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Hullo. Weighing in a little late here, I'm afraid, but I just had to deliver a couple of Percy apologetics. Because, you know, guys, Percy is just so not evil!
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On Percy and the Rules:
Penny wrote:
Has Percy learned his lesson about blind adherence to rules?
Hmmm.
You know, I've never quite been sure where this notion that Percy is such a blind follower of rules comes from in the first place. He really doesn't seem to me to be that type at all.
In Chapter Seven of PS ("The Sorting Hat"), when Dumbledore announces that the third floor corridor is out of bounds "to everyone who does not wish to die a very painful death," Percy has the following exchange with Harry:
Harry laughed, but he was one of the few who did.
'He's not serious?' he muttered to Percy.
'Must be,' said Percy, frowning at Dumbledore. 'It's odd, because he usually gives us a reason why we're not allowed to go somewhere - the forest's full of dangerous beasts, everyone knows that. I do think he might have told us Prefects, at least.'
That doesn't strike me as at all the reaction of a believer in blind obedience to the rules. Far to the contrary, it is the behavior of an independent thinker who fully expects for there to be some explanation given for a new rule. When no explanation is forthcoming, Percy is disturbed and troubled.
Nor does Percy expect his subordinates to accept regulations blindly. His explanation to first-year Harry of the reason that the Forbidden Forest is off-limits shows that when Percy does understand the reasons for the rules, he is not only willing to share them with the younger students, but even goes out of his way to volunteer such information. He's not a blind follower, and he's not a martinet, either.
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On Percy and 'Prefects Who Gained Power:'
People keep bringing up that scene in CoS in which Harry and Ron catch Percy in the junk shop, poring over the copy of 'Prefects Who Gained Power.' When Ron teases him about it, Percy snaps: "Go away." Many people seem to have read this as evidence that Percy is actually madly ambitious, so ambitious that he is both secretive and defensive about it.
Er...was I the only person who assumed that Percy was actually hanging around in that junk shop because he had previously arranged to meet Penelope Clearwater there? From what Ron and the Twins say about his behavior over the summer, I think that we can safely assume that he'd been corresponding with her. When he takes his leave from the rest of the Weasleys outside of Gringotts, he does so by "muttering vaguely about needing a new quill." Ron and Harry run into him very shortly thereafter. If he needs a new quill, then what is he doing in a junk shop, a shop which the text emphasizes quite strongly sells nothing but old and fairly useless items?
I thought it fairly clear on rereading that what was really happening there was that Percy had previously arranged to meet Penny in this obscure little shop, a place that he had thought would be safe from his younger siblings, and that he was waiting for her to arrive when Ron and Harry stumbled across him. He was quite understandably annoyed, and desperate to get rid of them, and that was why he snapped so rudely at Ron.
Of course, I'm sure that he found the book perfectly interesting. But this notion that his defensiveness in that scene is due to some unwholesome degree of ambition is pure misdirection, IMO. After all, at that point in the novel, JKR is setting Percy up as a red herring in a big, big way.
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On Percy and Favoritism:
Whirdy wrote:
Equally fascinating and perhaps a point of discussion I may have missed is the fact that Percy assessed points against Gryffindor when Ron was disrespectful to Percy "Prefect." Later, Ron as Crabbe confronts Percy and Draco Malfoy is told that he should "show a bit more respect to a school prefect," Percy does not cry out "five points against Slytherin" for their disrespect.
Percy would seem to be quite concerned about the appearance of favoritism, and at times goes overboard in his efforts to avoid it.
There's another example of this tendency in the first book, right after both Harry and Ron are sorted into Gryffindor. Percy greets Harry in a perfectly friendly and normal manner, by standing up and shaking his hand. His greeting to Ron, on the other hand, ("Well done, Ron, excellent"), is stilted, awkward, and undeniably pompous. (In fact, it warrants Percy's very first "pompously" in the entire series, quite a precedent!) I tend to view this as a sign of his discomfort: he doesn't want to appear to be showing any favoritism to his brother, and so he tries for formality — and just plain fails to pull it off.
It is an interesting trait in light of his later identification with Crouch, though, isn't it? All the same, I don't know if I'm prepared to believe that five points from Gryffindor falls into quite the same category as conviction to life in prison on the basis of scanty evidence.
And besides, in the end poor old Crouch did value his family relations over the rules, didn't he. Much to his detriment.
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On Percy and his family:
There's, uh, material here for an essay, to be sure, but just a few minor points for now.
Percy's conflict between his extra-familial relationships and his familial ones is a running motif throughout all four books. In the first book, his extra-familial relationships are represented by his Prefect friends, in the second by Penelope Clearwater, in the third by both Penelope and his affiliation with the staff of Hogwarts, and in the fourth by Crouch and the Ministry.
Given that Percy is a teenager, I always find myself wondering why people find this so very striking. Isn't it normal for teenagers to begin to value their extra-familial relationships quite highly, while they start to feel slightly annoyed and restricted by their familial ties? This tendency of Percy's is certainly an ongoing source of tension within the Weasley family dynamic, but is it really so odd as to warrant such great suspicion?
Debbie wrote:
In PS/SS, after putting on his robes and prefect badge the minute he crossed the barrier at Platform 9 3/4, Percy rushes off to the prefects' compartments, leaving his family on the platform.
Yup, agreed. He just can't wait to get his farewells over with so that he can get away from his Mum and his little siblings and go be with people his own age instead.
To my mind, this shows that Percy is guilty of the terrible sin of being a perfectly normal fifteen-year-old boy.
That he chose to associate with the prefects all term is evident from the fact that George has to demand that he spend Christmas day with the family.
The Twins do bully him into wearing his Weasley sweater, true, and they insist that he eat Christmas dinner with them. But although Percy makes his feeble protests, he not only does eat dinner with them (when, in truth, there was actually no way that the Twins could have forced him to do so), but he also spends the entire rest of the day with them. He has a snowball fight with them, and then he goes back to the Gryffindor common room with them and watches Harry and Ron play chess.
This is a fifteen-year-old, mind. Spending the entire day horsing around with two thirteen-year-olds and two eleven-year-olds, instead of spending the time with people his own age. It's only a couple of years' age difference, but those are important years.
And besides, if he hadn't wanted the Twins to manhandle him into his Weasley sweater and then march him down to dinner with them, then he wouldn't have poked his head into the first-year common room in the first place, would he? I mean, complaining that they're making too much noise? On Christmas morning? When there are hardly any students around in the first place? Puu-leeze. Even for Percy, that would really be a bit much. Me, I think that he wanted to hang out with them all along.
I think that Percy likes his family just fine. Well...in the first book, anyway. By the end of GoF, I still think that he loves them, but I also think that he's 'way overdue for moving out of the Burrow and into a place of his own.
—Elkins, always happy to fly the PINE banner
Posted to HPfGU by Elkins on April 12, 2002 5:59 AM
3 comments (link leads to main site)
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