I've never paid much attention to this letter, believing most/all to be fakes, but I have some questions about this letter on reading it with more interest,
1. He says 'from one women' [sic], implying that there were 2+? If this is the murderer this could be a reference, conscious or not, to the double murder of the night he killed Eddowes and took the kidney. It's an odd phrase to use otherwise. You can't take a single kidney from 2 women, so it's obvious 1 kidney is from 1 person, but here he implies there was more than 1 woman to have taken a kidney from, which he might have done. Thoughts?
2. How would he know how to preserve a diseased kidney? I assume lower-class Londoners at that time knew about meat preservation but would it work on organs, especially this one with Bright's disease?
3. If he's writing more or less phonetically, why is there a k in 'knif' yet no e, yet 'nise' has a final e, but he misses it again in 'whil'? Seems suspicious.
4. What does he gain by sending such a bizarre correspondence? I mean, if he's trying to prove a point it doesn't mean much. Certainly these days the genetic tests would confirm, but in the Victorian era when such organs were widely available at black markets it means little. That could have been any kidney and so many people were alcoholics at the time the appearance of the disease isn't quite as convincing.
1. He says 'from one women' [sic], implying that there were 2+? If this is the murderer this could be a reference, conscious or not, to the double murder of the night he killed Eddowes and took the kidney. It's an odd phrase to use otherwise. You can't take a single kidney from 2 women, so it's obvious 1 kidney is from 1 person, but here he implies there was more than 1 woman to have taken a kidney from, which he might have done. Thoughts?
2. How would he know how to preserve a diseased kidney? I assume lower-class Londoners at that time knew about meat preservation but would it work on organs, especially this one with Bright's disease?
3. If he's writing more or less phonetically, why is there a k in 'knif' yet no e, yet 'nise' has a final e, but he misses it again in 'whil'? Seems suspicious.
4. What does he gain by sending such a bizarre correspondence? I mean, if he's trying to prove a point it doesn't mean much. Certainly these days the genetic tests would confirm, but in the Victorian era when such organs were widely available at black markets it means little. That could have been any kidney and so many people were alcoholics at the time the appearance of the disease isn't quite as convincing.
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