Thanks loads, if you have some ideas with Transfiguration books. The library has so many, and I wasn't sure which ones would be best. I'd rather ask you than Madam Pince. She looks so . . . fierce, every time I walk up to her desk, that I lose my nerve and walk away. But maybe you know her better?
Funny that you mention it, Terry stopped me on my way to Charms yesterday, and he asked, real polite-like, if I could deliver a note for him to Madam Pomfrey. I was surprised, but said, 'sure,' and he popped back in the Transfiguration classroom before I could ask him what it was about.
Took it up to her, and she didn't seem half pleased when she read it, but don't know what it was about.
I've been inside a Muggle church once before, too, Lancaster Cathedral. Not far from my home. It was kind of ruined, too, during the war. Had splendid stained glass windows once, they said, but they're all broken now, and the roof's caved it. Pity, really.
I think I get the idea of that word, numinous, when I think about walking into the Great Hall for the first time and seeing those floating candles and all.
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Date: 2008-10-16 10:52 pm (UTC)Funny that you mention it, Terry stopped me on my way to Charms yesterday, and he asked, real polite-like, if I could deliver a note for him to Madam Pomfrey. I was surprised, but said, 'sure,' and he popped back in the Transfiguration classroom before I could ask him what it was about.
Took it up to her, and she didn't seem half pleased when she read it, but don't know what it was about.
I've been inside a Muggle church once before, too, Lancaster Cathedral. Not far from my home. It was kind of ruined, too, during the war. Had splendid stained glass windows once, they said, but they're all broken now, and the roof's caved it. Pity, really.
I think I get the idea of that word, numinous, when I think about walking into the Great Hall for the first time and seeing those floating candles and all.