Dumbledore’s trickeries: just how much is he covering up?
We know, now, from the “Santa Claus” stunts, that Dumbledore is quite capable of trickery. Reading between the lines, it appears he cruelly sabotaged Snape and Lily’s teenaged relationship.
What other deceptions belong to Dumbledore? Several are possible.
the prophecy and Snape
Rita Skeeter’s False Memory Charm
Amelia Bones burning Narcissa Malfoy
Lily’s final Dark-ritual conversation with Voldemort
The prophecy and Snape:
The “confessor” interlude makes it clear that Snape was present for Sybil’s prophecy. Does that mean that Harry is wrong to theorize that Dumbledore arranged for Snape to hear it...
… or did Dumbledore use a Time-Turner to make sure Snape heard the prophecy live and in person, so that Snape would be baited more credibly into telling Voldemort?
Rita Skeeter’s False Memory Charm:
Dumbledore rewards the Weasleys for the prank, which happened to benefit Harry Potter and deprive Lucius Malfoy of a tool. Is it possible that he not only rewarded them for it, but committed the active part of it himself?
Amelia Bones burning Narcissa Malfoy:
There’s suggestive evidence within the text (“Someone would burn for this”) that Amelia Bones is hard-bitten and fire-minded. We also see her specifically pulling back Dumbledore from confessing to Narcissa’s murder. Is it possible that Bones performed the murder, and afterward Dumbledore pretended to Lucius that he had been Narcissa’s killer?
Lily’s final Dark-ritual conversation with Voldemort:
Lily’s last conversation with Voldemort just so happens to replicate the requirements of a Dark ritual—you name the thing sacrificed, and then the thing to be gained.
“I accept the bargain. Yourself to die, and the child to live.”
Did Dumbledore prompt Lily on what to say if confronted by Voldemort, to trigger the accidental Horcruxing that saved Harry?
How much of this is Dumbledore actually guilty of? Do we know or suspect other trickeries, or have other evidence?
Lily’s last conversation with Voldemort just so happens to replicate the requirements of a Dark ritual—you name the thing sacrificed, and then the thing to be gained.
I’ve always considered the protection Harry had by Lily’s “Love” (in canon) to be essentially dark magic done by Lily. She spent her own life to cast a ridiculously powerful and specific spell of protection on her son. The ‘power of love’ nonsense is true only in the mundane sense of the term. It was the motivation to use the spell. This doesn’t devalue the power of love—that’s how love really works—it influences the incentive of intelligent agents.
How much of this is Dumbledore actually guilty of? Do we know or suspect other trickeries, or have other evidence?
I wouldn’t place this one in the realm of ‘guilt’. Assuming things happened according your story, Dumbledore gave Lily the power to do something that she wanted to do (sacrifice, save). Helping other people save their babies does not accrue guilt.
I’ve always considered the protection Harry had by Lily’s “Love” (in canon) to be essentially dark magic done by Lily. She spent her own life to cast a ridiculously powerful and specific spell of protection on her son.
I interpreted buybuy as claiming that at some point JKR or some authoritative HP encyclopedia or suchlike explicitly affirmed that there is a literal “Love Magic” in place—rather than that being just a description by Dumbledore. I let it pass, without agreeing. I’m not aware of JKR saying any such thing but nor would I expect to be, I haven’t looked and don’t especially want to hear it. If there is literal love magic I’d hold that in the same esteem as I hold the rules of Quidditch. (Also, midichlorians never happened.)
Midichlorians were totally inoffensive by comparison to everything else in that godforsaken movie. I don’t see why a fairly advanced civilization being able to stick a number on Force potential gets nearly as much hate as it does.
I read all the Harry Potter books the first day they came out. From what I recall of Hallows… the first half was “Frodo and Sam walked a lot” but with more pouting.
Then we must have interpreted it differently. I took the existence of literal love magic as pretty firmly established by the protection granted by Harry to every good guy in the Battle of Hogwarts. I’m having difficulty imagining how anything Rowling says could make this story-breaking power worthy of any lower esteem. (And I am only thinking of the second half, which was the interesting one.)
I’m having difficulty imagining how anything Rowling says could make this story-breaking power worthy of any lower esteem.
Lower esteem? By no means. Merely more reductionist detail and less Dumbledorish drivel. Sacrificing one’s life to make a protection spell over a loved one is in no way diminished if the magic mechanism doesn’t sound like it was developed by carebears.
