Originally posted by David Orsam
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostThat is not saying anything at all about it Pierre. That is asking three questions.
My question to you is why could Cox not have heard Kelly singing both "A Violet From Mother's Grave" AND "Sweet Violets"?
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[QUOTE=John G;390125]Originally posted by Pierre View Post
I think you make an excellent point about not drawing the most creative solutions and the risk of over-interpreting this type of source.
This is always a problem for historians.
And you could say that what I am experiencing right now is some sort of intellectual torture. It has to do with the risk of overinterpreting a source and the risk of misunderstanding it.
And I do not even have to be the slightest creative. That is remarkable.
Best wishes, Pierre
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[QUOTE=David Orsam;390130]
I was addressing Jeff, who was saying something rather different to you, and you've taken upon yourself to answer questions I addressed to Jeff about something he said of which your answers are completely irrelevant.
But I note with amusement that you have taken my "confusion" out of context and then completely failed to answer my first question to Jeff which was an enquiry as to what testimony and what trial he was talking about. That was the main thing that was confusing me so you have been of no assistance whatsoever.
As for your own bizarre theory
it must now be time for you to answer some questions.
1. Did Cox hear Kelly singing?
2. Did Cox hear Kelly singing "A Violet From Mother's Grave"?
3. If Cox did not hear Kelly singing "A Violet from Mother's Grave", why did she say she did, on oath, at the inquest?
4. Did Cox hear Kelly singing "Sweet Violets"?
5. If Cox did not hear Kelly singing "Sweet Violets" how do you know that?
6. Did anyone hear Kelly singing "Sweet Violets"?
7. If no-one heard Kelly singing "Sweet Violets" how do you know this?
8. Was anyone singing "Sweet Violets" on the night of Kelly's murder?
9. Did the woman referred to in the Pall Mall Gazette actually exist?
10. Are you claiming that the killer might somehow have planted a false story in the newspapers that a woman had heard Kelly singing "Sweet Violets"?
Perhaps if you can bring yourself to answer these questions, some of my confusion about your own position might be cleared up.Last edited by Pierre; 08-13-2016, 08:30 AM.
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Originally posted by Pierre View Post"Normal letters to newspapers". What is that?
Something which existed in your imagination only.
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Originally posted by Pierre View PostThat is correct, David. You have not seen that. But if you take it easy and wait you will perhaps see it in the near future.
Just another example of you playing silly games and pretending to have more knowledge about something that you actually possess. So far you have never made good on a single promise to provide hard information to support anything you have ever said on this forum.
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Originally posted by Pierre View PostOf course I have something to say about it. I say this:
1. Where is the source for Cox having heard the song "Sweet Violets"?
2. What are the hypotheses for that interpretation?
3. Are there any sources for those hypotheses?
My question to you is why could Cox not have heard Kelly singing both "A Violet From Mother's Grave" AND "Sweet Violets"?
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Originally posted by Pierre View PostI have not said now or at any time that sources are to be taken "at face value"
Lechmere Continuation Thread:
# 428: David Orsam: : "...on the evidence of Mizen, taken at face value, Lechmere told a lie."
I wasn't saying in that thread that Lechmere told a lie. I was very clear about that. I was saying that if the evidence of Mizen is taken at face value then Lechmere told a lie.
So I was not saying in that thread that sources are to be taken at face value.
This confirms what I have said about you time and time again, namely that you draw wrong conclusions from things you have not read properly.
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[QUOTE=David Orsam;390128]
Pierre, I appreciate you are utterly obsessed by the idea that the killer left some hidden messages for the police, or someone, to find but this kind of thinking is the last refuge of the ripperology scoundrel.
It's all too easy to find all kinds of hidden messages and anagrams and codes in the thousands of words written about Jack the Ripper in 1888,
not to mention the hundreds of letters and messages purporting to be from Jack the Ripper in 1888.
But in order to convince anyone that you have identified such a message you need to have some very good reasons to support it.
Yes I know that some killers like Zodiac and Rader sent messages in code but they were obviously messages in code.
By this, I mean that the police and everyone knew that they were dealing with coded messages and the trick was to decipher them.
What you seem to be doing
is finding normal things such as pawn tickets,
letters to newspapers,
song lyrics in newspapers
which do not appear to be coded messages
to David Orsam.
and no-one in 1888 thought
for one second
The only person who thinks they might be coded messages is you!
Your answer to everything seems to be that the killer was happy to send all kinds of coded messages to the police,
not flagging that they were coded messages, because he enjoyed the thought of sending them even though no-one knew that he was doing it.
Frankly, Pierre, that kind of theory is ridiculous but,
of course, it allows you to find hidden messages everywhere.
But I'm afraid that in that direction madness lies and you are fast heading towards that destination.
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[QUOTE=David Orsam;390127]
I have not said now or at any time that sources are to be taken "at face value"
Lechmere Continuation Thread:
# 428: David Orsam: : "...on the evidence of Mizen, taken at face value, Lechmere told a lie."
In this thread alone I have offered a new interpretation whereby Cox might have heard Kelly singing two songs about violets. What do you have to say about it? Or do you prefer to ignore it?
1. Where is the source for Cox having heard the song "Sweet Violets"?
2. What are the hypotheses for that interpretation?
3. Are there any sources for those hypotheses?
What I have not seen from you is any good reason to doubt that the woman being spoken of in the PMG was Cox so that the newspaper or its informant was confused about the song title (and, for that matter, the time it was heard being sung) which should have been "A Violet from Mother's Grave".
