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Why do you say that it seemed to have been recently written? - It looked fresh, and if it had been done long before it would have been rubbed out by the people passing. I did not notice whether there was any powdered chalk on the ground, though I did look about to see if a knife could be found
Telegraph 12th
Last edited by packers stem; 06-30-2019, 06:25 PM.
Well, it was evidently legible, for those bothered to read it. Letters of an inch or three-quarters high are perfectly readable.
From a few feet .....
If a bobby stood in front of it how many antisemitic , riot hungry residents of Wentworth model dwellings were likely to push him out of the way so that they could attempt to decipher it ?
How did you get onto hidden meanings?
I was talking about Warren pretending it was on the jamb when I mentioned 'official line' ......
I’m unaware of any alternative reason that has been suggested as to why Warren agreed to the graffito being erased other than that he saw some hidden meaning in it.
Regards
Sir Herlock Sholmes.
“A house of delusions is cheap to build but draughty to live in.”
Why do you say that it seemed to have been recently written? - It looked fresh, and if it had been done long before it would have been rubbed out by the people passing. I did not notice whether there was any powdered chalk on the ground, though I did look about to see if a knife could be found
Telegraph 12th
Exactly, he didn't say he looked specifically for chalk dust. If he had looked he could say there was none, or there was some.
So it is incorrect to keep saying he looked, he didn't. He was looking for obvious clues like a weapon or spots of blood.
If the shadowed area represents where the graffito would have been written, and the jamb is located same as, and is as wide as, the jamb above it (balcony), then I would conclude that Warren was correct it could be seen by any passerby. Too bad the first floor jamb width and location isn't obvious like the second floor.
If the shadowed area represents where the graffito would have been written, and the jamb is located same as, and is as wide as, the jamb above it (balcony), then I would conclude that Warren was correct it could be seen by any passerby. Too bad the first floor jamb width and location isn't obvious like the second floor.
By "first floor", I presume you mean "ground floor" (in Brit-speak).
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