Lily’s last conversation with Voldemort just so happens to replicate the requirements of a Dark ritual—you name the thing sacrificed, and then the thing to be gained.
“I accept the bargain. Yourself to die, and the child to live.”
...Now that’s awesome.
He could have sent his Patronus with a message to her the moment he heard the prophecy.
The prophecy was made before Harry was born; the Potters were in hiding for more than a year before the attack.
I think we’re talking about different things. The original post made it look like he was calling Aberforth’s death a change from canon, whereas I guess he was talking about Kendra.
Lily’s last conversation with Voldemort just so happens to replicate the requirements of a Dark ritual—you name the thing sacrificed, and then the thing to be gained.
“I accept the bargain. Yourself to die, and the child to live.”
The “confessor” interlude makes it clear that Snape was present for Sybil’s prophecy. Does that mean that Harry is wrong to theorize that Dumbledore arranged for Snape to hear it...
Maybe. I’m thinking it’s a nicer rationalist story to have Voldemort arrange the prophecy, particularly if you’re going with the “Voldemort uploads into Harry after it appears that Harry defeated him” scenario.
Did Dumbledore prompt Lily on what to say if confronted by Voldemort, to trigger the accidental Horcruxing that saved Harry?
Why do you assume the Horcruxing was accidental, if Voldemort wants to upload into Dark Lord Harry anyway? It looks to me like the Horcruxing of Harry is likely what gave him much of his power, with that power lending credibility to his “defeat” of Voldemort, and avoiding suspicion of Harrymort when he displays so much power after the upload.
Everything that has transpired has done so, according to my design. Bwa ha ha.
It looks to me like the Horcruxing of Harry is likely what gave him much of his power, with that power lending credibility to his “defeat” of Voldemort, and avoiding suspicion of Harrymort when he displays so much power after the upload.
...What power? Wasn’t it explicitly called out that Harry’s dark side had no superpowers and he wasn’t any stronger than any other highly-motivated first year?
I like that. It does seem like Harry’s dark side is the one that can find a win in any situation, and that does seem to be his strongest power—just the will to win, and the means to calculate that win.
But there is also:
For once, just once, Harry hadn’t gotten shortchanged in the mysterious powers department.
After almost a month of work, and more on a whim than any real hunch, Harry had decided to make himself coldly angry and then try the book’s Occlumency exercises again. At that point he’d mostly given up hope on that sort of thing, but it had still seemed worth a quick try -
He’d run through all the book’s hardest exercises in two hours, and the next day he’d gone and told Professor Quirrell he was ready.
His dark side, it had turned out, was very, very good at pretending to be other people.
Dumbledore’s trickeries: just how much is he covering up?
We know, now, from the “Santa Claus” stunts, that Dumbledore is quite capable of trickery. Reading between the lines, it appears he cruelly sabotaged Snape and Lily’s teenaged relationship.
What other deceptions belong to Dumbledore? Several are possible.
the prophecy and Snape
Rita Skeeter’s False Memory Charm
Amelia Bones burning Narcissa Malfoy
Lily’s final Dark-ritual conversation with Voldemort
The prophecy and Snape:
The “confessor” interlude makes it clear that Snape was present for Sybil’s prophecy. Does that mean that Harry is wrong to theorize that Dumbledore arranged for Snape to hear it...
… or did Dumbledore use a Time-Turner to make sure Snape heard the prophecy live and in person, so that Snape would be baited more credibly into telling Voldemort?
Rita Skeeter’s False Memory Charm:
Dumbledore rewards the Weasleys for the prank, which happened to benefit Harry Potter and deprive Lucius Malfoy of a tool. Is it possible that he not only rewarded them for it, but committed the active part of it himself?
Amelia Bones burning Narcissa Malfoy:
There’s suggestive evidence within the text (“Someone would burn for this”) that Amelia Bones is hard-bitten and fire-minded. We also see her specifically pulling back Dumbledore from confessing to Narcissa’s murder. Is it possible that Bones performed the murder, and afterward Dumbledore pretended to Lucius that he had been Narcissa’s killer?
Lily’s final Dark-ritual conversation with Voldemort:
Lily’s last conversation with Voldemort just so happens to replicate the requirements of a Dark ritual—you name the thing sacrificed, and then the thing to be gained.
Did Dumbledore prompt Lily on what to say if confronted by Voldemort, to trigger the accidental Horcruxing that saved Harry?
