I believe it is stated somewhere, maybe in the books, or maybe Jk Rowling said it herself, but children produced under a love potion are incapable of love. Since Voldemort's mother used love potion to be with Tom Riddle senior, baby Voldemort was made under a love potion, and therefore was incapable of love.
Oh, I think I remember that. But the question then would be, if he was loved, if he had a loving family, would he be any different? Hm. they'd have to be more than just him produced under the love potion and no others had become Dark Lords, or that we know of.
hmmmm... my immediate reaction is to say, what kind of question is that? Of course if Voldemort had been better cared for and loved he would have turned out differently! Children are blank slates when they are born and learn as they go, they are a product of their environment (many, MANY factors combined to make a person who they are), and so there is no such thing as a bad child or and inherently evil child, just ones that have been negatively effected by the people, ideas, and events around them. he was raised in a rather harsh and hostile world and therefore he reflects that. unless of course he was in actuality a true sociopath with no sense of empathy with the feelings of others. which still means he is not truly evil. that combined with his upbringing could have pushed him into being the person that he became.
but then i think, wait, this is a children's book, and in children's book there is such a thing as true evil. there are no grey spots, no rationalizations about mental health and misguided decisions, there are good guys and there are bad guys and Voldemort is a bad guy and has always been bad an would have been bad not mater what because he was made of badness, as shown through his less than favorable ancestry. Poor, ugly, stupid, hateful pureblood bigots and a love potioned muggle do not a good man make (apparently).
so can Voldemort love? that depends on if you want an answer from the real world or not.
well like, technically, this question has a lot of layers.
If by Voldemort you mean Tom Riddle Jr- then yeah different circumstances might have changed things.
(and like even using real world logic- Tom riddle could Still be evil EVIL guy. isn't that what makes sychopaths? you know, like those that have perfectly normal family, perfect happy homes and still there is that trigger that makes them selfish monsters who go on killing sprees of innocents)
if by voldemort- you mean came out of the cauldron new body Voldemort- I would say No. different chances would not have changed him, since the ritual was an evil one made with suffering and murder so it probably killed whatever goodness he had in him.
Voldemort was loved by someone, I think. In that idolized sort of way that only Bellatrix could love someone. And as for whether Voldemort could love, I think that he could. And the why of this is actually very easy - it's the moment that makes me certain that Bellamort, somewhere in cannon, happened.
"Molly's curse soared beneath Bellatrix's outstretched arm and hit her squarely in the chest, directly over her heart. Bellatrix's gloating smile froze, her eyes seemed to bulge: For the tiniest space of time she knew what had happened, and then she toppled, and the watching crowd roared, and Voldemort screamed."
Voldemort has never been shown to care about his followers, but he cared about her. If he could love anyone, it was her.
YES. So very much yes. I think he would have seen a lot of himself in her in some ways, and even if he saw her as beneath him, she was happy enough to be in that position that I don't think it would have interfered at all. *loves all over the Bellamort*
Eeee!! *Shares the Bellamort love* My thoughts exactly - as long as he was making it clear to her that she was still his servant, I think they could have had a relationship quite easily. She'd still be inferior to him in his mind, but not so much that he couldn't care for her.
Nice point. It's also interesting to me that he tells Severus he regrets having to kill him. There's nothing he gains by saying that, so I tend to take it as genuine. I have a soft spot for a certain kind of loyalist!Snape fic, and so I think it would be very interesting to look more closely at their relationship - maybe V could come to feel for him the way he does for Bella.
And he also seems oddly invested in the notion of the DEs as his friends or family, arguing with Dumbles about it in the middle of a battle as he does.
But the way he addresses the 'I don't want to do this but I must' thing was very cold, so it seems more like he was trying too hard to have a heart, in that case, to me. I think in some ways he wants to care, but he finds it hard for most of them. Perhaps it's just my shippy heart that makes me see Bella as having been special for him, but I think out of all of them, she might have been the one he really felt for. Severus I could see him viewing almost as a friend, though, or as close to it as he's capable of, more than any of his other followers.
Given the circumstances, I think he CAN love, but it won't be the love most of us want. deirdre_aithne said, he did love Bellatrix. Maybe WE didn't see it as love, but it was their form of love that we couldn't understand.
Sometimes I wonder if JKR just makes crap up when people ask her questions, and then puts them in the books to make it the truth. Like with the thing about love potions and the child formed out of one being unable to love. To me, that's utter BS -- that came out of Dumbledore's mouth (if I'm remembering correctly), but we all know his past. Gellert had love and loved in return, but he still became powerful enough to be feared, why couldn't Voldemort do the same?
If Tom had the respect he wanted (from the students and/or Dumbledore) during school, or if Dumbledore had just given him a chance on the DADA position, I'm sure we would have seen a different Voldemort in the books. A lot of his actions were ones of a child reaching out for attention, and that continued on through his adult years.
Seconded. (And Dumbles doesn't even provide any genuine evidence that there WAS a potion involved - he assumes Merope must have used one because she was ugly and poor and not socially talented. But a spoiled rich boy could just as easily have taken advantage of her for precisely those reasons, and freaked out when she got pregnant. That whole argument of Dumbledore's makes my skin crawl.)
maybe Its because I like Dumbledore, and despite him doing some BAD things in his past, I dont cross him as Bad Bad liar pants on fire.
but like, there's as much evidence of merope Not using a love potion as much as evidence she didn't.
I think there was a love potion because, How else coud merope have enough space to interact with Tom Sr, to get him to woo her? He barely crossed the gaunts territory, Marvolo and Morfin didn't even let merope long enough out of the house.
and tom Sr. has no reason to go there- no gain. if the Gaunts had some sort of secret treasure or something Tom Riddle sr could benefit from then ok- he had sex with her even if she was ugly.
but, from my little understanding of rich shallow guy has sex with lower status girl troupe- he only does it if he can gain something- (rebellion, money, etc)
and Tom Sr had nothing to gain, and Merope everything. (until he dumped her)
plus merope WAS desperate to leave- And to have a chance with Tom Sr.
i dont think it had nothing to do with her being ugly- and poor- and like, all to do with her being opressed and wanting to be loved and a way out.
if anything it wasn't dwelled on because Rowling just wanted a plot point to make evil!tom riddle Jr. not because Dumbledore is skevy eww guy.
My point wasn't that Dumbledore was lying. It was that he's making *assumptions* - rather common, ugly assumptions that play into common misogynistic tropes - that he gives no actual evidence to support. (And my larger point is that JKR is, probably unconsciously, relying on some really ugly misogynistic tropes in making such a simplistic narrative argument and expecting the audience to buy it.) And the argument that Merope was barely out of the house doesn't really support or condemn any particular argument, since every argument has to deal with that fact in some way in order to get the characters together at all.
Her being poor and oppressed doesn't rule out er desire for love. But it does mean that Tom is dealing with someone who, as far as he knows, *can't effectively fight back* if he chooses to take advantage of her. What would he gain by such a move? Power; a sense of control over someone; sex; all of the things that privileged, powerful men have throughout history gained by taking advantage of poor women. It's not only about money or adolescent rebellion (it's hardly rebellion anyway - it's as traditional as you can get. Droit du seigneur, it's called - the assumption that you can do as you please with the serving-girls and the like because you are the master and they are there for your pleasure. See the Strauss-Kahn affair for simply the latest incarnation of this.)
Of course this is as well-supported as Dumbledore's argument - we DON'T KNOW for sure. Which is part of my point: people take Dumbledore's *assumptions* as equivalent to *knowledge,* when historically the reverse is at least as likely a scenario, if not moreso. But blaming the woman is the traditional, and misogynistic, way out - and blaming the not-conventionally-attractive people is an icky theme running throughout JKR's books. Of course JKR was doing it in order to get a plot point - that doesn't mean we can't critique the way she went about it and the foundations of the tropes she draws on.
And I didn't even touch on the ickiness of the suggestion that Tom was evil because he was born of rape (asserting a causal connection implies that children born of rape are necessarily evil or, at the very least, predisposed to be evil). That's REALLY not cool, and the argument that she used a potion really needs to take this into account if those supporting it want credibility in my book.
did I said that? If I did I admit to being wrong, I never ever ever meant to imply that because it's Bad bad stupid assumption.
also, I like, would like to think rowling didn't meant the raep baby= evil babies. i mean that's a Horrible thing for a woman to say! and like, didn't her ex-husband beat her or something? so i dont think so.
.....
now i totally think she didn't meant all the ugly misogenist thing and it just came out, because pre-harry potter fame- She Totally was like Merope! bad husband, left alone to take care of child- poor.
i want to say that I wasn't trying to be Mean or mysogenist to merope. and of course she deserved love- her family was Horrible, Horrible so she deserved something better. I know merope is th victim, and i never said she was a bad person. I mean she ended up dead because she tried to support a child by herself and couldn't survive in the end. Tom riddle Sr. is a monster.
also- i should have said this before- when I said I support the love potion-as fact. I was not saying that because merope is ugly and poor that was the only way she could get Tom Riddle Sr and it's Her fault Voldemort is the way he is. the way I see it, merope Might Have used the Potion on Tom riddle Sr. - and that is Bad. But that was a mistake out of desperation But it takes two to tango- so like, I think Voldemort turned out the way he is because most likely Tom Riddle Sr. I mean his character is not described really nicely- except of being handsome- but he's a horrible person.
what like, I was trying to say is that we have no evidence of the love potion being used Not being true or being true- its 50/50. so we can't know if dumbledore is assuming things or knowing the truth and call him evil meany liar- because he and us reader got half truths/info. that the problem is not dumbledore, even if he did do some sucky things, the problem is that the story/rowling left it ambiguous not totally clear.
