POTIONS IN HARRY POTTER

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A variety of 'potions' are discussed in the fictional ''Harry Potter'' series of novels by J. K. Rowling.
'Potions' are brewed in a cauldron from magical ingredients. This results in liquids that can be made to have any kind of effect on the drinker from strength enhancement to immunity to flames. According to former Potions Professor Severus Snape, with potions one can "bewitch the mind, ensnare the senses and even [put a] stopper [on] death". Potion-making skills are not dependent on the maker's overall magic skills, as the potions result from the properties and right proportions of the ingredients. However the creator's magic still forms an integral part of the potion's magical effect (Rowling has said "Potions seems, on the face of it, to be the most Muggle-friendly subject. But there does come a point in which you need do more than stir.") [1].

Contents
Amortentia
Draught of Living Death
Felix Felicis
Love Potion
Mandrake Restorative Draught
Polyjuice Potion
Veritaserum
Wolfsbane Potion
Minor potions
Potion Ingredients
Notes
Amortentia

'Amortentia' (pronounced ''Ah-more-TEN-shia'') is the strongest love potion in the world. In the first Potions class of Harry Potter's sixth year at Hogwarts, Professor Slughorn has a cauldron full of this potion, which is correctly identified by Hermione Granger.
Amortentia can be recognized by its distinctive mother-of-pearl sheen, its steam rising in characteristic spirals and its ability to smell differently to everybody, as Hermione says, "according to what attracts them." We are told that Harry can smell treacle tart, the woody scent of a broomstick handle, and "something flowery he might have smelled at The Burrow", which the reader can infer by the end of the chapter to be connected to the Weasley family in general, and by the end of the book, with Ginny Weasley in particular. To Hermione it smells like freshly mown grass, new parchment, and a third scent that she seemed to have been too embarrassed to reveal in front of the entire Potions class, which was revealed in an interview with JK Rowling to be Ron's hair. [2].
Draught of Living Death

The 'Draught of Living Death' is made by mixing a root of asphodel and an infusion of wormwood. It brings upon its drinker a very powerful sleep that can last indefinitely, hence its name. The potion is mentioned by Snape in Harry's very first Potions class in ''Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone''. It again plays an important role as the first potion to be brewed in Professor Slughorn's N.E.W.T. Potions class during the sixth year, at which time it also noted that the potion contains sopophorous bean juice and chopped valerian root. While attempting to make the potion, Harry finds the altered instructions that lead to his discovery of the Half-Blood Prince.
Instructions on how to brew the 'Draught of the Living Death' are found on page ten of Advanced Potion-Making, the N.E.W.T. level book Hogwarts students were required to use during potions class in their sixth year. The copy Harry used, previously owned by the Half-Blood Prince was "... scribbled all over the pages so that the margins were as black as the printed portions."
When brewing, the potion gives off a "bluish" steam. The ideal half-way point of the potion should resemble a "smooth, blackcurrant-coloured liquid." As the potion continues it should turn a light shade of lilac and then become as clear as water as it is stirred.
According to Advanced Potion-Making the Valerian root and Sopophorous Bean should be chopped. However as proven by the Half-Blood prince's notes crushing the Sopophorous Beans with the flat side of a silver dagger, releases juice better than cutting. Also, the text book states that the potion should be stirred counter-clockwise until it turns as clear as water. The Half-blood Prince's instructions suggested a clockwise stir after every seventh counter-clockwise stir.
Felix Felicis

Main articles: Felix Felicis

Felix Felicis is a potion that makes the user incredibly lucky. It is described as looking like molten gold and bubbling. The potion also helps the person know what to do and where to go. Extremely difficult to brew, if the potion is used too often, it will affect the user's ability to tell what is humanly possible and what is not, as well as inducing toxic effects to those who ingest it excessively. Felix Felicis is banned in organized activities such as sporting events and examinations.
Professor Slughorn offers a small bottle of Felix Felicis as a prize in a potion-brewing contest. Harry wins it with the hints written in the mysterious Half-blood Prince's textbook. The potion is eventually used in anti-Voldemort activities, but not before Harry tricks Ron into believing that he's given the potion to him right before a Quidditch match, eliminating the self-doubt problem that had crippled Ron's playing skills.
Love Potion

'Love Potions' create extreme romantic obsession rather than genuine love, the latter being impossible to recreate artificially. Love Potions can be added to food or drink and can strengthen the longer they're kept. There is a wide range of them. Fred and George Weasley send them disguised as perfumes and cough potions as part of their Owl order service. The strongest Love Potion in the world is Amortentia, which is first seen in the ''Half-Blood Prince'' and has a mother-of-pearl sheen and smells of that which is the most attractive to whoever inhales it. The effectiveness of the potion (or at least the Weasley potions) depends on the attractiveness of the potion giver (how much work the potion has to do before the desired effect is reached), and the body weight of the victim (how long it take for the potion to pass through his or her system). Romilda Vane attempts to use said potions on Harry Potter in the sixth book by spiking a box of Chocolate Cauldrons with love potion. This plan eventually backfires when Ron Weasley eats the sweets instead.
Mandrake Restorative Draught

