Well, after yesterday, I certainly won’t be betting against you, even though my odds are (slightly) lower.
My reading is that Harry intended to get married, because that’s the only applicable law he knew of—but McGonagall figured out what he was about to attempt and instead triggered some sort of fealty or adoption law.
But I don’t think it’s totally inconceivable that the wizarding world has marriage vows that sound like that.
My reading is that Harry intended to get married, because that’s the only applicable law he knew of—but McGonagall figured out what he was about to attempt and instead triggered some sort of fealty or adoption law.
Agreed mostly, but I don’t think McGonagall figured out that he was about to propose marriage to Hermione. She just came up independently with the idea of inducting Hermione into House Potter; and of course she preferred to use a more age-appropriate (and less emotionally-charged) path than marriage. The alternate option of service, which Harry didn’t even know existed.
I’m not sure how good McGonagall’s model of Harry is, so maybe you’re right, and she didn’t figure out what he was planning.
Hm. In my model of the wizard world, what McGonagall did was a totally obvious solution to every wizard in the room except Harry; everyone in the room not on Malfoy’s side probably even came in expecting Lucius to extract this fealty vow or something similar from Hermione before Azkaban was mentioned—it should have been fresh in their minds.
″...The girl is no part of House Potter...”
So I kinda feel like Lucius must have picked up the idiot ball to utter this. I can’t explain why he didn’t think of the obvious counter (was he so fixated on Azkaban that the fealty thing never occurred to him this whole time?). Unless he was trying to get Hermione joined to House Potter, but that seems really unlikely. Perhaps he didn’t think there was any way he could lose to an 11 year old and thus didn’t try hard enough.
I assumed the vow was obscure, ancient, Almost Never Done in modern times for good reasons (consider the content!), and that Lucius just wouldn’t have imagined his model of Harry doing that with a mudblood girl.
Would’ve been fun to see Lucius’s expression if Harry had actually proposed marriage, but that wouldn’t have fit quite as well.
Ah, that makes sense. I forgot that Lucius thinks he’s dealing with Harrymort (and expects him to have a pureblood bias). Hm, that implies that Lucius didn’t use Veritaserum on Draco after all (or he’s really blinded by his bias). Well, either way I imagine Lucius is extremely confused right now...
Oddly, people seem to be assuming that “Lucius used Veritaserum on Draco” means “Lucius knows everything Draco knows”. Which wouldn’t follow even if Draco was given 3 drops, let alone the 2 he actually got.
I think that’s a reasonable default scenario. Truth is entangled (and Draco/Harry/Hermione’s dealings is more so than usual); I would expect that as soon as Lucius asked a question with an unusual answer, he’d keep asking questions until he figured out nearly all that Draco knew. If Lucius used Veritaserum and managed to not ask any such questions, then he might as well have not used Veritaserum at all...
That first, while Lucius was primarily concerned about Draco’s safety and what happened that night?
And it seems like a major breach of trust to ask that directly, which Draco will remember so that it will harm their bond permanently.
Also, I wonder how long Draco would be able to ponder which thing is the most important before starting to answer. It might be a moot point, since I’m pretty sure Veritaserum tends to make people think out loud.
“Well, I hide a lot of things from you intentionally. That’s what you taught me after all. But which one is the most important? I’m not even sure how to rank things like this, so I suppose I’m solving a problem. Harry would say that in this sort of situation, one should hold off on proposing solutions. So let me think of the salient features of how to sort a list of secrets in order of importance...” (no effort on my part to make this in Draco’s voice)
No, not that first. But I’d expect him to get around to it eventually. And it won’t harm their bond if Draco doesn’t remember it- the Hogwarts wards only protect students from being Obliviated while they’re in Hogwarts.
it won’t harm their bond if Draco doesn’t remember it
I doubt that’s true in the purely consequentialist sense, and I don’t expect Lucius to think like a consequentialist.
A major violation of trust from the person Draco cares about and respects most of all, seems like exactly the sort of damage that could survive Obliviation (as McGonagall hinted in Chapter 6).
And my model of Lucius would not want to violate Draco’s trust, even if Draco couldn’t remember it—he genuinely cares about being a good father to Draco. Old-fashioned nobles believe in virtue ethics, if any.
I don’t. But I think I have a better model of what sorts of things Harry has been up to with Draco, than Dumbledore does.
I think Dumbledore thinks that “whatever you have done with Draco” is one thing, and will be most salient to Draco. He’s not expecting the Bayesian Conspiracy, and Draco’s Patronus, and Harry’s Patronus, and discovering that the blood purist hypothesis is false, and actually becoming friends with Hermione, and becoming pregnant with Harry’s baby, and trying to reform Slytherin house, and so on...
So, if I’m understanding you correctly, you think that Lucius giving Draco Veritaserum is not in itself a violation of his trust?