. and either way Merope got a really sucky outcome either way- regardless of wether she was pretty/ugly rich or poor- this is a girl that got knocked up, the "boyfriend" found out and left her to survive alone. and then she died. :(
like my whole point was not to jump to conclusion on who is lying/making stuff up because readers didn't got all the info- rowling does and she didn't made it clear and that was bad.
I agree with condwiramurs -- there's just no evidence that a potion was used in the first place. People take what Dumbledore says for fact, even if he just happened to be pulling it out of his ass, lol.
we got no POV from merope or Tom Riddle Jr. either, and their the main players of this- so there's as much possibility of there being a potion than not. it's 50/50.
and I take it as a fact because, within harry's journey it is presented as a fact. and harry is our eyes to the story.
That's the beauty of fanfiction, though. To see it through someone else's eyes and to explore deeper than what the original author placed on the page.
Reading is all about interpretations. You can take things as face value, or you can tear it apart and dissect the story, try to figure out the why and how rather than the is.
but Grindewald is Not voldemort- they're too different tyrants.
and why not a love potion would make a love-deprived child? it does have some logic.
Love potions do not Create real love- they create lust and obsession- we actually saw the effect of a love potion on Ron- and that didn't looked like love to me.
like, isn't there some medical finding thing that says if a woman is alcoholic/does drugs then the baby is born alcohol/drug dependant too?
so why wouldn't a baby conceived while someone's system is full of love potion, mess up the baby development?
that does happen.
also, that;s not a fair criticizing, then like All the characters are unreliable because they have said things that are not shown explicitly.
(and the love potion thing is not BS- slughorn a potion master said it and we saw the effects of that on Ron)
Thinking on most of JKR's flat plane (that she has sometimes), Voldemort and Gellert are pretty much the same. We just don't see Gellert's reign at all, so we will never know how far he got.
Ron's episode had no lust to it. Just pure and complete infatuation.
The baby has a CHANCE of being dependent on them -- it isn't born like that all the time. And hey, some kids whose mothers don't do drugs are born needing them. I've got a cousin that's like that and her mother was devastated because she carried "the perfect pregnancy."
I think that's a perfectly fair bit of criticizing. Dumbledore is painted as perfect through six books and it isn't until the seventh that we realize that he is human and he's made some huge mistakes. One of his biggest is that he's too judgmental on certain people, Tom being one of them.
And I don't have a strong trust of Slughorn. I trust Snape over him any day, especially when it comes to potions. Besides that, Ron didn't have children while under the influence of that potion.
I think Gellert was powerful to be feared because he didn't have his priorities in order XD
Also, I feel like the part about love potions and the child coming as a result of one being unable to love was supposed to be more figurative in the sense that it wasn't genuine love, but that might just be me. I think Dumbledore was just trying to make the point that a child should be made from love so that he or she will receive proper love in the future, in turn giving the child the capability of giving love as well. But, again, that might just be me xD
JKR did say in an interview that Voldemort could have been able to love if his mother were to have loved him, so I don't think she thinks that he's evil no matter what the circumstance. It was just the whole importance of familial/maternal love, that thing :D
I think both. Voldemort was capable of love- and he also wasn't.
could he care for something? yes. He cared about bellatrix, nagini, his horcruxes.
Did he cared Selflessly? Agape love? Platonic love? for the other's benefit, even if he got nothing out of it? No.
we seen examples of this a lot. when he was in the orphanage he blames Both his mother and father. he HATED his father for abandoning his mother and him, but he Also hated his mother for "being weak and not strong enough to stay alive for him. (that is him missing his mother but not for his mother sake- but for his)
when he gets caught by dumbledore about stealing and hurting other kids he doesn't feel ashamed because what he did was bad/wrong. he felt ashamed because he got caught.
for bellatrix, I think he "loved" her because he saw another person almost identical to him. also something useful- someone he knew would NEVER betray him- not for family, not out of fear- absolute loyalty.
but the kind of "love" he had was not selfless, or good. it was self-centered and selfish.
as for snape- i think he "respected him" after all, from Voldemort's POV. snape gave him everything he asked- he WAS useful- but once he stop being useful he got rid of him. I mean he might have said he regretted having to kill him- but he still killed him.
as for my theory of how he can Both love and cant love, I have like- 3:
1. He has a disorder- both physical and mental (now I'm not saying those things or people that have those things make anyone evil- that would be stupid, unfair dumb idea) but his understanding of love was completely twisted. it's like this wall that he keeps putting up to Not understand it- even if he was given chances to start over and knew real love- he kept blocking them and thinking them lies, fake, useless.
I mean Harry told him that if he could feel true remorse, he could save himself. and voldemort mocked the idea and refused to take it.
2. he had a chance to understand/feel love but as he started murdering people that part became smaller and smaller until it was almost not there- but also there because in the end he could have pulled himself back together and have a whole purged of evil soul- if he repented.
3. the reason why he had those glimpses of love (snape, bellatrix) was because having harry's blood in him/th connection he had with harry.