How much of this is Dumbledore actually guilty of? Do we know or suspect other trickeries, or have other evidence?
I’ve always considered the protection Harry had by Lily’s “Love” (in canon) to be essentially dark magic done by Lily. She spent her own life to cast a ridiculously powerful and specific spell of protection on her son. The ‘power of love’ nonsense is true only in the mundane sense of the term. It was the motivation to use the spell. This doesn’t devalue the power of love—that’s how love really works—it influences the incentive of intelligent agents.
I wouldn’t place this one in the realm of ‘guilt’. Assuming things happened according your story, Dumbledore gave Lily the power to do something that she wanted to do (sacrifice, save). Helping other people save their babies does not accrue guilt.
I like that. Definite improvement over canon.
?
I interpreted buybuy as claiming that at some point JKR or some authoritative HP encyclopedia or suchlike explicitly affirmed that there is a literal “Love Magic” in place—rather than that being just a description by Dumbledore. I let it pass, without agreeing. I’m not aware of JKR saying any such thing but nor would I expect to be, I haven’t looked and don’t especially want to hear it. If there is literal love magic I’d hold that in the same esteem as I hold the rules of Quidditch. (Also, midichlorians never happened.)
Midichlorians were totally inoffensive by comparison to everything else in that godforsaken movie. I don’t see why a fairly advanced civilization being able to stick a number on Force potential gets nearly as much hate as it does.
Upvoted primarily for the sentence in parentheses.
Wedrifid, do not read Deathly Hallows. It will disappoint you. (Personally, I was pleased; it could have been a lot worse.)
I read all the Harry Potter books the first day they came out. From what I recall of Hallows… the first half was “Frodo and Sam walked a lot” but with more pouting.
Then we must have interpreted it differently. I took the existence of literal love magic as pretty firmly established by the protection granted by Harry to every good guy in the Battle of Hogwarts. I’m having difficulty imagining how anything Rowling says could make this story-breaking power worthy of any lower esteem. (And I am only thinking of the second half, which was the interesting one.)
Lower esteem? By no means. Merely more reductionist detail and less Dumbledorish drivel. Sacrificing one’s life to make a protection spell over a loved one is in no way diminished if the magic mechanism doesn’t sound like it was developed by carebears.
OK, I’m pretty thoroughly confused. When you write
what don’t you want to hear? And what more would have to be true to trigger the hypothesis in
I’ve heard it argued as being the case in canon, but poorly explained. (That may have been pre-Deathly Hallows, though). Agreed, it’s much better.
...Now that’s awesome.
The prophecy was made before Harry was born; the Potters were in hiding for more than a year before the attack.
Fixed. Thanks!
Also,
In canon Kendra died some time before Ariana, not in the fight.
I don’t understand how you get this from
Removed confusing clause. In the fic, we have
This is a change from canon. Presumably it points to a secret about Dumbledore.
Here’s a real change from canon:
chapter 18
No clue what it implies, though.
Implies Aberforth Dumbledore was killed by the Death Eaters.
If Albus Dumbledore killed Narcissa himself, this was probably the trigger.
Ah, no it’s not?
Yes it is.
I don’t see anything in the link that contradicts that. Unless you’re just saying that it isn’t made explicit that the Aurors ruled it to be murder?
I think we’re talking about different things. The original post made it look like he was calling Aberforth’s death a change from canon, whereas I guess he was talking about Kendra.
I was responding to
That’s really awesome.
Maybe. I’m thinking it’s a nicer rationalist story to have Voldemort arrange the prophecy, particularly if you’re going with the “Voldemort uploads into Harry after it appears that Harry defeated him” scenario.
Why do you assume the Horcruxing was accidental, if Voldemort wants to upload into Dark Lord Harry anyway? It looks to me like the Horcruxing of Harry is likely what gave him much of his power, with that power lending credibility to his “defeat” of Voldemort, and avoiding suspicion of Harrymort when he displays so much power after the upload.
Everything that has transpired has done so, according to my design. Bwa ha ha.
...What power? Wasn’t it explicitly called out that Harry’s dark side had no superpowers and he wasn’t any stronger than any other highly-motivated first year?
But Harry has The Ultimate Power.
I like that. It does seem like Harry’s dark side is the one that can find a win in any situation, and that does seem to be his strongest power—just the will to win, and the means to calculate that win.
But there is also: