When Ivan nodded, Hermione's crisp voice rang in the room:

Miss Albus Dumbledore, Effias Doge.

I met Abbs Dumbledore on the Hogwarts train the day I entered Hogwarts, when I was eleven.

We were all freshmen that year, and friendship was built the moment we entered the same compartment.

We are undoubtedly attracted to each other because we all feel like outsiders.

I developed Dragon Pox shortly before school, although it was no longer contagious, but I was full of acne and my skin was pale and few people were willing to come near me.

Albus, he came to Hogwarts under the pressure of notoriety.

Less than a year ago, his father Percival brutally attacked three young Muggles, and things went wild. Abbess never attempted to deny that his father had committed this crime (life imprisonment in Azkaban). Instead, when I gathered the courage to ask him, he made it clear to me that he knew his father was guilty.

Beyond that, Dumbledore refused to talk about this sad thing, although many people wanted to set him up.

Some even praised his father's behaviour and concluded that Abbess was also a Muggle-hater. But they were so wrong that anyone who knew Abbess could prove that he had never shown any anti-Muggle tendencies. In fact, his future firm defence of the rights and interests of Muggles will be an enemy to him.

A few months after school, Abbess began to have a reputation over his father.

Towards the end of the first school year, he was no longer seen as a son of a Muggler hater, but rather as the smartest student ever in school.

Those of us who have had the privilege of being his friends have benefited greatly from his example, not to mention his constant generosity in helping and encouraging us.

He told me many years later that he knew that his greatest pleasure lay in teaching.

Not only did he win important awards from the school, but he soon maintained frequent correspondence with some of the most famous magicians of his time, including the famous alchemist Nick LeMay, the famous historian Bakhida Basat, and the magic theorist Adebe Wafflin.

Several of his papers have appeared in academic journals such as "Transformation Today", "Innovation of the Magic Curse" and "Master of Practical Magic".

Dumbledore's success in Hogwarts has made him more famous than all professors before graduation, and his future seems brilliant, the only question being when he will become Minister of Magic. In the days that followed, he never had the ambition to become a minister, although he was often foretold that he would hold that office.

Three years after we went to school, Abbess' brother Abbess also came to Hogwarts. Unlike the two brothers, Abbess never likes to read, and he likes to fight duels and not to negotiate problems through reason, which is not like Abbess.

However, it was said that the brothers were not close.

Nor is it true that, although they are very different in character, they live in harmony.

To be fair for Abbess, it must be acknowledged that living in the shadow of Abbess is not particularly comfortable. As his friend, he was always overshadowed by his comparison, which hurt morale; as a brother, he would certainly not be much happier.

After leaving Hogwarts, Abbess and I intend to travel the world with us, visiting and observing wizards abroad, in accordance with the traditions of the day, before pursuing their respective careers.

However, the tragedy descended from the sky.

Just the day before we left, Abbess' mother, Candela, passed away, and Abbess became the head of the family and the top pillar of the family for money.

I postponed my departure, attended Candela's funeral, and then embarked on a lonely journey.

Albus is going to take care of a pair of younger siblings, and life at home is strained. He can't travel with me anymore.

In our lifetime, that was the least exposure.

I wrote to Abbess, describing the strange experiences of the journey, from escaping from Greece to visiting the Egyptian alchemists' experiments, and so on.

I may have done so too poorly because his daily life is rarely mentioned in his letters.

I guess that must have been frustrating for such a brilliant wizard as him.

I was immersed in my own journey, and towards the end of the year's trip, the tragedy struck again at Dumbledore's house; his sister Ariane died.

I was shocked to hear that Arianna had been ill for a long time, but soon after her mother's death, she was struck again, and Ariana's two brothers were long overdue.

All those close to Abbess, and I myself have had the privilege of counting, agree that Arianna's death, and Abbess' perceived responsibility for the matter (which, of course, he is not actually guilty of), is a shadow he will never be able to escape for life.

When I returned home, I saw a young man experiencing the suffering of an elderly man disproportionate to his age.

Abbess is more silent and in a much heavier mood than ever before.

More painfully, Ariane's death did not bring Abbess and Abbess closer together, but alienated them. (This alienation gradually improved, and they later re-established their relationship, even if not intimately, which was undoubtedly friendly.

Since then, Abbs has rarely talked about his parents and Ariane, and his friends have avoided talking about them.

In the years to come, his glorious accomplishments will be described.

Dumbledore's tremendous contribution to the library of witchcraft knowledge, including the discovery of twelve uses of dragon blood, and the wisdom that he displayed in many judgments when he was chief magician of Wesengamo, will benefit future generations.

It is also said that no witch duel can compare to Dumbledore and Greendward in 1945.

Those who witnessed these two extraordinary wizards fight a duel depict the fear and awe they felt at the time. Dumbledore's victory, and its impact on the witch community, was seen as a turning point in the history of modern magic, comparable to the introduction of the International Secrecy Act and the fall of mysterious men.

Abbs Dumbledore never bullies and pursues vanity.

He always finds something valuable in someone else, no matter how depressing and eye-catching they may seem.

I believe it was his early and painful loss of loved ones that gave him great compassion and compassion.

I will miss his friendship immensely, yet my personal loss is nothing compared to the entire witchcraft world.

He is undoubtedly one of Hogwarts' most inspiring and beloved successive Rectors.

Whether he lives or dies, he always works for the higher good until the last moment of his life, just as the day I first saw him on Hogwarts, he reached out friendly to a little boy with dragon pox...