Subject: Harry isn't perfect, after all.
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Posted on: 2013-09-23 20:54:00 UTC

Harry, like any well-rounded character, does have some evil tendencies. He keeps them under good control, but he does. Most of his Slytherin-ish traits are the more neutral ones, though.

His time with the Dursleys left him with little respect for authority or for Muggles in general. Because Harry is a generally decent person, he will respect authority figures who prove their trustworthiness, and he will risk his life for a Muggle like Dudley when necessary. But he certainly does a lot of sneaking around, probably more than he needs to do.

He has a temper. If he's angry, he'll let you have it. Most of the time, Harry gets angry at people who deserve it, but his friends get caught in the crossfire too, like when he smashed up Dumbledore's office after Sirius died. And he'll often create a fight where there doesn't need to be one, because he is too proud to back down from a challenge.

Harry is also quite ambitious. Becoming an Auror is a difficult goal and Harry initially states that as his career plan mostly to mess with Umbridge. That same ambition lets him take on challenges that are much more than any person his age should be expected to conquer, without more than occasional doubts as to whether he is up to the task.

He can be pretty sneaky when he needs to be. Hiding a brewing Polyjuice potion, convincing Ron that he's sneaked him good-luck potion, spending all that time under the invisibility cloak, using secret passages, etc. He had good reasons for most of those things, but he did choose the sneaky method rather than the straightforward charge-into-battle Gryffindor style.

And of course, he's a Parselmouth who's got a bit of Voldemort in him. That, too.

I always thought it was a bit of a pity that we never got to see more of the non-evil Slytherins. It doesn't make much sense that fully a quarter of all wizards are evil wizards. Slytherin can mean sneaky, ambitious, proud, competitive. There are probably good Slytherins. Except, for the most part, they didn't come into the story much--Harry probably never thought too much about getting to know them.

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