Name: Pansy Louise Parkinson
Nickname(s): Pansy
Birthday: January 27th
Year: 7th
House: Slytherin
Appearance
Hair: Dark Brown Almost Black
Eyes: Dark Brown
Style: Proper
General: Very slim and proper with a heart shaped face and creamy-white skin. Apprx. 5 feet 6 inches tall
Personality
Likes: money and privilege balls and parties, watching the fox hunt and playing the pianoforte Voldemort supporters. She also enjoys the theatre very much, possibly more than she should. Secretly, Pansy loves to write poetry, though she understands that it is highly improper so she would never share, and if she were given the chance, she might enjoy acting on the stage.
Dislikes: She cannot abide by poor, lowbrow commoners. She also dislikes half bloods and Muggle-born witches and wizards. She cannot stand things that are done halfway -- she feels that if you are going to do something, like have a ball, it should be of the finest and best quality. Superficially, Pansy dislikes ugliness and hates snakes.
Hobbies: torturing 1st years, spending time with Draco, secretly writing poetry
Personality: Pansy is the very model of good breeding and high society. Though she can be very nasty to people she believes are of a lower class, especially non-purebloods, she always keeps up her appearances of elegance, finery, and good taste. Pansy is most comfortable during the society season, immensely enjoying everything that has to do with money and privilege. She is passionate about ladylike things, but her feelings and emotions are always distempered by what she knows as the “right” things to say, think, and feel. There is an aura of falsity about Pansy -- she is like a doll.
History
Family Members: She grew up with her father, Fitzwilliam Ernest Parkinson, and mother, Louise Clarice (Nott) Parkinson, and her brother David Fitzwilliam Parkinson, who is 15
Personal History: Pansy’s father was very excited when she was born, though it would have been better had she been a boy, in her mother’s opinion. Fitzwilliam doted upon Pansy in her youth, and when David was born three years later, his affections did not diminish. But as soon as she was of age, Eloise insisted that Pansy attend charm school -- the finest in the world. Fitzwilliam gave a great protest, but he was overruled, as usual.
At eleven, Pansy was shipped off to France to attend Beauxbatons School for Proper Young Witches, where she learned everything there was to know about etiquette, manners, breeding, and propriety, as well as some magic. It was a school designed to land a girl a rich husband. Pansy was dutiful in her learning, and when she returned at seventeen, her mother was very pleased with the outcome.
Her time spent at Beauxbatons was relatively quiet, though there was an incident that Pansy refuses to talk about which resulted in the small scar on her hand. But the school Pansy found to be very beneficial because she understands just what her place is and how to survive in a male-dominant world. She recognises that she needs to find a man to take care of her, but, as evidenced by her own mother, she will still be able to control her fortunes.
Since her return, she and her mother have been extensively planning Pansy’s official coming out celebration, and they are just about ready to do so.
Other
Her Boggart is herself, penniless and forced to live on the streets in London. If she were to look in the mirror of Erised she would see herself onstage