I mean, like first Lily's sacrifice was an act of pure selfless love of a mother for her child, and Voldemort took that inside his new body in the ritual in GoF.
and like, the same way Harry had those moments of Hate, Murderous thought, indifference towards others suffering/feelings while wearing the horcrux/ flashes of being inside voldemort's head- it could have worked the other way around too- Voldemort going into lapses of feeling love because he had a part of harry in him.
I dont know if these like, make a lot of sense, but that's what i think.
I'll do a copy/paste of the answer I gave to this question @ PFF and add a few bits in italic...
This is an interesting question. According to JK Rowling, no he can't. However, that's an oversimplification. She doesn't like Voldemort, he's 'evil', so he's incapable of love. Probably why she created the whole 'a child born of a love potion can't feel love' BS. She despises Voldemort/Tom Riddle, therefore refuses to leave a 'loophole' for someone to claim he could have ever been anything but evil. Rather childish of her in my opinion.
My take on it is that the question needs to be broken down a bit:
At no point in his life was he ever shown love. What if he was... What if someone had loved him?
1) If Tom Riddle had been raised by people that loved him would he still have become Voldemort? Could he have been saved as a baby? Or was he born evil?
2) When Tom first came to Dumbledore's notice at 11 years old, was he beyond saving? Yes, he was vicious and cruel, but could someone have helped him? Is a child truly beyond all hope?
3) What if... Instead of leaving a Magical Child in a Muggle Orphanage, what would have happened if Dumbledore had done the right thing and found the child's nearest living Magical relatives (the Potters or the Blacks) and placed him with them? Look at the Gaunt family tree, as well as the Potter and the Black family trees, Tom Riddle could be claimed by either house
Now let's jump ahead to Lord Voldemort:
By the time Tom was 16 he had taken the name Voldemort. That's also when he made his first Horcrux.
1) What if someone was to give Tom love at this point? Could he accept it? Would he be able to return it? Could he love someone that loved him?
Remember, there is a way of reversing a Horcrux. If you feel remorse, true remorse, for what you've done, you can undo the Horcrux and take back the piece of your soul. It stands to reason then , that someone is not beyond hope after creating a Horcrux as long as they can be led to see the error of their ways
2) At what point in Tom's life did he truly become irredeemable? Or did he ever?
3) What if someone could have shown him love towards the end? Say during OotP. Obviously it would require pulling him away from his sycophantic followers, among other things. But, are there any circumstances that would allow him to accept someone's love at this point? I mean actual love, not blind worship. Bella doesn't count. That is the love of a deranged, insane psychopath and falls more under 'blind worship' than true love.
He knows what love is, he knows it is real and that it exists. "His mother left upon him the traces of her sacrifice.... This is old magic, I should have remembered it, I was foolish to overlook it ... " That kind of sacrifice won't work without love. He realizes it exists and the power behind it, but he's never felt it.
So, we return to the beginning. What if he had been shown love and given love?
My (oversimplified) opinion: Yes, he is capable of love and he could have been saved. Tom Riddle is one of Dumbledore's multitude of tragic mistakes. But my feelings on Dumbledore are a different matter entirely and should anybody care, a short version can be found here.
"3) What if... Instead of leaving a Magical Child in a Muggle Orphanage, what would have happened if Dumbledore had done the right thing and found the child's nearest living Magical relatives (the Potters or the Blacks) and placed him with them?"
Can this be a fic? Like, right now? I want to see this so bad.
"3) What if someone could have shown him love towards the end? Say during OotP. Obviously it would require pulling him away from his sycophantic followers, among other things. But, are there any circumstances that would allow him to accept someone's love at this point? I mean actual love, not blind worship."
This is why I adore the Voldemort/Harry pairing. Just this right here.
Can this be a fic? Like, right now? I want to see this so bad. I know, it would be such an interesting story, right! I'd love to see it as well.
This is why I adore the Voldemort/Harry pairing. Just this right here. I like Voldemort/Harry as long as he can be made to look like he did before (as Tom Riddle), either by a potion or a spell or some combination of the two. I also have become fascinated with the idea of Tom(Voldemort)/Ginny and Tom(Voldemort)/Hermione. Unfortunately I have found much fic like that; other than ones where Harry goes dark.
Like other people said--the kind of love Voldemort had, or would have had, is probably different from the kind of love we think of.
I think Voldemort has a very different view and opinion on love--he's never had someone genuinely care for him, so I don't think he knows how to genuinely care for anyone. He's always been on his own, and even if he regards his Death Eaters as his friends, they're mere acquaintances--loyal, yes, especially with Bellatrix. Voldemort valued Bellatrix so much, and really I did love it that Voldemort screamed when she died because over the years he'd probably grown to realize that she's someone whom he could rely on, even if he didn't disclose any secrets to her.
