Imperius Resistance and Occlumency was Harry's anger (was Re: Draco's anger.)
evita2fr
Snarryfan at aol.com
Fri Jan 21 10:30:58 UTC 2005
No: HPFGUIDX 122587
> Carol wrote:
> Looking in the Pensieve is not fighting back. It's violating Snape's
> privacy. Fighting back is using a stinging hex or a Protego, both of
> which Snape *praises* Harry for using, even though he did it
> involuntarily.
> Alla responds:
>
> I must have missed the part,where Snape "praises" Harry for using a
> Stinging Hex.
>
> "Did you mean to produce a Stinging Hex?" asked Snape cooly.
> "No, said Harry bitterly, getting up from the floor.
> " I thought not," said Snape contemptuously, "You let me get in too
> far. You lost control" - p.535, OOP.
>
> Sounds to me that Snape is downplays Harry's success, at very least
> and it IS quite a success, unvoluntarily, or not.
>
> He only practices Occlumency for the first time in his life and he
> only allowed Snape to see "flashes of it" Shouldn't Snape be more
> happy about it, if he was indeed teaching in good faith? I wonder.
>
It's further:
[..you lost control]
"Did you see everything I saw?" Harry asked, unsure wether he wanted
to hear the answers.
"Flashes of it,"said Snape, his lip curling."To whom did the dog
belong?"
"My aunt Marge," Harry muttered, hating Snape.
"Well, for a first attempt that was not as poor as it might have
been"
Harry did better than what Snape expected, and he recognised it.
Christelle, who still want to know why Snape didn't used the Dudley-
related memories.
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