To Lynn
Well, I have a great deal of doubt about lumping Sir Robert Anderson, a pious, reclusive, egoistic sectarian, with the middle-class Littlechild (who was correct about Wilde being a homsexual masochist and Thaw being a vicious deviant and murderer) along with the affable, Old Etonian Sir Melville Macnaghten. The latter sort of declassed himself by becoming a Scotland Yard 'Sleuth' (true, they are all three Tories, Gentiles, and cops, but the differences arguably outweigh the similarities -- and in terms of class Mac far outranked the other two)
For one thing, Sir Melville had come from an institution which he adored and one which was inevitably rife with secret homosexuality, bisexuality and masturbation -- and heterosexuality, for those who could get it from the local barmaids.
Look how Mac writes about 'Kosminski' in his Report(s): he was driven into an imbecilic state by 'solitary vices' perhaps after what he had done to Kelly. That is a much less harsh description of masturbation than Anderson's 'unmentionable vices'.
The shaky conventional wisdom claims that Mac did not realise that Aaron Kosminski had only been sectioned long after he had joined the Force. He only accidentally backdated it to before he joined the police, to a time shortly after Kelly to possibly explain the cessation of the murders, eg. the Polish Jew's mind was turned to masturbatory mush by what he had done to that poor woman's remains.
Yet Mac knew that in the medical records of Kosminski the cause of his mania, which had been initially registered as unknown, was changed to 'self-abuse'.
He knew that tiny detail yet screwed up the obvious ones. Is that really likely?
Just as he supposedly does not know that Druitt was a young barrister but does know that among his things found on his soggy corpse was found a season rail pass -- and that his brother had been frantically trying to find him after he vanished. But he supposedly honestly forgot his chief suspect's correct age, his correct vocation(s) and the correct timing of his suicide -- which he changed in his memoirs anyhow?
And all this forgetting only accidentally yet very fortutiouslyhid Druitt's identity from the press, from researchers, from his cricket club, from his grown-up pupils, and from the respectable circles in which the surviving family members moved.
The luck of Constabale Magoo ...
Mac knew that Ostrog was just a melancholic thief as he stole valuables from Eton on the day he was there as an old scholar. He knew that the Russian con man only pretended to be a doctor. Furtehrmore, he knew, like everybody else, that in late 1894 Ostrog was banged-up in France at the time of the murders. Yet Mac went ahead and showed Griffiths and Sims (or verbally communicated its contents) his 'Home Office Report' which named Ostrog as a dangerous homicidal lunatic and a possible suspect for 'Jack'.
As for John Henry Lonsdale that is just speculation. There are no sources which suggest that Montie confided anything to him. He is just so convenient a peg because he was a barrister and a priest, he was down the road from Druitt's legal chambers, he was known to the clerical cousin Charles, and he had a parish in Dorset, and is an Old Etonian like Farquharson and Macnaghten.
But he is not at Druitt's funeral (he was apparently on his honeymoon).
What might have happened, instead, is the following:
A friend of William's discovered that Montie was missing from his legal chmabers for over a week and alerted the brother on the 11th. He came to London and went to the school on the 13th (misreported as the 30th) and then may have checked out his cricket club or other haunts. By then he had the note explaining that he was contemplating suicide and so he knew that his troubled brother might be deceased, or holed up somewhere -- possibly abroad -- considering taking his own life.
It is at this point that a priest came forward and told William Druitt the wholly unexpected and shattering news that his AWOL brother had confessed to him that he was, of all things, the Whitechapel fiend. The shock of that ghastly revelation is hard to imagine, and surely William rejected it as simply evidence of an unbalanced mind and not of a maniacal sibling.
And yet he was convinced -- he believed.
This priest might have been cousin Charles, the future vicar. He later had a Dorset parish called Whitchurch and the other Vicar's tale of 1899 weirdly changes Whitechapel to 'Whitechurch'. Also Mac does not suggest anybody outside the family 'believed' (though obviously Farquharson did even after Coles' murder and Sadler's arrest -- the MP was still 'adamant').
The source of distress in the family was that Montie had told the priest that he wanted the truth to come out in ten years and Charles -- if the priest was Charles -- was going to honour that promise.
This is what Mac learned in 1891 after it leaked in Dorset on the local, Tory grapevine: the story was coming out in 1898/9 no matter what, though veiled via 'substantial truth in fictitious form'. This gave the upper class smoothie the idea to get in first with his own self-serving, semi-fictional version, and so on.
In his veiled memoirs the murderer's 'own people' notice that he is 'absented' and this is [apparently] incriminating, for they knew he probabaly had a 'diseased body' too. How did they know that? Because he told them?
