… the most terrible ritual known to me demands only a rope which has hanged a man and a sword which has slain a woman; and that for a ritual which promised to summon Death itself—though what is truly meant by that I do not know and do not care to discover, since it was also said that the counterspell to dismiss Death had been lost.
Chapter seventy-nine, HP:MoR
I can see your interpretation, but Quirrel’s commentary does not lend it credence. He does fear Dementors, or rather their effect upon him, but—no, your interpretation holds; regardless of how high a probability there may be of the spell merely summoning a Dementor, the inability to dismiss what’s summoned leaves too high a risk of freeing something worse.
Though I would think Quirrel would clearly express those concerns over opting to speak warily and vaguely of the ritual—and I think it out of character for him to not have thoroughly contemplated it.
Chapter seventy-nine, HP:MoR
I can see your interpretation, but Quirrel’s commentary does not lend it credence. He does fear Dementors, or rather their effect upon him, but—no, your interpretation holds; regardless of how high a probability there may be of the spell merely summoning a Dementor, the inability to dismiss what’s summoned leaves too high a risk of freeing something worse.
Though I would think Quirrel would clearly express those concerns over opting to speak warily and vaguely of the ritual—and I think it out of character for him to not have thoroughly contemplated it.
Does Quirrell know that Dementors are death? I think Quirrell’s interpretation is based on a lack of data, not on a difference of opinion.
Indeed, I see your point. The theory still holds should the ritual summon one Dementor or many, and I’ve benefited from considering it; thank you.