In the context of “assume Lucius will know” “he’ll give him Veritaserum” the clear implication is that Lucius would use enough Veritaserum to make answering involuntary, which would seem a clear violation of trust to me.
Right, I assumed that the Veritaserum itself was just necessary as part of the legal process, for outside observers to make sure Draco isn’t lying, and that instance is what they were talking about. Even in that context, “Tell me things you wouldn’t want to tell me normally” is a violation of trust.
Okay, back up even further. You think that investigating Aurors will give a child victim Veritaserum and then leave him alone with someone else before it wears off? That’s horrifying.
No, I thought that the investigating Aurors would not give a child Veritaserum without his legal guardian there, and thus Lucius would have access to whatever Draco said under Veritaserum. It occurs to me now that Lucius wouldn’t be too prying in front of Aurors.
On reflection, I do believe I have a better model of Lucius than Dumbledore does. I’ve read a lot of the same fanfic as the author has and I know a decent amount about the author’s thought processes, neither of which is true of Dumbledore. And Dumbledore thinks of people in absolutes, and would probably think Lucius is incapable of honestly wanting to be a good father to Draco since he’s “Dark”.
Did Eliezer say that Lucius interrogated Draco himself? I can’t find it—I had assumed it was aurors, who in the course of investigating this particular crime would have no reason even to mention Harry’s name.
It looks like readers didn’t get this. They were overdosed on age-inappropriate romantic hopes or did not notice the gap between Harry’s idea and MacGonagal’s.
Is this the sort of thing you respond to by changing the chapters that are already out? The whole service thing will probably be explained in the next chapter anyway, along with Lucius’s “certain rights.”
Well, I mean that romance at eleven is inappropriate. I suggested marriage was seen because it would signal romance and signals of romance were desired because of hopes.
But thank you, Perry. If you hadn’t responded I would have answered the wrong question. I thought he misunderstood when I wrote about the gap between Harry’s marriage idea and MacGonagal’s fealty idea. And then maybe I would not have been clear enough again and there would have been more confusion and we might go on until one got fed up and both simply logged the other as ‘dense’ and left it at that.
Yeah, it would not have occurred to me that romance at age 11 is inappropriate, as I knew a lot of romantically-inclined people at age 11, and I tend to think of Wizarding Britain as a backwards, medieval society so “marriage at 11” doesn’t ring any alarm bells. Plus, 11ish-year-old characters have already talked at length about romance in the story.
And since we know no one has the idiot ball, that suggests that the fealty vow (or possibly wedding vow) to Harry was totally unexpected. My impression was that the Wizengamot was stunned by the events.
what McGonagall did was a totally obvious solution to every wizard in the room except Harry; everyone in the room not on Malfoy’s side probably even came in expecting Lucius to extract this fealty vow or something similar from Hermione
Yes, they expected Lucius to extract something similar from Hermione. They weren’t thinking of Lucius’s debt to Harry, so until Harry mentioned it and stunned the room, McGonagall’s actions wouldn’t have occurred to them.
They weren’t thinking of Lucius’s debt to Harry, so until Harry mentioned it and stunned the room, McGonagall’s actions wouldn’t have occurred to them.
I meant that it should have occurred to everyone immediately after Lucius’s statement ”...The girl is no part of House Potter...”
True. Maybe they were just so stunned by everything.
On the other hand, Lucius gets 100,000 gold and Potter in his debt, which apparently gives him some kind of control. And maybe he realized Hermione wasn’t the actual killer, but couldn’t back down at that point because he’d lose face. So it’s not like he ends up with a bad deal.
Alternatively, if he thinks Harry is his real enemy and Hermione just a minion, maybe having Harry in his debt is just as good as putting Hermione in the clank, according to his utility function.
Yes. I agree. I was just saying that the gender-inclusive language specifically isn’t a good reason to think that, given Wizarding Britain’s displayed attitude toward homosexuality.
It’s not the “gender inclusiveness” that’s the problem, it’s the vagueness. Harry is male, why not call him “Master” instead of “Master or Mistress”? It’s because the oath is a fealty oath sworn to the House, and after Harry dies, the mastery of his house may pass to a daughter of his (which Hermione would then be still sworn to obey).
Marital oaths are between specific people. In this case obedience was sworn to House Potter, and Harry accepted it as the heir and last scion of House Potter.
Well, yes, agreed that points more towards an oath of servitude. But I could easily imagine someone marrying me and promising to obey “the master of my house” as a poetic and formal way of referring to me. My point in the comment you were responding to was that obedience is hardly foreign to wedding vows.
Well, after yesterday, I certainly won’t be betting against you, even though my odds are (slightly) lower.
My reading is that Harry intended to get married, because that’s the only applicable law he knew of—but McGonagall figured out what he was about to attempt and instead triggered some sort of fealty or adoption law.
