Skip to main content

harry potter - Is Parseltongue a useful skill?


While we know Parseltongue brings all the Basilisks to the yard, Parseltongue is kind of presented in canon as this edgy, somewhat cool ability that very few wizards (who are direct descendants of Salazar Slytherin himself) possess.


So, is Parseltongue actually a useful skill? If so, in what way? Why?


Aside from Tom Riddle using Parseltongue to control the Basilisk in Chamber of Secrets, does canon show any other instances of Parseltongue being a useful skill?



Or is Parseltongue just a vaguely interesting novelty?


Is Parseltongue a useful skill?



Answer



It can be very useful indeed, but situational.


Parseltongue is one of those character traits that can be very useful if you design your character around it and make sure you get into situations where you're useful. It is not useful if you want a character that just hits everything in melee with brute force without having to think about tactics or strategy.


Here are some examples for uses of Parseltongue other than what you and anotherguest have mentioned.




Firstly, in Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, the Little Prince, the snake gives the Little Prince some advice, and lets him return home when he eventually wants to leave. Although in this book, the Prince uses ordinary human language to speak to the snake, it is clear that he understands the replies of the snake but the pilot narrator does not, so understanding snakes is a special ability in this universe.




Secondly, in Rudyard Kipling, The Jungle Book and The Second Jungle Book, Mowgli can speak to snakes, which has helped him many times. Quoting The Jungle Book, chapter "Kaa's Hunting" first:




Then he [Baloo] turned aside to tell Bagheera how he had begged the Master Words from Hathi the Wild Elephant, who knows all about these things, and how Hathi had taken Mowgli down to a pool to get the Snake Word from a water-snake, because Baloo could not pronounce it, and how Mowgli was now reasonably safe against all accidents in the jungle, because neither snake, bird, nor beast would hurt him.



Baloo can speak in general, but cannot pronounce the words of water-snakes, whereas but Mowgli can do both. Thus being able to speak to snakes is clearly a special ability in the Jungle Book. This ability is useful because now snakes would not hurt Mowgli. Indeed, in the same chapter, Mowgli uses the Master Word in the ruins, and it protects him from the venomous cobras living there.


Mowgli had previously befriended Kaa, a large python snake, who rescuse him from the monkeys in the very same chapter. Kaa's friendship becomes useful again in The Second Jungle Book chapter "Red Dog", for fighting the dholes. Being able to understand snakes' speech was probably necessary for befriending Kaa. Finally, speaking to cobras comes up in the chapter "The King's Ankus" too, though it's debatable how useful it is for Mowgli.


Of all the abilities I list here, this one seems to be the most close to the Parseltongue ability as used in the Harry Potter books, since makes Mowgli safer from snakes attacking him, and let him befriend a snake Kaa who helped him, similarly to how the snake Nagini helped the Dark Lord.




Update: you might want to also check the S.W.I.T.C.H. series by Ali Sparkes, featured in the question Children's graphic novel series, schoolboy twin protagonists retrieve formula that lets them transform to insects . In this series, the protagonits boys (and sometimes other humans) can transform to various insects and reptiles, including snakes, and while transformed, can talk to other animals of the same species. This means they can talk to snakes when transformed to snakes. At least once they can also talk to rats as well while they're transformed to an insect.


The ability clearly seems useful for the boys. Most often, it helps them communicate with each other, which lets them coordinate to save each other from danger. Talking to their sister the one time she was transformed also helped, as did talking to the rats. The boys learn a lot from it, and sometimes it moves the plot ahead too. On the other hand, the ability to understand other ants (ones that weren't transformed humans) was also dangerous to them.





Update. Consider now Arthur Conan Doyle's story "The Adventure of the Speckled Band" from The Adventures of Sherlock Holmes. In this story, a man attempts to assassinate a sleeping woman in a locked bedroom by sending a venomous swamp adder, "the deadliest snake in India", through a small hole in the wall. Had the plan succeeced, the truth about the murder would never have been found out, for the snake would return to his owner through the hole and never be found.


This man did not speak Parseltongue. Although he could handle the snake enough for this attempt, due to Sherlock Holmes's timely intervention, the angry snake returned through the wall and has killed the man. Now imagine what weapon such a venomous snake could become in the hands of someone who does speak Parseltongue and can control snakes! For one, this man would probably not be killed by the snake, though he might still go into prison. But if you can control a snake, you could probably use it as a weapon in a more clever way than just sending it through a hole, and assassinate people without anyone being able to trace the snake back to you.




Update. Harry Potter and the Methods of Rationality by Eliezer Yudkowsky, a Harry Potter fan fiction, has Harrry, Salazar Slytherin, and one other character who spoke Parseltongue. This came very useful to at least the third character, although I won't spoil the exact details here because they're revealed close the end of the book.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Did the gatekeeper and the keymaster get intimate in Ghostbusters?

According to TVTropes ( usual warning, don't follow the link or you'll waste half your life in a twisty maze of content ): In Ghostbusters, it's strongly implied that Dana Barret, while possessed by Zuul the Gatekeeper, had sex with Louis Tully, who was possessed by Vinz Clortho the Keymaster (key, gate, get it?), in order to free Big Bad Gozer. In fact, a deleted scene from the movie has Venkman explicitly asking Dana if she and Louis "did it". I turned the quote into a spoiler since it contains really poor-taste joke, but the gist of it is that it's implied that as part of freeing Gozer , the two characters possessed by the Keymaster and the Gatekeeper had sex. Is there any canon confirmation or denial of this theory (canon meaning something from creators' interviews, DVD commentary, script, delete scenes etc...)? Answer The Richard Mueller novelisation and both versions of the script strongly suggest that they didn't have sex (or at the very l...

Why didn't The Doctor or Clara recognize Missy right away?

So after it was established that Missy is actually both the Master, and the "woman in the shop" who gave Clara the TARDIS number... ...why didn't The Doctor or Clara recognize her right away? I remember the Tenth Doctor in The Sound of Drums stating that Timelords had a way of recognizing other Timelords no matter if they had regenerated. And Clara should have recognized her as well... I'm hoping for a better explanation than "Moffat screwed up", and that I actually missed something after two watchthroughs of the episode. Answer There seems to be a lot of in-canon uncertainty as to the extent to which Time Lords can recognise one another which far pre-dates Moffat's tenure. From the Time Lords page on Wikipedia : Whether or not Time Lords can recognise each other across regenerations is not made entirely clear: In The War Games, the War Chief recognises the Second Doctor despite his regeneration and it is implied that the Doctor knows him when they fir...

story identification - Animation: floating island, flying pests

At least 20 years ago I watched a short animated film which stuck in my mind. The whole thing was wordless, possibly European, and I'm pretty sure I didn't imagine it... It featured a flying island which was inhabited by some creatures who (in my memory) reminded me of the Moomins. The island was frequently bothered by large winged animals who swooped around, although I don't think they did any actual damage. At the end one of the moomin creatures suddenly gets a weird feeling, feels forced to climb to the top of the island and then plunges down a shaft right through the centre - only to emerge at the bottom as one of the flyers. Answer Skywhales from 1983. The story begins with a man warning the tribe of approaching skywhales. The drummers then warn everybody of the hunt as everyone get prepared to set "sail". Except one man is found in his home sleeping as the noise wake him up. He then gets ready and is about to take his weapon as he hesitates then decides ...

warhammer40k - What evidence supposedly supports Tau as related to the Necrontyr?

I've heard of rumours saying that the Tau from Warhammer 40K are in fact the Necrontyr. Is there anything that supports this statement, in WH40K canon? I just found this, on 1d4 chan 1 : Helping Necrons? Or are they Necrontyr descendants? An often overlooked issue is that Tau have no warp signatures, just like Necrons, hate Warpspawns and Warp in general, just like Necrons, have the exact same skull shape,stature and short lives, and the overwhelming need for Technology and beam weapons, JUST LIKE NECRONS. GW may have planned a race that simply prepares a pacified, multiracial galaxy for Necrons to feast upon, supported by Ethereals that have a C'tan phase blade. Then there is a reference of "dark seed in east" by the Deceiver, so the tricky C'tan might give Tzeentch the finger in the JUST AS PLANNED competition. Or maybe GW just has so little creativity that they simply made a new civ conforming to an Old One's standards without knowing it. Is this the connec...