For the rest of the holidays, Jon's life was busy.

Every day is three o'clock one, from the Hufflepuff common room, to the Room of Requirement, to the restaurant.

Although the snow had stopped outside the castle, the site was still covered with thick snow. Zacharias called him to go to snowball fights and build snowmen every day, and he promised, but he didn't participate once.

Astoria went home with her sister, after all, there were still ten days of vacation left.

Jon is busy all day, nothing more than two things, one is to continue to try to explore the potion sequence list...

During this period of time, he has been reconfiguring a Veritaserum in the Room of Requirement, and it will be ready in mid-January. Part of the consumed materials (such as the iconic medicinal materials of Veritaserum such as the feather of the soundless bird) was bought by writing letters to Diagon Alley, and the other part (common medicinal materials) was shamelessly asked Professor Snape and Sprout The professor wants it.

There is also the "Secrets of the Cutting-Edge Dark Arts", which is almost the most esoteric spell book Jon has ever seen.

With the words of Principal Phineas Black that "the evil of power does not depend on itself, but on its master", Jon has no fear of black magic.

Of course, he still has the most basic respect for unknown forces.

The yellow and crunchy pages of the book "Secrets of Advanced Dark Arts" make sparse and unpleasant sounds every time it is opened, which is quite annoying.

However, many of the contents in it are of interest to Jon... The more typical ones are, for example, the Fiercefire Curse!

However, Jon is most concerned about the content related to "Horcrux".

Horcruxes, similar to the lich's phylactery, can be regarded as a life-saving method for some dark wizards; although compared with the real shattered phylactery of Owo, Jon feels weak.

To make a horcrux, a black wizard needs to shatter his soul through murder and other evil things, and then separate part of the soul from the body and seal it in a container, which is the horcrux.

In this way, even if the body is destroyed, it will not die. Because there is still a part of the soul that has not been damaged and remains in the world.

At the same time, relying on the remaining soul, you can also find a way to restore your body and be reborn!

In Jon's personal opinion, the soul level is almost the most important thing for a wizard; the so-called "immortality" obtained at the cost of actively splitting the soul is really not worth it...

No wonder, in the end, Voldemort lived like that man who was neither human nor ghost.

Moreover, in the process of splitting the soul, it is necessary to endure severe pain; generally speaking, it is very difficult for a dark wizard to endure such pain once and obtain a Horcrux.

So Voldemort is not worthy of Dumbledore's evaluation, he is indeed a very good Hogwarts graduate... It must be extremely difficult for him to be able to split six and a half Horcruxes, and I wonder what kind of pain he endured during this process?

Any item can be made into a horcrux, but along with the transfer of the soul, an extremely powerful spell is required to protect the horcrux and maintain its existence.

The Horcrux and the container that holds it are directly related... Once the container that holds the Horcrux is destroyed, the soul inside will also collapse naturally.

The damage of the horcrux will definitely affect the soul of the body, making the already extremely unstable soul even more fragmented. The most direct consequence is to make the black wizard lose his mind and gradually go crazy. To put it bluntly, after the Horcrux is destroyed, it will not affect the power of the wizard, but it will make him lose his mind.

This is in line with Voldemort's crazy and stupid performance a few years later!

Jon searched this chapter several times...Unfortunately, it only seems to describe the method of making Horcruxes, but does not give the spell to split the soul.

That was what Jon was most interested in.

This can't help but disappoint Jon... It seems that Voldemort found the spell to split the soul through other means.

...

The last day of the Christmas holidays.

When Jon returned to the Hufflepuff common room with the book, he suddenly heard whispers inside.

"What's going on?" Jon asked curiously.

"Hagrid..." Ernie McMillan put down a copy of "Daily Prophet" with some horror.

"It should be called Professor Hagrid!" Jon said calmly.

"Well...no matter what it's called...he's actually a half-blood giant!" While speaking, Ernie handed the "Daily Prophet" to Jon: "Half-blood giant, it's really scary! "

Looking at the terrified expression on Ernie's face, Jon wondered if the education of pure-blood wizard families made giants so scary?

Jon picked up the newspaper, opened it, and found the headline on the front page, with a picture of Hagrid.

In the photo, Haig's expression looks a bit sneaky due to the angle.

The headline read: "Shock, Dumbledore made a terrible mistake!"

The author, unsurprisingly, is Rita Skeeter.

Jon just briefly scanned the content of the article... Rita Skeeter blackened Dumbledore Hagrid together. In her writing, Hagrid became a terrible butcher, and Dumbledore was Is an insidious schemer.

Objectively speaking, Jon feels that Rita Skeeter's description of Dumbledore is quite correct.

"My father will definitely protest to Professor Dumbledore!" Ernie McMillan said with certainty, "He will never tolerate a half-blood giant becoming my classroom!"

"Actually, Hagrid is not bad..." A second-year girl whispered, "I accidentally fell off the boat when freshmen started school last year... It was Hagrid who fished me out by swimming! My moleskin coat is draped over me, although it makes me a little out of breath!"

"Do you know how terrifying giants are!" Ernie made a ferocious expression, which startled the second-year girl: "Do you know how many people they have eaten... During the rampage of the mysterious man, they made They were responsible for some of the worst Muggle massacres ever..."

Jon didn't take part in the quarrel between them.

After all, Hagrid had treated him fairly well, and he had no reason to speak ill of him.

At the same time, he was also very clear that with Dumbledore's trust in Hagrid... even if the whole school's parents wrote him a yelling letter, he would not fire Hagrid.

Dumbledore is such a person, when he trusts a person, he will trust without reservation.

And he seems to have made a mistake once in his life.

Continue to ask for a monthly ticket!

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