The same thing goes with Snape. I think Voldemort doesn't love in the ideal sense, but he does have value of what's good and bad, what's important and what's not. Love is hard to define, anyways--the kind of love that Harry experiences is the kind where people care for him, like his mother who protected his life, or his friends who were there to hold him up when he broke down, or Dumbledore who comforted him when Sirius died. Voldemort didn't have anything like that--he had people who believed in him, but he didn't ever need them. I don't think he ever felt the sense that without them, he would be broken; I think that's the kind of love that Harry addresses, that the book addresses, that JKR addresses.
I personally agree with what JKR said about that if his mother had cared enough about him to have the will to live, instead of being too heartbroken that Tom Riddle Sr. had left him, that Voldemort wouldn't have been Voldemort, but that he would have just been normal old Tom Riddle Jr.--maybe a little haughty, perhaps, but definitely not evil, definitely not exclusively self-reliant, definitely not experimenting with his magic without someone to guide him. He needed a mother figure, someone he needed, but I do believe Merope's death caused him to lose the opportunity for this. I don't think it's only Merope's fault, though--he also hated the orphanage, and why? Perhaps it was because he didn't feel loved--if the people at the orphanage had loved him, if the adults there had cared for him as a surrogate parent and less as a strict caretaker; or if when Tom Riddle Jr. was too young to really make any moral decisions by himself and maybe had a fellow friend, or an older one offer a hand of friendship, he would have been less evil.
It seems to me that he's always been isolated throughout his whole life, that no one ever reached out a hand to him before it was too late. His perception on love is skewed (comparatively to the other characters), which is probably why his opinion of it isn't very high.
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Date: 2012-04-22 06:26 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-04-22 07:07 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-04-22 09:40 am (UTC)but then i think, wait, this is a children's book, and in children's book there is such a thing as true evil. there are no grey spots, no rationalizations about mental health and misguided decisions, there are good guys and there are bad guys and Voldemort is a bad guy and has always been bad an would have been bad not mater what because he was made of badness, as shown through his less than favorable ancestry. Poor, ugly, stupid, hateful pureblood bigots and a love potioned muggle do not a good man make (apparently).
so can Voldemort love? that depends on if you want an answer from the real world or not.
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Date: 2012-04-22 06:35 pm (UTC)If by Voldemort you mean Tom Riddle Jr- then yeah different circumstances might have changed things.
(and like even using real world logic- Tom riddle could Still be evil EVIL guy. isn't that what makes sychopaths? you know, like those that have perfectly normal family, perfect happy homes and still there is that trigger that makes them selfish monsters who go on killing sprees of innocents)
if by voldemort- you mean came out of the cauldron new body Voldemort- I would say No. different chances would not have changed him, since the ritual was an evil one made with suffering and murder so it probably killed whatever goodness he had in him.
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Date: 2012-04-22 01:48 pm (UTC)"Molly's curse soared beneath Bellatrix's outstretched arm and hit her squarely in the chest, directly over her heart. Bellatrix's gloating smile froze, her eyes seemed to bulge: For the tiniest space of time she knew what had happened, and then she toppled, and the watching crowd roared, and Voldemort screamed."
Voldemort has never been shown to care about his followers, but he cared about her. If he could love anyone, it was her.
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Date: 2012-04-22 02:36 pm (UTC)In my opinion, he either loved Bellatrix (while still considering her a servant and beneath him), or something very close to it.
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Date: 2012-04-22 02:42 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-04-22 02:48 pm (UTC)My thoughts exactly - as long as he was making it clear to her that she was still his servant, I think they could have had a relationship quite easily. She'd still be inferior to him in his mind, but not so much that he couldn't care for her.
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Date: 2012-04-22 03:45 pm (UTC)And he also seems oddly invested in the notion of the DEs as his friends or family, arguing with Dumbles about it in the middle of a battle as he does.
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Date: 2012-04-22 03:49 pm (UTC)But the way he addresses the 'I don't want to do this but I must' thing was very cold, so it seems more like he was trying too hard to have a heart, in that case, to me. I think in some ways he wants to care, but he finds it hard for most of them. Perhaps it's just my shippy heart that makes me see Bella as having been special for him, but I think out of all of them, she might have been the one he really felt for. Severus I could see him viewing almost as a friend, though, or as close to it as he's capable of, more than any of his other followers.
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Date: 2012-04-22 02:17 pm (UTC)Sometimes I wonder if JKR just makes crap up when people ask her questions, and then puts them in the books to make it the truth. Like with the thing about love potions and the child formed out of one being unable to love. To me, that's utter BS -- that came out of Dumbledore's mouth (if I'm remembering correctly), but we all know his past. Gellert had love and loved in return, but he still became powerful enough to be feared, why couldn't Voldemort do the same?
If Tom had the respect he wanted (from the students and/or Dumbledore) during school, or if Dumbledore had just given him a chance on the DADA position, I'm sure we would have seen a different Voldemort in the books. A lot of his actions were ones of a child reaching out for attention, and that continued on through his adult years.
