A/N: Due to the Shakespearean language which is used within the dialogue, I will be providing a summery of each scene beforehand so that you guys can follow the text better. Trust me, those really help me in Shakespeare class.

Act I; Scene I Summery: While spending a week at the Burrow with the Weasley family, Harry tells Ron about how he has seen the spirit of the late Bartimus Crouch SR roaming the halls of the Weasley residence. While investigating this, the two boys are actually approached by the ghost, who says nothing to them. However, when Harry and Ron ask Percy, who has been in mourning for the past seven months over the death of both his boss and Cedric Diggory, about the ghost; Percy says that he too has seen the spector around. Once Harry and Ron exit, Percy expresses in a soliloquy about how he is not mourning for the death of Cedric and Crouch, but for how their death will be the start of the new war against Voldemorte.

Act I; Scene I

Enter Harry who is then bumped into by Ron

Harry: What spirit or creature hath chosen to startle me in such a way? Be gone evil demon, for I know you are of no good due to the burning pain in my scar!

Ron: Be not so paranoid, Friend!

Harry: Oh Ron...you must not frighten me so!

Ron: Why speak you of your scar? Hath the Dark Lord risen yet again?

Harry: Nay, methinks it not to be so.

Ron: Then why dost thou speak in such fear?

Harry: 'Tis a spirit, the one in the form of the late Bartimus Crouch SR, that I hath seen wandering the halls of this house!

Ron: Speak not with madness, Harry! My brother's boss did pass over seven months ago, as did Cedric Diggory. Percy still wears nothing but black and walks to the sound of melancholy minstrels. A spector such as that of Crouch would not appear within our house, as one would think he nothing but the product of Percy's declining sanity.

Harry: Be so what you say, Ron. But mine eyes hath seen a spirit of that very form!

(Enter Ghost)

Ron: By my wand, I too see it!

Harry: Same form as which I hath spoken. (To Ghost) What be your reason?

Ron: Yes, Spirit, do speak to us.

{Exit Ghost)

Harry: 'Tis but our folly. Say, perchance it hath spoken to Percy.

Ron: If Percy hath spoken to it.

Harry: He speaks not? For part of his mourning?

Ron: Nay, he does speak, but nothing but cries and whimpers like that of a dove which hath entangled itself in a wire.

Harry: So then he speaks?

Ron: Nay Friend, he whines.

Harry: Whining is speaking, though.

Ron: You would say such.

(Enter Percy)

Ron: Here comes our Melancholy Minister now. How now, Percy?

Percy: Speak not of day while in mourning. Dost thou not have any respect for those who have passed?

Ron: Nay, Dear Brother, for no need to dwell on the passed while in the present.

Percy: Be silent for those who are passed will always be present while their services to the earth are not yet done. Both men died before their time, murdered by a dark one's hand or spoken curse. The curse is not theirs, for those who curse are themselves the damned. Damned to live forever in Limbo while those which to whose life they hath brought end, forever haunt their dreams as well as eyes with the moans heard seconds before their death.

Harry: Aye, you have seen the spirit too, then?

Percy: I shall not speak as the spirit shall not speak to you. For as long as I wear these colours of night, do the dead still live. That is why he hath spoken to me and has muttered not a word to you. For all he is to you is nothing but a flickering memory, and by that to you he shall appear. Yet to me he lives as he did throughout his years...and thus that way to me he shall be seen.

Ron: Utter madness!

(Exit Ron and Harry)

Percy: He speaks so much yet says nothing.

For I do not mourn for the two men alone,

Yet for the lives which we call our own.

Did not they see the thing which caused their demise

Is the same thing which will bring our society's end before

their very eyes.

So I do not cry for the death of a friend'

But for the fact that our civilisation shall soon too

meet by Death Eaters it's end.