Or the idea isn’t as great as Harry seems to think it is. Moody knows a LOT more about the world and the wizarding world. I’m sure he can remember plenty of dark Lords that started out as light lords, for one.
Where do you get that idea from? Apart from the single example of Grindewald.
Isn’t a bad Light Lord pretty much exactly what Dumbledore fears? That suggests historical precedent, to be so worried after just a few months of Harry.
From Dumbledore’s words to Harry, I gathered that he was more afraid Harry might become a Dark Lord more directly without a significant Light Lord phase in between. I don’t think he has the concept of a Light Lord present—great wizards are to him either Dark Lords or those who oppose them, not Light Lords who do something positive and unrelated to any Dark machinations.
Also, I don’t trust Dumbledore in particular to make a fair assessment, since he’s the one most liable to be swayed by the single example of Grindelwald.
Or the idea isn’t as great as Harry seems to think it is. Moody knows a LOT more about the world and the wizarding world. I’m sure he can remember plenty of dark Lords that started out as light lords, for one.
Where do you get that idea from? Apart from the single example of Grindewald.
Besides, Moody wouldn’t go Dark because he’s got ETERNAL VIGILANCE on his side.
Isn’t a bad Light Lord pretty much exactly what Dumbledore fears? That suggests historical precedent, to be so worried after just a few months of Harry.
From Dumbledore’s words to Harry, I gathered that he was more afraid Harry might become a Dark Lord more directly without a significant Light Lord phase in between. I don’t think he has the concept of a Light Lord present—great wizards are to him either Dark Lords or those who oppose them, not Light Lords who do something positive and unrelated to any Dark machinations.
Also, I don’t trust Dumbledore in particular to make a fair assessment, since he’s the one most liable to be swayed by the single example of Grindelwald.