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File:VoldemortNagini.jpg

Parselmouth Lord Voldemort with his snake familiar, Nagini.

"Hannah, he’s a Parselmouth. Everyone knows that’s the mark of a Dark Wizard. Have you ever heard of a decent one who could talk to snakes? They called Slytherin himself Serpent-tongue."
Ernie Macmillan to Hannah Abbott after Harry Potter's ability to speak Parseltongue was revealed[src]

Parseltongue is the language of serpents (as well as other magical creatures, like the Runespoor) and those who can converse with them. An individual who can speak Parseltongue is known as a Parselmouth. It is a very uncommon skill, and may be hereditary. Nearly all known Parselmouths are descended from Salazar Slytherin.[1]

The ability to speak Parseltongue is considered an attribute of a Dark Wizard, which is partly due to the fact that both Salazar Slytherin and Lord Voldemort possessed this ability. Another notable Dark Wizard who was also a Parselmouth was Herpo the Foul. Although as Albus Dumbledore points out there are Parselmouths among the good as well, the most well known being Harry Potter.

Harry Potter as a Parselmouth

Harry: "I spoke a different language? But I didn't realise...how can I speak a language without knowing I can?"
Hermione: "I don't know, Harry but it sounded like you were egging the snake on or something. Harry, listen to me. There's a reason the symbol of Slytherin house is a serpent. Salazar Slytherin was a Parselmouth, he could talk to snakes too."
Ron: "Exactly! Now the whole school is gonna think you're his great-great-great-grandson or something."
Harry Potter, Hermione Granger, and Ron Weasley after Harry speaks Parseltongue[src]
HarryParseltongue

Harry Potter speaks Parseltongue to a Burmese Python in the zoo in 1991.

Lord Voldemort passed the ability to speak and understand Parseltongue on to Harry Potter when he attacked him in infancy in 1981, and inadvertantly and unknowingly made Harry into one of his Horcruxes[2]. Harry first experienced conversation with snakes at age ten when he was taken to the zoo with his cousin Dudley Dursley and found himself communicating with a boa constrictor (in the film, a Burmese python) while in the reptile exhibit. Harry inadvertently caused the glass of the snake's tank to vanish, enabling it to escape.[3]

Harry was not consciously aware of his ability to speak Parseltongue until 1992; he was pitted against Draco Malfoy in the Duelling Club and was able to communicate with the snake Draco conjured to attack him. This caused hysteria among his fellow students because graffiti on the walls of Hogwarts Castle foretold that the Heir of Slytherin would open the Chamber of Secrets, unleashing a monster that would attack the school's Muggle-born students. The Heir of Slytherin was in fact Voldemort, but Harry was able to gain access to the Chamber by speaking the password in Parseltongue, and subsequently killed the basilisk within.[4]

Harry also used his skill in Parseltongue to open Salazar Slytherin's Locket. When Harry, Ron Weasley, and Hermione Granger returned to Hogwarts to search for Voldemort's final Horcrux, Ron managed a weak imitation of Parseltongue to re-open the Chamber of Secrets so that he and Hermione could fetch basilisk fangs, which Hermione used to destroy Helga Hufflepuff's Cup.[2]

After Lord Voldemort destroyed the fragment of his soul residing in Harry, Harry lost the ability to speak Parseltongue, and was glad to lose it.[5]

Known Parselmouths

Other Incidents of Parseltongue

Etymology

J. K. Rowling has said that she took the name Parselmouth from an "old word for someone who has a problem with the mouth, like a hare lip"[6].

Behind the scenes

  • When Harry Potter and Hermione Granger went to Godric's Hollow in 1997, Nagini (inside the corpse of Bathilda Bagshot) tells Harry to "Come!" from the next room in Parseltongue. In reaction, Hermione jumps and clutches Harry's arm, and the two of them obey the command.[7] It is unknown how Hermione seemed to understand this command, though it could be that she did not hear it well, and merely followed Harry.

Appearances

Notes and references

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