advice. But when it comes to himself or when someone needs protecting, Sirius has a different standard of normalcy.
In conclusion, throughout the series, Sirius makes a number of insightful remarks, and his intelligence and giftedness are exceptionally highly regarded by Dumbledore, McGonagall, and Lupin. I wouldnât attribute his pathological desire to help those he loves to stupidity. Furthermore, adult Sirius shows recklessness mainly when it concerns his own safety and life â he doesn't cherish his own life if it means the well-being of someone he loves, thus he readily throws himself into danger.
Sirius was a brave, clever and energetic man, and such men are not usually content to sit at home in hiding while they believe others to be in danger. (Dumbledore)
Potter Children Headcanons
JAMES
James is Ginny with black hair. Her eyes, her nose , the only out of the three to get her extreme freckles. I imagine him to be mid height but Albus is taller.
Ginny is his best friend. Absolute mammas boy yes James is the rebel child but so is Ginny. They have the same humor have the same interest they are very close. He made her a mum and they will always have that bond.
James is also very protective of Lily and Albus. Yes he had very caring and present parents but they are busy people so James stepped in a lot as he got older to be there for the other two. James and teddy are incredibly close James was Tedds first brother and they spend a lot of time together once James graduates, they even lived together at a point.
ALBUS
Everything about Albus looks like Harry. But, Albus has a warmness in his face that came from his mama. He has Harryâs wider shoulders but Albus got Ronâs height. Something James will forever be jelous of.
Albus was closer to Ginny as a toddler because he was so shy but moving through adolescence he noticed how similar he is to his father. They are both people watchers, donât like big crowds, crave the quiet. He always goes to Harry when he has questions or concerns. Donât get me wrong they fight a lot and when they do itâs bad but Harry is his favorite parent and deep down he would never admit it Albus is Harryâs favorite child.
Albusâs family mate is Rose she does all the talking for him and they get along very well. Teddy has always looked out for Albus as well always making sure he had eaten dinner and including him in things with the other cousins.
LILY
Everyone says lily looks like Ginny at first but, Ginny and Harry both agree she looks more like her father. She has her mums fair skin, her brown eyes, and a light dusting of freckles not like James and Ginny have. But if you look closer she has Harryâs eye shape. His check bones, his nose, his jaw. Her eyebrows her lips thatâs all from her dad. When sheâs standing right next to Harry that really shines through how much she looks like her father. She is also crazy petite like Ginny very small in stature.
Sheâs the baby so obviously she gets away with everything. If James and Albus want something then they make Lily go ask for it. Sheâs close with Ginny because they enjoy doing stuff together like getting nails done going shopping talking about boys all the usual mother daughter things. But just like Ginny and Molly holy hell those two could row if they fight the whole neighborhood will know. But thatâs where Harry comes in if Lily runs to her room crying after a fight with her mom Harry will be the one to comfort her till she falls asleep.
Lily wasnât that close to the boys growing up especially not James because she was so much younger but when they all got older they started to bond more. She always admired Aunt Angelina Lily could always tell her things she could never tell her mom.
I've always liked the idea of magic working in whimsical and mysterious ways, more than the school of thought that makes magic more 'technical'. The way Harry Potter's story is, I feel like I've been conditioned to enjoy the interplay between "magic" and "luck".
This to say, I'd always imagined Peter as a powerful wizard that few recognized until Voldemort. I imagine Dumbledore never had a clue-- he makes mistakes, he misses things. I like to imagine either James or Lily had a subconscious inkling, but never really thought about it. James just knew Peter was a self-conscious little fool at times, when he didn't need to be, really, see Peter! you became a freakin animagus! idk why you doubt yourself...
