[HPforGrownups] Snape's lack of remorse
Sandy
elvenlady0903 at yahoo.com
Thu Feb 10 15:28:17 UTC 2005
No: HPFGUIDX 124329
"curlyhornedsnorkack":
>Snape's actions don't sound like those of a man who is at all ashamed
> or embarrassed about his past.
Sandy:
We also have to remember that Snape is working undercover. If he shows any remorse, or that he is ashamed to his students, someone is going to catch on to something. He has Lucius Malfoy's son in his class and Draco seems to go to his father about everything. Now if Draco told is father (who is suppose to still believe that Snape is working for the DE's) that his Potions teacher was taking Harry's side in everything, or showing the smallest bit of like toward Harry then he will blow whatever cover he has.
At the end of OOTP, DD is going over the events of the night and he says that Snape caught on to the hint Harry gave about "Padfoot being taken to the place where it was hidden." He then told Harry that Snape waited and when Harry never came back from the Forbidden Forest Snape got worried and went after him. To me that sounds as though he cares ultimately, about what happens to Harry, even though he can't show it.
Sandy
Jocelyn Grunow <aandj at labyrinth.net.au> wrote:
On Thursday, February 10, 2005, at 09:05 am, curlyhornedsnorkack wrote:
> "Snape strode forward, past Dumbledore, pulling up the left sleeve of
> his robes as he went. He stuck out his forearm and showed it to Fudge,
> who recoiled."
>
> Snape's actions don't sound like those of a man who is at all ashamed
> or embarrassed about his past.
>
> In the scene with Karkarov in the classroom, he doesn't seem to have
> any empathy with his fellow ex-deatheaters.
Hi!
I see the quoted paragraph as a very aggressive thing to do, but not
relevant to the question of remorse. Snape is effectively showing
Fudge proof that he KNOWS what he is talking about it. He is no
wooly-minded snorkackloving flake but an exDE and a SURVIVOR. I think
he is very angry that a danger so strong and personal to him is being
shuffled under the carpet.
I am not a Snape-lover - the scene with Hermione's teeth ended any
leaning I may have had in that direction - but I think that his
defection from LV has cost him a lot. He DOESN'T have any empathy with
the DEs because
(a) he is not an empathic person in general (!) and
(b) he knows what and who they are _from the inside_ - and has chosen
to reject that. The others didn't, which to Snape's mind probably sets
them up as either evil OR cowardly weakings.
He made a hell of a choice, and I am not using those words lightly.
Being Snape he isn't going to make nice about any of it, but he did
choose the side of light.
Remorse? He lives with the consequences in his head every day. He
chooses to remain with the light every day. That's far more practical
than wallowing in 'I'm -so-sorrys' which another more sympathetic
character might feel and inflict on us. It just isn't in his character
to do that.
The proof of his remorse is in his actions. He changed sides. That
truly is the best and only genuine proof anyone can give of remorse -
deciding to and succeeding in NEVER LETTING IT HAPPEN AGAIN. The rest
is just words.
Jocelyn
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