But I don’t think it’s totally inconceivable that the wizarding world has marriage vows that sound like that.
Agreed mostly, but I don’t think McGonagall figured out that he was about to propose marriage to Hermione. She just came up independently with the idea of inducting Hermione into House Potter; and of course she preferred to use a more age-appropriate (and less emotionally-charged) path than marriage. The alternate option of service, which Harry didn’t even know existed.
I’m not sure how good McGonagall’s model of Harry is, so maybe you’re right, and she didn’t figure out what he was planning.
Hm. In my model of the wizard world, what McGonagall did was a totally obvious solution to every wizard in the room except Harry; everyone in the room not on Malfoy’s side probably even came in expecting Lucius to extract this fealty vow or something similar from Hermione before Azkaban was mentioned—it should have been fresh in their minds.
So I kinda feel like Lucius must have picked up the idiot ball to utter this. I can’t explain why he didn’t think of the obvious counter (was he so fixated on Azkaban that the fealty thing never occurred to him this whole time?). Unless he was trying to get Hermione joined to House Potter, but that seems really unlikely. Perhaps he didn’t think there was any way he could lose to an 11 year old and thus didn’t try hard enough.
I assumed the vow was obscure, ancient, Almost Never Done in modern times for good reasons (consider the content!), and that Lucius just wouldn’t have imagined his model of Harry doing that with a mudblood girl.
Would’ve been fun to see Lucius’s expression if Harry had actually proposed marriage, but that wouldn’t have fit quite as well.
Ah, that makes sense. I forgot that Lucius thinks he’s dealing with Harrymort (and expects him to have a pureblood bias). Hm, that implies that Lucius didn’t use Veritaserum on Draco after all (or he’s really blinded by his bias). Well, either way I imagine Lucius is extremely confused right now...
Oddly, people seem to be assuming that “Lucius used Veritaserum on Draco” means “Lucius knows everything Draco knows”. Which wouldn’t follow even if Draco was given 3 drops, let alone the 2 he actually got.
I think that’s a reasonable default scenario. Truth is entangled (and Draco/Harry/Hermione’s dealings is more so than usual); I would expect that as soon as Lucius asked a question with an unusual answer, he’d keep asking questions until he figured out nearly all that Draco knew. If Lucius used Veritaserum and managed to not ask any such questions, then he might as well have not used Veritaserum at all...
And I believe he was interrogated by aurors investigating this crime—in which Harry was not involved—not by Malfoy.
“What have you been intentionally hiding from me, in descending order of importance?”
That first, while Lucius was primarily concerned about Draco’s safety and what happened that night?
And it seems like a major breach of trust to ask that directly, which Draco will remember so that it will harm their bond permanently.
Also, I wonder how long Draco would be able to ponder which thing is the most important before starting to answer. It might be a moot point, since I’m pretty sure Veritaserum tends to make people think out loud.
“Well, I hide a lot of things from you intentionally. That’s what you taught me after all. But which one is the most important? I’m not even sure how to rank things like this, so I suppose I’m solving a problem. Harry would say that in this sort of situation, one should hold off on proposing solutions. So let me think of the salient features of how to sort a list of secrets in order of importance...” (no effort on my part to make this in Draco’s voice)
No, not that first. But I’d expect him to get around to it eventually. And it won’t harm their bond if Draco doesn’t remember it- the Hogwarts wards only protect students from being Obliviated while they’re in Hogwarts.
I doubt that’s true in the purely consequentialist sense, and I don’t expect Lucius to think like a consequentialist.
A major violation of trust from the person Draco cares about and respects most of all, seems like exactly the sort of damage that could survive Obliviation (as McGonagall hinted in Chapter 6).
And my model of Lucius would not want to violate Draco’s trust, even if Draco couldn’t remember it—he genuinely cares about being a good father to Draco. Old-fashioned nobles believe in virtue ethics, if any.
So, for what reason do you believe you have a better model of Lucius than Dumbledore does?
I don’t. But I think I have a better model of what sorts of things Harry has been up to with Draco, than Dumbledore does.
I think Dumbledore thinks that “whatever you have done with Draco” is one thing, and will be most salient to Draco. He’s not expecting the Bayesian Conspiracy, and Draco’s Patronus, and Harry’s Patronus, and discovering that the blood purist hypothesis is false, and actually becoming friends with Hermione, and becoming pregnant with Harry’s baby, and trying to reform Slytherin house, and so on...
So, if I’m understanding you correctly, you think that Lucius giving Draco Veritaserum is not in itself a violation of his trust?
In the context of “assume Lucius will know” “he’ll give him Veritaserum” the clear implication is that Lucius would use enough Veritaserum to make answering involuntary, which would seem a clear violation of trust to me.