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Originally posted by Pierre View Post
Hi David,
Sorry to hear that you are so confused. You see, Jeff has not been digging a lot into the provenance of the publication of the press of Sweet Violets in 1888. People in 2016 probably have a low interest in the issue, so this is understandable. That is why he does not share your knowledge. Are you a bit less confused now? Good.
I think there is no need for Jeff to answer the questions. It is enough to repeat my point above.
But I will make a short commentary: Cox said nothing about a song title in the police investigation on the 9th. And you had not suggested that she did either. I am just mentioning it so that your confusion, if it has not ceased, does not create more confusion in this thread.
Redundant question to Jeff. A short answer from me: Such a recalling must have taken place wherever and whenever she heard that Kelly had been singing about violets, if that is what happened during the days between the finding of the victim and the inquest.
What you say here, David, is that Cox would have known the "right" song to tell at the inquest. But then a problem rises: Cox may have heard that "Sweet Violets" was sung by Kelly - but it was not the song heard by her. And it was not heard at the time stated for the song Sweet Violets.
Yes, I did point to this problem in my first post already. Go back and read it if you want to.
Whatever Cox knew about violets is very likely - since it is there for us all to see, left to us on a piece of paper from the past.
The question is redundant. There was no statement of "A Violet from Mother´s Grave" in the papers before the inquest.
Surprise.
But I note with amusement that you have taken my "confusion" out of context and then completely failed to answer my first question to Jeff which was an enquiry as to what testimony and what trial he was talking about. That was the main thing that was confusing me so you have been of no assistance whatsoever.
As for your own bizarre theory it must now be time for you to answer some questions.
1. Did Cox hear Kelly singing?
2. Did Cox hear Kelly singing "A Violet From Mother's Grave"?
3. If Cox did not hear Kelly singing "A Violet from Mother's Grave", why did she say she did, on oath, at the inquest?
4. Did Cox hear Kelly singing "Sweet Violets"?
5. If Cox did not hear Kelly singing "Sweet Violets" how do you know that?
6. Did anyone hear Kelly singing "Sweet Violets"?
7. If no-one heard Kelly singing "Sweet Violets" how do you know this?
8. Was anyone singing "Sweet Violets" on the night of Kelly's murder?
9. Did the woman referred to in the Pall Mall Gazette actually exist?
10. Are you claiming that the killer might somehow have planted a false story in the newspapers that a woman had heard Kelly singing "Sweet Violets"?
Perhaps if you can bring yourself to answer these questions, some of my confusion about your own position might be cleared up.
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Originally posted by Pierre View PostDo not forget, David, that the killer lived in 1888 and not 2016.
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Originally posted by Pierre View PostOne of the main problems we should discuss here is that serial killers use the press for their communication. This is a well established historical fact. Dennis Rader sent messages in code that could not be decoded by the cryptologists working on it. There are still messages from serial killers that have not been decoded and understood.
And now we are speaking of the 20th and 21st Century.
So the next main problem we should discuss here is the question about the possible communication from a serial killer in the 19th Century.
1. What sort of communications could he have produced, if any?
2. What sort of "conscience collective" or "symbolic capital" could he refer to or draw from if he wanted to give messages to someone?
3. And who would have been the recipient(s) of such communication?
I have to protest strongly against your approach to the case, where you try to say that sources are to be taken "at face value" and where you leave no room for new approaches or interpretations of old sources.
It does not lead the case forward. Instead, the killer continues to make fools of us all.
I certainly appreciate the posts of Jeff, where he describes culture and thinking in the 19th Century. It gives us, and perhaps even yourself, insight into differences between then and now.
It's all too easy to find all kinds of hidden messages and anagrams and codes in the thousands of words written about Jack the Ripper in 1888, not to mention the hundreds of letters and messages purporting to be from Jack the Ripper in 1888. But in order to convince anyone that you have identified such a message you need to have some very good reasons to support it.
Yes I know that some killers like Zodiac and Rader sent messages in code but they were obviously messages in code. By this, I mean that the police and everyone knew that they were dealing with coded messages and the trick was to decipher them. What you seem to be doing is finding normal things such as pawn tickets, letters to newspapers, song lyrics in newspapers which do not appear to be coded messages and no-one in 1888 thought for one second that they were coded messages. The only person who thinks they might be coded messages is you!
Your answer to everything seems to be that the killer was happy to send all kinds of coded messages to the police, not flagging that they were coded messages, because he enjoyed the thought of sending them even though no-one knew that he was doing it. Frankly, Pierre, that kind of theory is ridiculous but, of course, it allows you to find hidden messages everywhere. But I'm afraid that in that direction madness lies and you are fast heading towards that destination.
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Originally posted by Pierre View PostI have to protest strongly against your approach to the case, where you try to say that sources are to be taken "at face value" and where you leave no room for new approaches or interpretations of old sources.
In this thread alone I have offered a new interpretation whereby Cox might have heard Kelly singing two songs about violets. What do you have to say about it? Or do you prefer to ignore it?
What I have not seen from you is any good reason to doubt that the woman being spoken of in the PMG was Cox so that the newspaper or its informant was confused about the song title (and, for that matter, the time it was heard being sung) which should have been "A Violet from Mother's Grave".
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Originally posted by Pierre View PostIt doesn´t matter if Cox could read or not. She had the possibility to hear about a song about violets from the 9th to the 12th.
It's Jeff who is trying to make something of the point about Cox possibly being illiterate, not me.
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