I think ‘last surviving student of the greatest martial-arts teacher’ counts as a hint, yeah.
Why would Quirrel’s battle-magic skill, or lack thereof, be relevant in Voldemort’s choice of host? Magic is at least partly a function of the mind, and judging by the descriptions of zombie-like behavior when off-duty, the body-snatching didn’t do Quirrel’s mind any favors. Rather, the point would be to combine Voldemort’s lifetime of rationality and Battle Magic practice with Quirrel’s sixth-dan hand-to-hand combat skill, resulting in a single individual with two lifetimes’ worth of powers, without the expense and possible side-effects traditionally associated with magical life extension.
Speaking of which, isn’t there a prefabricated, ready-to-use Alchemist’s Stone somewhere on campus?
I think ‘last surviving student of the greatest martial-arts teacher’ counts as a hint, yeah.
Why would Quirrel’s battle-magic skill, or lack thereof, be relevant in Voldemort’s choice of host? Magic is at least partly a function of the mind, and judging by the descriptions of zombie-like behavior when off-duty, the body-snatching didn’t do Quirrel’s mind any favors. Rather, the point would be to combine Voldemort’s lifetime of rationality and Battle Magic practice with Quirrel’s sixth-dan hand-to-hand combat skill, resulting in a single individual with two lifetimes’ worth of powers, without the expense and possible side-effects traditionally associated with magical life extension.
Speaking of which, isn’t there a prefabricated, ready-to-use Alchemist’s Stone somewhere on campus?
Philosopher’s Stone, or in the American version, Sorcerer’s Stone. Although it does belong to an alchemist.