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Date: 2012-04-22 03:34 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-04-22 03:47 pm (UTC)why?
Date: 2012-04-22 06:29 pm (UTC)but like, there's as much evidence of merope Not using a love potion as much as evidence she didn't.
I think there was a love potion because, How else coud merope have enough space to interact with Tom Sr, to get him to woo her? He barely crossed the gaunts territory, Marvolo and Morfin didn't even let merope long enough out of the house.
and tom Sr. has no reason to go there- no gain. if the Gaunts had some sort of secret treasure or something Tom Riddle sr could benefit from then ok- he had sex with her even if she was ugly.
but, from my little understanding of rich shallow guy has sex with lower status girl troupe- he only does it if he can gain something- (rebellion, money, etc)
and Tom Sr had nothing to gain, and Merope everything. (until he dumped her)
plus merope WAS desperate to leave- And to have a chance with Tom Sr.
i dont think it had nothing to do with her being ugly- and poor- and like, all to do with her being opressed and wanting to be loved and a way out.
if anything it wasn't dwelled on because Rowling just wanted a plot point to make evil!tom riddle Jr. not because Dumbledore is skevy eww guy.
Re: why?
Date: 2012-04-22 07:50 pm (UTC)Her being poor and oppressed doesn't rule out er desire for love. But it does mean that Tom is dealing with someone who, as far as he knows, *can't effectively fight back* if he chooses to take advantage of her. What would he gain by such a move? Power; a sense of control over someone; sex; all of the things that privileged, powerful men have throughout history gained by taking advantage of poor women. It's not only about money or adolescent rebellion (it's hardly rebellion anyway - it's as traditional as you can get. Droit du seigneur, it's called - the assumption that you can do as you please with the serving-girls and the like because you are the master and they are there for your pleasure. See the Strauss-Kahn affair for simply the latest incarnation of this.)
Of course this is as well-supported as Dumbledore's argument - we DON'T KNOW for sure. Which is part of my point: people take Dumbledore's *assumptions* as equivalent to *knowledge,* when historically the reverse is at least as likely a scenario, if not moreso. But blaming the woman is the traditional, and misogynistic, way out - and blaming the not-conventionally-attractive people is an icky theme running throughout JKR's books. Of course JKR was doing it in order to get a plot point - that doesn't mean we can't critique the way she went about it and the foundations of the tropes she draws on.
Re: why?
Date: 2012-04-22 07:57 pm (UTC)Re: why?
Date: 2012-04-23 03:23 am (UTC)also, I like, would like to think rowling didn't meant the raep baby= evil babies. i mean that's a Horrible thing for a woman to say! and like, didn't her ex-husband beat her or something? so i dont think so.
.....
now i totally think she didn't meant all the ugly misogenist thing and it just came out, because pre-harry potter fame- She Totally was like Merope! bad husband, left alone to take care of child- poor.
so i dont think she meant it!
Re: why?
Date: 2012-04-23 03:17 am (UTC)also- i should have said this before- when I said I support the love potion-as fact. I was not saying that because merope is ugly and poor that was the only way she could get Tom Riddle Sr and it's Her fault Voldemort is the way he is. the way I see it, merope Might Have used the Potion on Tom riddle Sr. - and that is Bad. But that was a mistake out of desperation But it takes two to tango- so like, I think Voldemort turned out the way he is because most likely Tom Riddle Sr. I mean his character is not described really nicely- except of being handsome- but he's a horrible person.
what like, I was trying to say is that we have no evidence of the love potion being used Not being true or being true- its 50/50. so we can't know if dumbledore is assuming things or knowing the truth and call him evil meany liar- because he and us reader got half truths/info. that the problem is not dumbledore, even if he did do some sucky things, the problem is that the story/rowling left it ambiguous not totally clear.
. and either way Merope got a really sucky outcome either way- regardless of wether she was pretty/ugly rich or poor- this is a girl that got knocked up, the "boyfriend" found out and left her to survive alone. and then she died. :(
like my whole point was not to jump to conclusion on who is lying/making stuff up because readers didn't got all the info- rowling does and she didn't made it clear and that was bad.
no subject
Date: 2012-04-23 01:00 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2012-04-23 02:57 am (UTC)we got no POV from merope or Tom Riddle Jr. either, and their the main players of this- so there's as much possibility of there being a potion than not. it's 50/50.
and I take it as a fact because, within harry's journey it is presented as a fact. and harry is our eyes to the story.
no subject
Date: 2012-04-23 03:21 am (UTC)Reading is all about interpretations. You can take things as face value, or you can tear it apart and dissect the story, try to figure out the why and how rather than the is.
no subject
Date: 2012-04-23 12:57 am (UTC)mmm....
Date: 2012-04-22 06:43 pm (UTC)and why not a love potion would make a love-deprived child? it does have some logic.