'Mandrake Restorative Draught' removes the effects of petrification from the user. It requires the leaves from the Mandrake plant and form the base of many antidotes. Its concoction is one of Professor Lockhart's many claimed skills. Professor Sprout concocts this potion to unpetrify the victims of the Basilisk in ''Chamber of Secrets''.
Polyjuice Potion

'Polyjuice Potion' is used to transform a person into the physical form of another person. The final ingredient in this potion is a piece (hairs are the most convenient) of the person that the potion-taker will transform into. The final colour and taste of the potion depends on the person who is being imitated. While Remus Lupin says that Polyjuice Potion is designed solely for humans, and is thus unusable upon those who aren't entirely human such as half-giants, quarter-veela Fleur Delacour successfully uses it; it is possible that it was the giant blood that made it unusable. The potion must not be used to transform into a non-human animal - that ability can only be learned through hard study of transfigurations and contamination of the Polyjuice Potion causes horrendous partial animal transformations which cannot be easily reversed. This potion contains knotwood, bicorn horn, lacewing flies, leeches, and boomslang skin.
The name is a portmanteau of ''polymorph'' (indicating shape-change) and ''juice'' (indicating that it is indeed a liquid).
The potion has played a part on several occasions:

★ Harry Potter, Ronald Weasley, and Hermione Granger brew this potion in ''Chamber of Secrets'' in order to assume the appearances of three Slytherins so they can sneak into the Slytherin Common Room and find out whether Draco Malfoy is the heir of Slytherin, though Hermione is unable to accompany them, because she accidentally used a cat's hair instead of the Slytherin girl's hair she originally intended to use.

Barty Crouch Jr uses Polyjuice Potion in very large quantities in ''Goblet of Fire'' in order to pose as Alastor Moody. He was also smuggled out of Azkaban (by trading identities with his dying mother) by utilising the potion several years before.

★ Draco Malfoy has his cronies, Crabbe and Goyle, use the potion so they can act as his undercover sentries in ''Half-Blood Prince''. Very much to their chagrin, the most effective disguise for two hulking adolescent male students is that of two small girls.

★ It is used extensively in Deathly Hallows, when the decoy Potters are used in the transport of Harry to the Burrow. The Order had a large supply thanks to Mad-Eye Moody, but Hermione stole most of it for Harry's quest. It is used again when Harry and his friends infiltrate the Ministry of Magic, and yet again when Hermione uses it to impersonate Bellatrix Lestrange as part of her plot to infiltrate Gringotts. Lastly used in Godric's Hollow, to disguise Harry and Hermione as Muggles.
Veritaserum

'Veritaserum' has properties similar to a truth drug. Three drops can force the drinker to spill his innermost secrets. It can be resisted through various methods, including Occlumency, rendering it inadmissible as legal evidence, and by drinking an antidote which an experienced potion maker can do, although one must know well in advance that one will be given this potion, in order to brew the correct antidote. Because some wizards can resist the effects of Veritaserum, this potion is said to be an "unfair and unreliable tool to use at a trial".[3]
The name comes from the Latin ''veritas'' ("truth") plus ''serum''. Characters in the series who use it include Dolores Umbridge (who tries to get Harry to tell her where Sirius Black is, although he refuses to drink the tea into which she pours it; this made no difference in the end, as Snape had given her false Veritaserum), and Albus Dumbledore (who uses it to interrogate Barty Crouch Jr, who has just been restored to his own appearance after the Polyjuice Potion he has been using to disguise himself as Alastor Moody has worn off). Severus Snape threatens Harry with a crystal bottle of Veritaserum after Snape's office had been robbed of polyjuice potion ingredients in Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire.
In the film adaptation of the fifth book, Umbridge uses the Veritaserum on Cho to reveal the location of Dumbledore's Army.
Wolfsbane Potion

'Wolfsbane Potion' is a recently invented potion that, if taken periodically during the week leading up to the full moon, allows a werewolf to retain his or her mindset and sanity when he or she transforms into a werewolf. It is described as a foul-tasting potion, sugar makes it useless, and is so difficult to make that Severus Snape is the only member of the Hogwarts staff capable of preparing the potion for Remus Lupin, who requires regular doses to control himself when he transforms. The potion was invented by Marcus Belby's uncle, Damocles. Damocles was taught Potions at Hogwarts by Horace Slughorn.

Minor potions



★ A potion is used by Harry to get past the black flames in ''Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone'' to get to the Stone.

★ A potion is used by Hermione to get past the purple flames in Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone so she can send an owl to Dumbledore and warn him of the pending danger as well as to help Ron who was hurt whilst playing Giant Wizard's Chess in an earlier challenge.

★ A potion with an unknown name that cures boils. It is the very first potion Snape assigns to Harry's class to brew in year one.

