Hogwarts Gymnastics Professor

Chapter 150 Snape's Heart

Chapter 150 Snape's Heart
Snape stood up from the stool, looking as if he was about to take out his wand from his pocket and point it at Lockhart to start a duel. Looking at Snape who was trembling all over, Lockhart sat on the stool carelessly, even a little There is no point in standing up.

Lockhart had never had a good impression of Snape.

In the beginning, of course, it was because Lockhart brought in the protagonist team when he was reading novels and movies. Therefore, when Lockhart first read the book, he always looked at the problem from the perspective of Gryffindor.

In Potions class, Snape worked on turning Gryffindors into Gryffindors.

Although as the dean of Slytherin House, it is not unacceptable for Snape to have some preferential treatment for the students of this house, for example, Professor McGonagall bought Harry a new broom and allowed Harry to enter Quidditch earlier Team, Lockhart felt that this level of preferential treatment was permissible.

However, Snape's excessive treatment of Slytherin made it impossible for even the most shameless person to ignore his double standards. Students in Slytherin can get extra points for doing the same thing, but students in other colleges will deduct points for doing the same thing. .

A teacher is an engineer of the soul. A good teacher should not only teach students knowledge, but also teach students how to be a human being. Snape's famous double standard in Potions class can only make all the little wizards learn double standards. Be lenient with self-discipline and strict with others.

Young wizards trained in this way will most likely become the kind of people who only talk about camps and positions, don't care about right and wrong, and have no sense of right and wrong. Fudge and Umbridge are such people.

Lockhart remembered that Snape had forced Neville to feed his toad the ruined potion, just to "teach him a lesson".

Neville's toad, Trevor, was given to him by his uncle after he learned he was going to Hogwarts, because his family had been worried that he was a Squib
.So to Neville, Trevor is not just a pet, it symbolizes that Neville is a wizard and his family is proud of him.Though killing a student's pet because a potion wasn't made right would be too much in itself.

In addition, Snape's double standard is also reflected in many other ways.

For example, taunting that Tonks' Patronus has changed because of Remus, even though his own has changed because of Lily.

For example, tolerating and supporting school bullying: When Draco used a curse to make Hermione's front teeth bigger, Snape told Hermione that he didn't see any difference.Even if he was a victim of school bullying.

Later, after reading the original book and all the movies, and learning about Snape's undercover identity and his feelings for Lily, Lockhart gradually developed a sympathetic affection for Snape.

Especially when Snape said to Harry on his deathbed, "Look at my eyes...your eyes are very similar to your mother's." Lockhart was even more moved. .

But when Lockhart got to know more about Snape, his attitude towards Snape changed again.

First of all, Snape voluntarily joined the Death Eaters.

He is a man of injustice, a man obsessed with black magic and power, and a man of low morals.

He once told Voldemort the prophecy knowing that the baby would be killed by Voldemort, because he thought killing a baby was a normal thing.

When Snape himself heard the prophecy about Voldemort, he conveyed the prophecy to Voldemort without hesitation, only wavering when he heard that it was Lily's child.

Snape begged Voldemort to spare Lily.Don't let James go, kill the baby Harry, just hope Lily can survive.He only thought about Lily in his mind, and never thought about how cruel it would be for Lily to let her husband and children die.

If Voldemort thought Neville was the chosen savior, Snape would not have betrayed Voldemort at all, I'm afraid he is not in Hogwarts now, but in Azkaban.

It is always easy for people to flock to a little bit of light in a dark character, but at the same time blame the little bit of darkness in those bright characters.

Before Lily's death, Snape could almost be said to have done all the bad things, but he was able to wash it clean because of the words "always" and "look at me".

But James, Lupine and Sirius have to receive all kinds of pointers because of a school violence when they were young.

No matter how many people in the book have said about the great Lily James, no matter how many times Rowling positively described Sirius Lupine's forbearance and persistence.It seems that a person who has been wronged in Azkaban for more than ten years, and a person who has lost his life, teachers and friends, is not as touching as his saying "aways".

Besides, speaking of school violence, isn't it considered school violence that Snape once connived at his friends to use black magic on Mary McDonald, a Gryffindor girl in the same grade as Lily?
Isn't it a kind of campus bullying that he constantly verbally suppressed Harry and Neville by relying on his professorship in class?

Moreover, Snape and the foursome were rivals, not a relationship of unilateral bullying.

Memories of the Deathly Hallows, Lys Snape.Snape and James met for the first time on the train. When James and Sirius chatted about "wanting to join Gryffindor", Snape interjected, "If you would rather develop your limbs than your mind Simple".

Opening the map cannon, the yin and yang are strange, the first to flirt is cheap, and the beam between the two was provoked by Snape when they first met.

Besides, even if it is understandable for Snape to hate James and Sirius, he really can't bear Lupine's various attacks. "Pretending to accidentally reveal that Lupine is a werewolf" simply disgusted Lockhart.

Alan Rickman's acting skills in previous life movies are too good, and his personal image is handsome enough, which has attracted a large number of fans for Snape, but anyone who knows about Snape's ins and outs It is impossible to really think that Snape is a person worthy of ordinary people's liking.

When Dumbledore heard Snape say for the first time that he wanted to kill James and Harry, he said "Snape, you make me sick!"

If he didn't know that Voldemort was not dead, and he had to have a spy to deal with Voldemort, Lockhart believed that Dumbledore would not have allowed Snape to stay at Hogwarts.

In any case, Snape was not a good person, let alone a teacher, so Lockhart was merciless towards Snape.

One might argue that Snape suffered in the past, and the subsequent redemptive act of Snape, but Lockhart disagrees.

Suffering in the past can explain the reason why a person becomes a bad person, but it cannot whitewash a bad person. It is obviously inappropriate to hurt others because of one's past suffering.

(End of this chapter)

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