Love potions do not Create real love- they create lust and obsession- we actually saw the effect of a love potion on Ron- and that didn't looked like love to me.
like, isn't there some medical finding thing that says if a woman is alcoholic/does drugs then the baby is born alcohol/drug dependant too?
so why wouldn't a baby conceived while someone's system is full of love potion, mess up the baby development?
that does happen.
also, that;s not a fair criticizing, then like All the characters are unreliable because they have said things that are not shown explicitly.
(and the love potion thing is not BS- slughorn a potion master said it and we saw the effects of that on Ron)
Re: mmm....
Date: 2012-04-23 12:56 am (UTC)Ron's episode had no lust to it. Just pure and complete infatuation.
The baby has a CHANCE of being dependent on them -- it isn't born like that all the time. And hey, some kids whose mothers don't do drugs are born needing them. I've got a cousin that's like that and her mother was devastated because she carried "the perfect pregnancy."
I think that's a perfectly fair bit of criticizing. Dumbledore is painted as perfect through six books and it isn't until the seventh that we realize that he is human and he's made some huge mistakes. One of his biggest is that he's too judgmental on certain people, Tom being one of them.
And I don't have a strong trust of Slughorn. I trust Snape over him any day, especially when it comes to potions. Besides that, Ron didn't have children while under the influence of that potion.
no subject
Date: 2012-04-23 07:56 pm (UTC)Also, I feel like the part about love potions and the child coming as a result of one being unable to love was supposed to be more figurative in the sense that it wasn't genuine love, but that might just be me. I think Dumbledore was just trying to make the point that a child should be made from love so that he or she will receive proper love in the future, in turn giving the child the capability of giving love as well. But, again, that might just be me xD
JKR did say in an interview that Voldemort could have been able to love if his mother were to have loved him, so I don't think she thinks that he's evil no matter what the circumstance. It was just the whole importance of familial/maternal love, that thing :D
on the question-
Date: 2012-04-22 07:05 pm (UTC)could he care for something? yes. He cared about bellatrix, nagini, his horcruxes.
Did he cared Selflessly? Agape love? Platonic love? for the other's benefit, even if he got nothing out of it? No.
we seen examples of this a lot. when he was in the orphanage he blames Both his mother and father. he HATED his father for abandoning his mother and him, but he Also hated his mother for "being weak and not strong enough to stay alive for him. (that is him missing his mother but not for his mother sake- but for his)
when he gets caught by dumbledore about stealing and hurting other kids he doesn't feel ashamed because what he did was bad/wrong. he felt ashamed because he got caught.
for bellatrix, I think he "loved" her because he saw another person almost identical to him. also something useful- someone he knew would NEVER betray him- not for family, not out of fear- absolute loyalty.
but the kind of "love" he had was not selfless, or good. it was self-centered and selfish.
as for snape- i think he "respected him" after all, from Voldemort's POV. snape gave him everything he asked- he WAS useful- but once he stop being useful he got rid of him. I mean he might have said he regretted having to kill him- but he still killed him.
as for my theory of how he can Both love and cant love, I have like- 3:
1. He has a disorder- both physical and mental (now I'm not saying those things or people that have those things make anyone evil- that would be stupid, unfair dumb idea) but his understanding of love was completely twisted. it's like this wall that he keeps putting up to Not understand it- even if he was given chances to start over and knew real love- he kept blocking them and thinking them lies, fake, useless.
I mean Harry told him that if he could feel true remorse, he could save himself. and voldemort mocked the idea and refused to take it.
2. he had a chance to understand/feel love but as he started murdering people that part became smaller and smaller until it was almost not there- but also there because in the end he could have pulled himself back together and have a whole purged of evil soul- if he repented.
3. the reason why he had those glimpses of love (snape, bellatrix) was because having harry's blood in him/th connection he had with harry.
I mean, like first Lily's sacrifice was an act of pure selfless love of a mother for her child, and Voldemort took that inside his new body in the ritual in GoF.
and like, the same way Harry had those moments of Hate, Murderous thought, indifference towards others suffering/feelings while wearing the horcrux/ flashes of being inside voldemort's head- it could have worked the other way around too- Voldemort going into lapses of feeling love because he had a part of harry in him.
I dont know if these like, make a lot of sense, but that's what i think.
no subject
Date: 2012-04-23 09:10 am (UTC)This is an interesting question. According to JK Rowling, no he can't. However, that's an oversimplification. She doesn't like Voldemort, he's 'evil', so he's incapable of love. Probably why she created the whole 'a child born of a love potion can't feel love' BS. She despises Voldemort/Tom Riddle, therefore refuses to leave a 'loophole' for someone to claim he could have ever been anything but evil. Rather childish of her in my opinion.
My take on it is that the question needs to be broken down a bit:
At no point in his life was he ever shown love. What if he was... What if someone had loved him?
1) If Tom Riddle had been raised by people that loved him would he still have become Voldemort? Could he have been saved as a baby? Or was he born evil?
2) When Tom first came to Dumbledore's notice at 11 years old, was he beyond saving? Yes, he was vicious and cruel, but could someone have helped him? Is a child truly beyond all hope?