★ A potion that is used to develop film creating moving pictures. Mentioned by young photographer Colin Creevey.

★ An emerald-colored potion used to defend a Horcrux in ''Half-Blood Prince'' that causes its drinker, at one point Dumbledore, severe dehydration and pain and also causes him or her to relive horrible experiences.

★ 'Aging Potion:' Causes the drinker to age; whether the potion only provides the signs of aging or actually ages the drinker is not clear. A few drops ages the drinker a couple of months. The potion does not work against magical age detectors when these are properly established, e.g. the Weasley twins' attempt at crossing Dumbledore's age line in ''Goblet of Fire''.

★ 'Babbling Beverage:' Causes the drinker to talk nonsense. Mentioned by Snape during year five.

★ 'Confusing Concoction:' A potion of unknown effect, possibly disorients the user and make him or her vulnerable to deceptions. Snape apparently fails Harry when he is unable to correctly make it in Prisoner of Azkaban''.

★ 'Deflating Draught:' Reverses the effects of the Swelling Solution. This is given out by Snape when Harry lobs a Filibuster firework into Goyle's cauldron during their second year, causing an uproar that enables Hermione to steal essential ingredients for the Polyjuice Potion from Snape's private stores.

★ 'Draught of Peace:' Gives the drinker a feeling of peace and well-being, but if overdone it can put the drinker into a deep or even irreversible sleep. It is a very difficult potion to make. Often used in the lead-up to the O.W.L. and N.E.W.T. exams to help over-distressed students , most notably Hannah Abbott.

★ 'An Elixir to Induce Euphoria :' This sunshine-yellow potion makes the drinker very happy. This potion was first seen in ''Half-Blood Prince''. Harry earns approval from Slughorn when he uses peppermint to reduce side effects of excessive singing and nose-tweaking.

★ 'Forgetfulness Potion:' A potion of unknown effect, but judging from the name either interferes with or strengthens memory. This is assigned by Snape as the end of term test in year one.

★ 'Hair Raising Potion:' Includes a number of rat tails. Mentioned by Ron during his second year.

★ 'Hiccoughing Solution:' Cures hiccups. First seen in ''Half-Blood Prince''.

★ 'Invigoration Draught:' Apparently fortifies and increases the user's constitution. Assigned by Snape during Harry's fifth year.

★ 'Pepper-Up Potion:' Cures the common cold. Percy makes his sister Ginny drink it in ''Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets''. Leaves drinker smoking at the ears for several hours.

★ 'Shrinking Solution:' Causes the drinker to reverse age. First seen in ''Prisoner of Azkaban''; Professor Snape tests Neville's solution on Neville's toad Trevor; Trevor becomes a tadpole.

★ 'Skele-Gro:' A potion with a burning taste that re-grows bones. Madam Pomfrey gives it to Harry in ''Chamber of Secrets'' after Lockhart removes his bones following a Quidditch match. When the drinker has all of their bones, it can increase their size. Draco Malfoy references this in the Goblet of Fire, when he says that he'd always assumed Hagrid's unusual size was due to swallowing a bottle of Skele-gro. Bill WeasleyFleur Delacour administer it to Griphook in the seventh book.

★ 'Sleeping Draught:' Used in ''Chamber of Secrets'' to subdue Crabbe and Goyle, so that Harry and Ron can steal their hair and shoes; also mentioned by Charlie Weasley in ''Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire'' as the method to subdue the dragons transported to Hogwarts for the First Task of the Triwizard Tournament on the way there.

★ 'Strengthening Solution:' Physically strengthens the drinker. First seen in ''Order of the Phoenix''.

★ 'Swelling Solution:' Causes body parts it comes in contact with to swell up. This is assigned by Snape during Harry's second year when Hermione steals ingredients from his stores. Harry and Ron blow it up with a Filibuster firework, causing various members of the class to get swellings in different places and keeping Snape occupied.

★ 'Wit-Sharpening Potion:' Apparently sharpens the user's mind. Consists of beetles, ginger root, and bile, among other ingredients. Assigned by Snape in ''Goblet of Fire''.

Potion Ingredients


Ingredient Known to be Used In Details
Asphodel Draught of Living Death A tree whose root can be powdered (other uses unknown).
Boomslang Skin Polyjuice Potion An ingredient used in Polyjuice Potion.
Sopophorous Beans Draught of Living Death Gives more juice if crushed with the flat side of a silver dagger, may be difficult to cut up.
Lacewing Flies Polyjuice Potion An ingredient used in Polyjuice Potion.
Bicorn Horn Polyjuice Potion An ingredient used in Polyjuice Potion.
Knotwood Polyjuice Potion An ingredient used in Polyjuice Potion.

Notes


1. [1]
2. http://www.the-leaky-cauldron.org/2007/7/30/j-k-rowling-web-chat-transcript
3. Veritaserum ''jkrowling.com.''


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