Those of us who finished the series know Snape's side of the story. We know that it introduces a new and interesting perspective. I understand the main idea that was communicated with that information, but I'm asking about his feelings on a personal level.
Did Snape truly CARE for Harry, did he enjoy watching him succeed, was he worried about his possible failure, did he find him funny, enjoyable, did he love him as a surrogate son? Or was his interests merely in preserving Lily's offspring and her 'eyes'. Was it ALL an act? Or just some of it?
Edit: I'm going to add this video for some clarity.
Answer
When Dumbledore tells Snape about Voldemort being held from death by the part of the soul attached to Harry, he then says that to be able to finish off Voldemort, the Dark Lord himself must kill Harry. Snape then asks if the reason to keep Harry alive was to kill him at the right time. Dumbledore asks in response if he has finally taken a liking to Harry, to which Snape responds by conjuring Lily's doe-shaped patronous, meaning that he has and always will love Lily, and is his sole reason to protect Harry.
The reason that I suspect Snape could never like Harry is because of his father James. I don't believe there is a source that suggests that Snape ever saw either Harry or James differently (e.g. he saw them as arrogant show-offs, yadda yadda).
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