That does not seem to jive with the last lines of chapter 89, which are first-person accounts of Quirrell’s feelings.
He’d felt the fury the boy had directed at some annoyance who was likely Dumbledore; followed by an unknown resolution whose unyielding hardness even he found adequate. With any luck, the boy had just discarded his foolish little reluctances.
Unseen by anyone, the Defense Professor’s lips curved up in a thin smile. Despite its little ups and downs, on the whole this had been a surprisingly good day.
EDIT: I also updated in favor of Quirrell being genuinely terrified after chapter 92, but only slightly. The evidence from chapter 89 still dominates in my mind since 89 has an uncensored account of Quirrell’s true feelings.
Note for readability: I did not realize that the prophecy was dialog, said aloud by Trelawney, until I read this comment. I read the prophecy as Quirrell thinking to himself, narrating for the reader why he was happy.
First time I read that, I interpreted it as “it would not be enough to prevent Harry from tearing the world apart”. But there is another possible interpretation : if we consider that Quirrelmort was trying to turn Harry dark, and killing Hermione was part of that plan, then we can interpret it completely to the opposite : the killing Hermione won’t be enough to turn Harry dark.
I don’t give a high probability to the second interpretation, but it does stand on its own feet.
That does not seem to jive with the last lines of chapter 89, which are first-person accounts of Quirrell’s feelings.
EDIT: I also updated in favor of Quirrell being genuinely terrified after chapter 92, but only slightly. The evidence from chapter 89 still dominates in my mind since 89 has an uncensored account of Quirrell’s true feelings.
And quite specifically, ironically, and counterpointedly placed before the prophecy.
Note for readability: I did not realize that the prophecy was dialog, said aloud by Trelawney, until I read this comment. I read the prophecy as Quirrell thinking to himself, narrating for the reader why he was happy.
From 93:
Woop. There goes that theory :-).
First time I read that, I interpreted it as “it would not be enough to prevent Harry from tearing the world apart”. But there is another possible interpretation : if we consider that Quirrelmort was trying to turn Harry dark, and killing Hermione was part of that plan, then we can interpret it completely to the opposite : the killing Hermione won’t be enough to turn Harry dark.
I don’t give a high probability to the second interpretation, but it does stand on its own feet.