Aside from the classes, I spent all my free time holed up in Room of Requirements (RoR). RoR is a whole lot better than I imagined. Aside from consumables like food or drinks, it can provide me with anything, given its present somewhere in Hogwarts itself. Means I have access to all the books including restricted library books and teachers personal collections. Access to Dumbledore personal collection of books including Alchemy books almost made me drool. My core has started to visibly become bigger due to a high amount of ambient of magic present at Hogwarts. I also got around to read a few books about dark arts. Previously I thought that magic is neither light or dark, it was all about user's intent i.e. depending on its use it could be either good or bad since even light magic could be used for killing someone. And boy, I was in for a rude awakening. Turns out there is a good reason to classify magic in light and dark. Let me explain in this way, magic is all about equal exchange meaning output is proportional to the input. Light magic uses a wizard's or witch's core magic input for desired output as a spell. Meaning more magic you feed it, the stronger the spell. But it's not the same for Dark magic. Dark magic uses negative emotions of the user along with the user's magic to cast spells. Meaning, if the user has high enough negative emotions, Dark spells use less of the user's magic to cast.
Harry Potter And The Rise Of Golden Falcon
Book&Literature · AidenCanis
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