Right, I assumed that the Veritaserum itself was just necessary as part of the legal process, for outside observers to make sure Draco isn’t lying, and that instance is what they were talking about. Even in that context, “Tell me things you wouldn’t want to tell me normally” is a violation of trust.
Okay, back up even further. You think that investigating Aurors will give a child victim Veritaserum and then leave him alone with someone else before it wears off? That’s horrifying.
No, I thought that the investigating Aurors would not give a child Veritaserum without his legal guardian there, and thus Lucius would have access to whatever Draco said under Veritaserum. It occurs to me now that Lucius wouldn’t be too prying in front of Aurors.
Why are you not assuming that Lucius could get his hands on Veritaserum himself and interrogate Draco later in private?
If we wanted to assume he would do that, we could assume that at any time—Harry should have been just as worried after the Christmas break.
On reflection, I do believe I have a better model of Lucius than Dumbledore does. I’ve read a lot of the same fanfic as the author has and I know a decent amount about the author’s thought processes, neither of which is true of Dumbledore. And Dumbledore thinks of people in absolutes, and would probably think Lucius is incapable of honestly wanting to be a good father to Draco since he’s “Dark”.
Did Eliezer say that Lucius interrogated Draco himself? I can’t find it—I had assumed it was aurors, who in the course of investigating this particular crime would have no reason even to mention Harry’s name.
I don’t think so, no.
Oh right. Slightly careless reading. Sorry about that.
It looks like readers didn’t get this. They were overdosed on age-inappropriate romantic hopes or did not notice the gap between Harry’s idea and MacGonagal’s.
Is this the sort of thing you respond to by changing the chapters that are already out? The whole service thing will probably be explained in the next chapter anyway, along with Lucius’s “certain rights.”
Waitwhat.
I did not think anyone thought Harry was marrying McGonagall. Or am I missing something here?
Marriage at eleven is inappropriate.
Aha. Missed the cultural context. Thanks!
Well, I mean that romance at eleven is inappropriate. I suggested marriage was seen because it would signal romance and signals of romance were desired because of hopes.
But thank you, Perry. If you hadn’t responded I would have answered the wrong question. I thought he misunderstood when I wrote about the gap between Harry’s marriage idea and MacGonagal’s fealty idea. And then maybe I would not have been clear enough again and there would have been more confusion and we might go on until one got fed up and both simply logged the other as ‘dense’ and left it at that.
Yeah, it would not have occurred to me that romance at age 11 is inappropriate, as I knew a lot of romantically-inclined people at age 11, and I tend to think of Wizarding Britain as a backwards, medieval society so “marriage at 11” doesn’t ring any alarm bells. Plus, 11ish-year-old characters have already talked at length about romance in the story.
Plus… polyjuice.
And since we know no one has the idiot ball, that suggests that the fealty vow (or possibly wedding vow) to Harry was totally unexpected. My impression was that the Wizengamot was stunned by the events.
Yes, they expected Lucius to extract something similar from Hermione. They weren’t thinking of Lucius’s debt to Harry, so until Harry mentioned it and stunned the room, McGonagall’s actions wouldn’t have occurred to them.
I meant that it should have occurred to everyone immediately after Lucius’s statement ”...The girl is no part of House Potter...”
True. Maybe they were just so stunned by everything.
On the other hand, Lucius gets 100,000 gold and Potter in his debt, which apparently gives him some kind of control. And maybe he realized Hermione wasn’t the actual killer, but couldn’t back down at that point because he’d lose face. So it’s not like he ends up with a bad deal.
Alternatively, if he thinks Harry is his real enemy and Hermione just a minion, maybe having Harry in his debt is just as good as putting Hermione in the clank, according to his utility function.
“to obey its Master or Mistress”
I don’t think it’s totally inconceivable that the wizarding world has marriage vows that sound like that.
It sounds more like a oath of obedience.
Yes. I agree. I was just saying that the gender-inclusive language specifically isn’t a good reason to think that, given Wizarding Britain’s displayed attitude toward homosexuality.
It’s not the “gender inclusiveness” that’s the problem, it’s the vagueness. Harry is male, why not call him “Master” instead of “Master or Mistress”? It’s because the oath is a fealty oath sworn to the House, and after Harry dies, the mastery of his house may pass to a daughter of his (which Hermione would then be still sworn to obey).
Marital oaths are between specific people. In this case obedience was sworn to House Potter, and Harry accepted it as the heir and last scion of House Potter.
Yes. I agree.
So was the traditional wedding vow… “I promise to love, honor, and obey.”
“I promise to love, honor, and obey you”, not “the master or mistress of your house”.
Well, yes, agreed that points more towards an oath of servitude. But I could easily imagine someone marrying me and promising to obey “the master of my house” as a poetic and formal way of referring to me. My point in the comment you were responding to was that obedience is hardly foreign to wedding vows.
Point.