Professor Fawcett

November 04, 2013 12:31 AM
Two cauldrons stood on a small, bare table placed in front of John’s desk as the Advanced students entered the classroom. The right side of the room sat facing a sunshine-yellow potion, the left, a shimmering, mother-of-pearl colored one with steam rising in spirals and a very appealing scent, which would, according to  theory, be different for every person who breathed it, according to what attracted them. Both, he suspected, would be welcome breaks from some of the visuals which had lately accompanied a unit on the uses of blood in potion-making.
 
“Welcome,” he said to the students who had signed on for a voluntary two years of his subject. The Advanced classes involved not only the most complex brewing, but also the most delving into complex theory, and, in the past few years, a measure of independent student research. “For those who are concerned about them, your latest batch of papers should be back by our next class meeting, and your exams are here now,” he said, waving his wand so each paper went to its owner. “Though you may find anxiety slightly difficult to maintain while in the room with this potion,” he added, gesturing to the spiral-steaming brew. “Amortentia – an extremely powerful potion capable, as those of you familiar with Latin may realize from the name, producing an overwhelming, if temporary, romantic obsession in the drinker when brewed correctly. In its unconsumed form, it also tempts those near it to drink it by smelling of what attracts them, though I have read that the taste is slightly bitter, hence the potion often being hidden inside sweets. This effect is not overwhelming, and I shall, of course, prevent any of you who approach the cauldron from removing any potion from it for any use whatsoever.”
 
This he said as blandly and matter-of-factly as possible.
 
“It is also quite complex to make, though you should all be capable of it by the end of your seventh year. Anyone interested in giving it a try may speak with me about setting up sessions for the attempt for extra credit. In class, we will mainly look at the theory behind it, however.
 
“On the other side, we have a somewhat less dangerous potion – somewhat. This is the Elixir to Induce Euphoria, which you will attempt in class today. Consumption, which I advise against, will induce a state of overwhelming happiness.
 
“Hopefully, you have all noticed I described both of these potions as dangerous,” he continued. “Both can produce effects which completely overwhelm the reason and cause the drinker to throw all caution, prudence, and forethought aside – they can induce a reckless disregard for consequence. A single dose of Amortentia will infatuate the drinker for, at most, a day, while a comparable dose of the Euphoria Elixir will last perhaps two hours, but in extreme cases, these times have been enough to produce disastrous actions, and the longer a subject continues to take them, the stronger the effects become. In this week’s reading, you will notice several murders sparked by Amortentia, both from unstable drinkers who became jealous over the object of affection and those who realized what happened to them after the potion wore off, and several accidental or careless deaths of those who overdosed on the Elixir to Induce Euphoria.
 
“Your homework for this lesson will be a composition on how these potions compare to other means of altering or subverting the emotions and will, both with other potions and, if you wish, other branches of magic, though that second course will require more research. Take ten minutes to begin sketching out your preliminary ideas together before or after brewing the Elixir to Induce Euphoria.” He tapped the blackboard to reveal the instructions, along with a list of ingredients – dried, sliced shivelfig, to be added in the beginning and end, porcupine quills, whole sopophorous beans, and wormwood.
 
“You may begin,” he released them, assuming that by now, they knew that he would be on the lookout for anything about to go dangerously wrong and to ask if they had any questions about the potion or their homework assignment. Many in the class were, after all, legal adults now, and the rest were getting close.
 
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0 Professor Fawcett Advanced Potions (6th and 7th Years) 0 Professor Fawcett 1 5


Theresa Carey, Pecari

November 22, 2013 12:48 AM
Taking Advanced Potions was not the stupidest thing Theresa had ever done, but nor did she rank it with her top five smartest decisions in life. The class was, for her at least, over the line between ‘challenging’ and ‘difficult,’ and if Potions had been even slightly less useful a subject for a witch to know, she wasn’t sure she would have continued on with it after CATS, or at least finished the RATS in it. Since it was, however, extremely useful and she was good enough to get by in it when she put the effort in, she was still around, though she felt something like dread every time she entered the classroom.

Today, though, she didn’t feel it quite as long as usual. Normally, the smell of the Potions labs were nothing to write home about, at least not in the sort of cheery, content-free letters she sent most of her family, but today, it was…it was….

As she sat down, she propped up her chin on her hand, trying to analyze it. There were familiar components, but they seemed to change every time she inhaled…apples, cut grass, and rich fabrics, and…She had to blink a few times, rapidly, when Professor Fawcett began speaking and promptly revealed it to be a love potion, at which point she pointedly ignored the telltale tingling and warmth which suggested she was blushing, especially since she didn’t even know why. It wasn’t as though she were desperate enough – or amoral enough, of course, she quickly mentally added on – to use such a thing, and it wasn’t like she had been slipped one, either. Sure, if she ever found out Alicia and Cepheus were more than just good friends, they would both spend a very long time screaming if she had her way about it, but that wasn’t obsessive love, that was just basic self-respect….

She put her exam away and began trying to sort her notes out, but gave it up as a bad job and just went to fill up her cauldron. As she turned, though – maybe just because of the distracting potion vapors in the room – she did so a little too quickly and bumped into someone else. “Ow!” she exclaimed, rubbing her arm and nearly, with one hand off it, dropping the cauldron. “I mean, sorry,” she amended quickly, hoping to alleviate any offense in her mood of well-being.
0 Theresa Carey, Pecari Bumping into people 0 Theresa Carey, Pecari 0 5