You’re correct, but I was responding to the whole statement:
I wouldn’t want to rule out the possibility that Dumbledore deemed himself indispensable >and his soul’s contiguousness dispensable to the war effort.
If our dear Headmaster murdered Narcissa because he thought his continued availability to Magical Britain was more important than avoiding that kind of atrocity, or keeping his soul whole then that means that he used the murder to protect himself from death, and in this context that means that he made a Horcrux.
This is, of course, all conjecture. We don’t know for certain that Dumbledore himself did the deed, or that it went down the way that the surviving Malfoys believe it did. We do know that Dumbledore finds it useful for them to believe it, and we do know that he has studied how horcruxes are made as part of his Anti-Voldemort campaign, and we can be fairly sure that Madame Bones knows the truth of the matter of Narcissa’s death
What evidence do we have that Bones knows the truth of the matter? She knows that Dumbledore might be tempted to confess to Lucius in the trial scene, and after that the best link I’ve ever seen anyone draw between her and Narcissa is the “Somebody would burn for this!” from TSPE. The latter implies nothing, and the former doesn’t require any special level of knowledge.
“That depends,” Amelia said in a hard voice. “Are you here to help
us catch criminals, or to protect them from the consequences of their
actions?” Are you going to try to stop the killer of my brother from getting her
well-deserved Kiss, old meddler?
In Chapter 56, one chapter after the “Somebody would burn for this.” quote.
Evidence in favor: Dumbledore thinks it’s plausible that he’s the Dark Lord from the prophecy, which would require it possible to destroy all but a remnant of him.
I do wonder whether the Source of Magic, or whatever it is that determines whether a Horcrux can be made, draws a distinction between deaths in combat, deaths accidentally caused and deaths deliberately and avoidably caused.
You’re correct, but I was responding to the whole statement:
If our dear Headmaster murdered Narcissa because he thought his continued availability to Magical Britain was more important than avoiding that kind of atrocity, or keeping his soul whole then that means that he used the murder to protect himself from death, and in this context that means that he made a Horcrux.
This is, of course, all conjecture. We don’t know for certain that Dumbledore himself did the deed, or that it went down the way that the surviving Malfoys believe it did. We do know that Dumbledore finds it useful for them to believe it, and we do know that he has studied how horcruxes are made as part of his Anti-Voldemort campaign, and we can be fairly sure that Madame Bones knows the truth of the matter of Narcissa’s death
What evidence do we have that Bones knows the truth of the matter? She knows that Dumbledore might be tempted to confess to Lucius in the trial scene, and after that the best link I’ve ever seen anyone draw between her and Narcissa is the “Somebody would burn for this!” from TSPE. The latter implies nothing, and the former doesn’t require any special level of knowledge.
I was only thinking of the trial scene, I’m afraid.
I wasn’t the first one to note this, but:
In Chapter 56, one chapter after the “Somebody would burn for this.” quote.
Evidence in favor: Dumbledore thinks it’s plausible that he’s the Dark Lord from the prophecy, which would require it possible to destroy all but a remnant of him.
I do wonder whether the Source of Magic, or whatever it is that determines whether a Horcrux can be made, draws a distinction between deaths in combat, deaths accidentally caused and deaths deliberately and avoidably caused.