Voldemort canonically sought out the Potters at first (the motivations of which, is a whole other topic to whcih I want insight). Peter was a last resort, a means to end, but I imagine Voldemort was clever enough to realize that Peter was meant for the inner circle. Of course, anyone close to his plans for immortality automatically were held close out of necessity. No doubt, Snape initially entered that inner circle not for his Sectumsempra, but because he had been attracted to 'prophecy'/'destiny'. Both Voldie and Harry gradually develop a "sixth sense" for these things.
I personally subscribe to the headcanon of Peter deliberately blasting a nearby gas plant that fateful Nov day. Not only does that theory satisfy my personal belief that Peter was the creative escape-artist of the Marauders (james was most creative at inventing problems, sirius at getting into problems, remus at avoiding problems, peter at getting out of problems), but also allows the Muggles a shred of truth. It's both logical and 'lucky'. (Did Peter set the location of their confrontation deliberately, or was he drawn near to a gas plant through magic?)
Anyway, great Peter meta. Yes to Voldemort negging Peter. GoF Peter is a disgusting pitiful mess. It's fascinating to imagine a 'toxic relationship' there
Voldemort constantly belittling Peter throughout GoF is so interesting because he, Voldemort, is probably the person who best knows Peter's abilities at this point. He expresses surprise at Peter being able to convince Bertha Jorkins to go with him. And like...dude, you of all people KNOW how much of a manipulative snake Peter is, you Know how he convinced Lily and James and Sirius to trust him...why are you acting so surprised? Like Voldemort is the last person who should underestimate Peter. But he does: I think because he knows full well Peter is actually competent but belittles him to keep him loyal. Ohhhh the psychology of these two. It's so fascinating.
(....petermort? someone stop me.)
Canât wait for the Dean fic! Can we as a collective acknowledge that Dean and Ginny got together very shortly after she dumped Michael. That means he mustâve been flirting with her while they were still together. Dean âsteal your girlâ Thomas
Dean Thomas when he sees Ginny giving Michael Corner the time of day:
Dean has rizz itâs canon soooo I had to drop a sneak peek of him in action đ
First DA meeting back after Christmas, heâd asked how her dad was doing. Sheâd let him know the good news in her typical Ginny way, quick joke, shut down need for further questions (âheâs doing alright. Not dead, thatâs the main thing. Whatâs a couple of snake bites between friends?â) But heâd wanted to keep her there, keep chatting before she drifted back over to the Ravenclaws, so had pressed it a bit, asked if theyâd spent the holidays between Devon and St Mungoâs. Whenever heâd pictured wizard hospital, itâd been a bit like an episode of Casualty but with more owls, and when heâd pictured Devon it was the proper seaside, like when his primary school did that trip to Southampton and his mate Liam threw that crisp packet at a seagull. Of course, then his brain had conjured up Ginny on a beach, bikini, licking something. Thereâd been something extra daring about imagining it when sheâd been right there, chatting to him, her boyfriend stood five yards away, chatting with all the other Ravenclaws who wouldnât know a good laugh if it hit them round the face.
âOh, we werenât in Devon in the end,â sheâd said. âWe ended up staying in London.â
âReally? Dâyou have family in London, or something?â We couldâve met up, heâd thought. Imagined taking her - somewhere. Wherever people take girls â heâd have to ask one of his cousins. Maybe go central, or use that Christmas money from his auntie to take her to the cinema or the good chicken shop in Forest Gate, hold her hand on the bus. Heâd glanced over at Michael, whoâd started eyeing the two of them suspiciously from over by the crash dummy, and resisted the urge to wave.
âItâs a bit complicated,â sheâd said. Her smile was apologetic, curving its way out of her bottom lip. Heâd wanted to ask more but didnât know how, and her tone sounded final, so heâd dropped it. It would be ages til heâd learn what that smile meant â all cover, hiding things heâd had no hope of ever asking about. âSorry to be cryptic.â
âNah,â heâd said. âKeeping it mysterious, I like it.â
Little glint in her eye, mischief. âWell, you know. A girlâs got to keep her secrets close to her chest.â
âGood place for them.â Alright. Doing it? Yeah? Ok, heâs doing it: âMaybe I could have a look sometime.â
For a second heâd really thought heâd fucked it. But a new smile had crept up her face, then, like sheâs intrigued, impressed, by the sheer audacity of it.
âGinny.â Of course, then Corner had shown up, face like thunder, come to claim whatâs his. âWeâre pairing up, Harryâs just said. Thomas, you get your own partner, yeah?â
fascinating! I can imagine teenagers who grow up in a confusing political environment having a coming-of-age nonetheless, "choosing sides"..
What are your biggest pet peeves in fics
My biggest pet peeve is, hands down, fandomâs portrayal of the first war, which is almost never portrayed as violent and terrible as the details we get about it in canon. Most importantly:
Not 1975 or 1976. Certainly not 1978. 1970. This means the war was raging the entire time the Marauders were at Hogwarts, and that they entered Hogwarts a year into the war. It lasted 11 whole years. The whole point is that the First War was much worse than the Second War.
Iâve seen people say things like âThe Marauders era is boring because nothing really happens until their later years until the war starts and/or heats upâ and say it like itâs complete fact and not something fans completely made up. The idea that the war only âheats upâ after Snapeâs Worst Memory is so universally accepted despite all evidence to the contrary.
(Iâve also seen claims that the only murders/war crimes committed during the first war were the few explicitly named in the text, which is, again⊠truly embarrassing analysis.)
The reason fandom has come up with this narrative is entirely to fit the Snape vs. Marauders âbullyingâ angle. It usually goes like this: Sirius and James were bullies for 5 years, until - conveniently and magically - the war started to âheat upâ and get more serious 6th year or sometimes 7th year and therefore they matured (especially James, though the idea of Sirius maturing after the Prank is also common in fic). It provides a neat little coming of age arc for the Marauders, one that does not actually exist in canon.
Because, believe it or not, Voldemort was not going to adjust the trajectory of his war to fit this narrative.
On the pro-Marauders side who still see them as bullies, the fandom canât reconcile the idea of the war being serious and the Marauders not being serious about it and instead spending their time bullying others. But the war was already heated up, and the Marauders were already serious about the war by SWM - because the Marauders attacks on Snape and others was them being serious about the war, because it wasnât bullying, it was vigilante justice.
On the Snape fan side, to portray Snape as a victim of bullying, they have to pretend that he's the only person capable of being victimized in the whole entire wizarding world, and people actually being murdered and tortured conflicts with that narrative.
I can buy that the war took a few years to heat up, I doubt it went to daily murders and tortures immediately, but I think a war would not take 6-7 years to escalate. I would guess it heated up sometime the Marauders 2nd year or 3rd year, at latest.
(I often see so many Order deaths happening in late war, per Moody, used at evidence that the war only escalated then, but the Order is tiny and doesnât represent the casualties in the rest of the population)
Evidence towards the fact that the war was very heated up already by the time of SWM is that Lily calls Voldemort âYou Know Whoâ in her conversation with Snape outside the Gryffindor common room - which means that by that time Voldemort has spread enough terror that people are afraid to say his name.
Also, remember this is already a very violent society. The fact that some pureblood families murder Muggles for fun (Muggle hunting) is apparently an open secret, they murder house elves, and Iâve said before that I think pureblood society practices honor killings which are at least somewhat legally sanctioned (i.e. Meropeâs situation).
So a few occasional murders is not going to shake them and is not what this society is going to consider a war.
More evidence is how much the violence has escalated at Hogwarts. Death Eater students are regularly and openly torturing students with Dark Magic "for a laugh" and not being expelled, which is something that doesn't even happen in canon era - the closest we get is Draco cursing Katie Bell by accident, during a specific secret mission, and unlike with Mulciber and Mary Macdonald, no one knows who the culprit even is, so they donât have the option to expel him. Similarly we have Snape using Sectumsempra so often at Hogwarts that it became known as his specialty and not being expelled, despite it being a near-fatal torture curse.
This fic captures what the atmosphere at Hogwarts wouldâve been like really well:
"Did that kind of thing happen a lot in Hogwarts?" Hermione asked, tone oddly flat. "In the seventies?"
âYes," Sirius said after a long moment. "It did. There were times when it was pretty much open warfare in the halls and on the grounds, between the students everyone knew were on Voldemort's side and the ones who opposed him, or whose families did... I was talking to Pomfrey about it the other day, she says you lot get yourself hexed as often in a few months as our generation used to in a week. And people attacked pets or destroyed belongings all the time. It was one reason a lot of students hid being muggleborn."
Thereâs the inability to extrapolate from canon details, fandom often portraying the First War like itâs just 30 Death Eaters on one side and 20 Order members on the other.
For example, if a mere ~30 Death Eaters are already committing daily murders in HBP during the Second War, how much violence do you think an army of ~500+ DEs (Sirius says the DEs that came back in GoF is literally nothing to how large Voldemortâs armies were in the First War; Remus says the Order was outnumbered 20 to 1) was committing? Similarly, based on the statistics given in HBP (by February Ron says heâs literally lost count of how many students have lost relatives), by SWM a substantial amount of the student body wouldâve had families murdered by Death Eaters (and therefore the students cheering James and Sirius on in SWM is obviously because they hate Snape for being a proto-Death Eater and not for being poor đ). There may have even been students themselves that were killed over breaks.
This lines up with Sirius's description of the war:
âYouâre scared for yourself, and your family, and your friends. Every week, news comes of more deaths, more disappearances, more torturing... the Ministry of Magicâs in disarray, they donât know what to do, theyâre trying to keep everything hidden from the Muggles, but meanwhile, Muggles are dying too. Terror everywhere... panic... confusion... thatâs how it used to be."
There are lots of similar passages about the war, Iâm not going to quote all of them, but I suggest people actually pay attention to those details, as well as stuff during the Second War that would apply to the first.
The same thing applies as fandom portraying teenage Death Eaters as only joining once they graduate, when canon indicates they would be Marked at 16, but thatâs for another meta. ETA: That meta is posted here.
Which hp book is your favorite and why?
personal favourite is probably ootp. because itâs just so long and messy and filled with teen angst. you get harry at his most vulnerable, and you also get so much of the school life like exams and harryâs first dalliance with romance on top of all the actual story (the order, voldemortâs rise, dumbledoreâs army, the ministry propaganda etc).
but i think hbp is probably a PERFECT book, and the BEST book in the series. itâs got mystery, comedy, romance, teen angst / drama, coming of age, action, lots of backstory and explanation. itâs just perfect. itâs got a little bit of everything.
phenomenal
a set if hp bookmarks iâll have for melbourne supanova next weekend! one (1) boy for each bookÂ
Thinking of Lily who learned Potions under her mentor Slughorn who obviously adored her...yeah, it's a little weird that Slughorn operated the way he did, but Lily knew right from the start that half of Sev's complaints about him stemmed from pure envy
And even as Lily draws further and further away from Severus and their potions' discussions together, she still loves the subject and ol' Sluggie still believes in her despite her bloodstatus...she finds more of a mentor in strange Sluggie than even the stern Gryffindor head McGonagall
âYou shouldnât have favorites as a teacher, of course, but she was one of mine. Your mother, Lily Evans. One of the brightest I ever taught. Vivacious, you know. Charming girl. I used to tell her she ought to have been in my House. Very cheeky answers I used to get back too.â
âYou liked her, didnât you?â
âLiked her?â said Slughorn, his eyes brimming with tears once more. âI donât imagine anyone who met her wouldnât have liked her. Very brave. Very funny.â
This lil puddle of an ex-poet, stressed medical student, ARMY, potterhead, etc. Watch your step, dear
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