Rebel Daughter

On my wedding day I sat alone,

Contemplating a life outgrown.

Pureblood daughter, one of three,

Life planned out to be lived for me:

Marriage arranged with the usual boor,

Pure and a bigot, with riches galore,

An heir to produce, and to live in, a manor—

So mother explained with customary candor.

With Bella and Cissy, that life seemed just fine,

But I would be damned if I would make it mine!

Marriage for politics, marriage for power—

This I'd been told, every last waking hour,

But I had discovered my family's lies;

Their darkest ideals I had learnt to despise,

For they'd have given me as a prize to be won

To become a wife, just to bear someone's son.

Once I would have heeded every order they could give,

Before I went to Hogwarts, saw the way the impure live.

No half-blood girls became society wives;

They were loved in their own right, not only as brides,

And needed not have their futures arranged—

If one was not 'pure', one could not be exchanged

By a matchmaker into a horrible life

Of power plays, struggle, and eternal strife.

So I found my own love, and the tempest inside

Dashed to the rocks all my family's pride:

I chose my own way over their twisted path,

And in doing so, I had quite earned their wrath.

But no more was I young, or so docile and meek;

The time had long since come my own life to seek;

So I watched with dry eyes as the tapestry burned,

Casting me out of the House I had spurned.

Years have passed by. I regret not my choice,

Which allowed me beliefs of my own, and a voice.

My family showed the truth of purity inborn,

And I knew that it merited naught save my scorn,

For try as they might, they could not keep me blind;

The truth, once searched for, was easy to find,

And the answer came ringing as clear as a bell:

To save my own soul, I would have to rebel.