3) What if... Instead of leaving a Magical Child in a Muggle Orphanage, what would have happened if Dumbledore had done the right thing and found the child's nearest living Magical relatives (the Potters or the Blacks) and placed him with them?
Look at the Gaunt family tree, as well as the Potter and the Black family trees, Tom Riddle could be claimed by either house
Now let's jump ahead to Lord Voldemort:
By the time Tom was 16 he had taken the name Voldemort. That's also when he made his first Horcrux.
1) What if someone was to give Tom love at this point? Could he accept it? Would he be able to return it? Could he love someone that loved him?
Remember, there is a way of reversing a Horcrux. If you feel remorse, true remorse, for what you've done, you can undo the Horcrux and take back the piece of your soul.
It stands to reason then , that someone is not beyond hope after creating a Horcrux as long as they can be led to see the error of their ways
2) At what point in Tom's life did he truly become irredeemable? Or did he ever?
3) What if someone could have shown him love towards the end? Say during OotP. Obviously it would require pulling him away from his sycophantic followers, among other things. But, are there any circumstances that would allow him to accept someone's love at this point? I mean actual love, not blind worship.
Bella doesn't count. That is the love of a deranged, insane psychopath and falls more under 'blind worship' than true love.
He knows what love is, he knows it is real and that it exists.
"His mother left upon him the traces of her sacrifice.... This is old magic, I should have remembered it, I was foolish to overlook it ... "
That kind of sacrifice won't work without love. He realizes it exists and the power behind it, but he's never felt it.
So, we return to the beginning. What if he had been shown love and given love?
My (oversimplified) opinion: Yes, he is capable of love and he could have been saved. Tom Riddle is one of Dumbledore's multitude of tragic mistakes. But my feelings on Dumbledore are a different matter entirely and should anybody care, a short version can be found here.
no subject
Date: 2012-04-23 08:04 pm (UTC)Can this be a fic? Like, right now? I want to see this so bad.
"3) What if someone could have shown him love towards the end? Say during OotP. Obviously it would require pulling him away from his sycophantic followers, among other things. But, are there any circumstances that would allow him to accept someone's love at this point? I mean actual love, not blind worship."
This is why I adore the Voldemort/Harry pairing. Just this right here.
no subject
Date: 2012-04-23 09:26 pm (UTC)I know, it would be such an interesting story, right! I'd love to see it as well.
This is why I adore the Voldemort/Harry pairing. Just this right here.
I like Voldemort/Harry as long as he can be made to look like he did before (as Tom Riddle), either by a potion or a spell or some combination of the two. I also have become fascinated with the idea of Tom(Voldemort)/Ginny and Tom(Voldemort)/Hermione. Unfortunately I have found much fic like that; other than ones where Harry goes dark.
no subject
Date: 2012-04-23 07:52 pm (UTC)I think Voldemort has a very different view and opinion on love--he's never had someone genuinely care for him, so I don't think he knows how to genuinely care for anyone. He's always been on his own, and even if he regards his Death Eaters as his friends, they're mere acquaintances--loyal, yes, especially with Bellatrix. Voldemort valued Bellatrix so much, and really I did love it that Voldemort screamed when she died because over the years he'd probably grown to realize that she's someone whom he could rely on, even if he didn't disclose any secrets to her.
The same thing goes with Snape. I think Voldemort doesn't love in the ideal sense, but he does have value of what's good and bad, what's important and what's not. Love is hard to define, anyways--the kind of love that Harry experiences is the kind where people care for him, like his mother who protected his life, or his friends who were there to hold him up when he broke down, or Dumbledore who comforted him when Sirius died. Voldemort didn't have anything like that--he had people who believed in him, but he didn't ever need them. I don't think he ever felt the sense that without them, he would be broken; I think that's the kind of love that Harry addresses, that the book addresses, that JKR addresses.
I personally agree with what JKR said about that if his mother had cared enough about him to have the will to live, instead of being too heartbroken that Tom Riddle Sr. had left him, that Voldemort wouldn't have been Voldemort, but that he would have just been normal old Tom Riddle Jr.--maybe a little haughty, perhaps, but definitely not evil, definitely not exclusively self-reliant, definitely not experimenting with his magic without someone to guide him. He needed a mother figure, someone he needed, but I do believe Merope's death caused him to lose the opportunity for this. I don't think it's only Merope's fault, though--he also hated the orphanage, and why? Perhaps it was because he didn't feel loved--if the people at the orphanage had loved him, if the adults there had cared for him as a surrogate parent and less as a strict caretaker; or if when Tom Riddle Jr. was too young to really make any moral decisions by himself and maybe had a fellow friend, or an older one offer a hand of friendship, he would have been less evil.
It seems to me that he's always been isolated throughout his whole life, that no one ever reached out a hand to him before it was too late. His perception on love is skewed (comparatively to the other characters), which is probably why his opinion of it isn't very high.