Well, I have a great deal of doubt about lumping Sir Robert Anderson, a pious, reclusive, egoistic sectarian, with the middle-class Littlechild (who was correct about Wilde being a homsexual masochist and Thaw being a vicious deviant and murderer) along with the affable, Old Etonian Sir Melville Macnaghten. The latter sort of declassed himself by becoming a Scotland Yard 'Sleuth' (true, they are all three Tories, Gentiles, and cops, but the differences arguably outweigh the similarities -- and in terms of class Mac far outranked the other two)
For one thing, Sir Melville had come from an institution which he adored and one which was inevitably rife with secret homosexuality, bisexuality and masturbation -- and heterosexuality, for those who could get it from the local barmaids.
Look how Mac writes about 'Kosminski' in his Report(s): he was driven into an imbecilic state by 'solitary vices' perhaps after what he had done to Kelly. That is a much less harsh description of masturbation than Anderson's 'unmentionable vices'.
The shaky conventional wisdom claims that Mac did not realise that Aaron Kosminski had only been sectioned long after he had joined the Force. He only accidentally backdated it to before he joined the police, to a time shortly after Kelly to possibly explain the cessation of the murders, eg. the Polish Jew's mind was turned to masturbatory mush by what he had done to that poor woman's remains.
Yet Mac knew that in the medical records of Kosminski the cause of his mania, which had been initially registered as unknown, was changed to 'self-abuse'.
He knew that tiny detail yet screwed up the obvious ones. Is that really likely?
Just as he supposedly does not know that Druitt was a young barrister but does know that among his things found on his soggy corpse was found a season rail pass -- and that his brother had been frantically trying to find him after he vanished. But he supposedly honestly forgot his chief suspect's correct age, his correct vocation(s) and the correct timing of his suicide -- which he changed in his memoirs anyhow?
And all this forgetting only accidentally yet very fortutiouslyhid Druitt's identity from the press, from researchers, from his cricket club, from his grown-up pupils, and from the respectable circles in which the surviving family members moved.
The luck of Constabale Magoo ...
Mac knew that Ostrog was just a melancholic thief as he stole valuables from Eton on the day he was there as an old scholar. He knew that the Russian con man only pretended to be a doctor. Furtehrmore, he knew, like everybody else, that in late 1894 Ostrog was banged-up in France at the time of the murders. Yet Mac went ahead and showed Griffiths and Sims (or verbally communicated its contents) his 'Home Office Report' which named Ostrog as a dangerous homicidal lunatic and a possible suspect for 'Jack'.
As for John Henry Lonsdale that is just speculation. There are no sources which suggest that Montie confided anything to him. He is just so convenient a peg because he was a barrister and a priest, he was down the road from Druitt's legal chambers, he was known to the clerical cousin Charles, and he had a parish in Dorset, and is an Old Etonian like Farquharson and Macnaghten.
But he is not at Druitt's funeral (he was apparently on his honeymoon).
What might have happened, instead, is the following:
A friend of William's discovered that Montie was missing from his legal chmabers for over a week and alerted the brother on the 11th. He came to London and went to the school on the 13th (misreported as the 30th) and then may have checked out his cricket club or other haunts. By then he had the note explaining that he was contemplating suicide and so he knew that his troubled brother might be deceased, or holed up somewhere -- possibly abroad -- considering taking his own life.
It is at this point that a priest came forward and told William Druitt the wholly unexpected and shattering news that his AWOL brother had confessed to him that he was, of all things, the Whitechapel fiend. The shock of that ghastly revelation is hard to imagine, and surely William rejected it as simply evidence of an unbalanced mind and not of a maniacal sibling.
And yet he was convinced -- he believed.
This priest might have been cousin Charles, the future vicar. He later had a Dorset parish called Whitchurch and the other Vicar's tale of 1899 weirdly changes Whitechapel to 'Whitechurch'. Also Mac does not suggest anybody outside the family 'believed' (though obviously Farquharson did even after Coles' murder and Sadler's arrest -- the MP was still 'adamant').
The source of distress in the family was that Montie had told the priest that he wanted the truth to come out in ten years and Charles -- if the priest was Charles -- was going to honour that promise.
This is what Mac learned in 1891 after it leaked in Dorset on the local, Tory grapevine: the story was coming out in 1898/9 no matter what, though veiled via 'substantial truth in fictitious form'. This gave the upper class smoothie the idea to get in first with his own self-serving, semi-fictional version, and so on.
In his veiled memoirs the murderer's 'own people' notice that he is 'absented' and this is [apparently] incriminating, for they knew he probabaly had a 'diseased body' too. How did they know that? Because he told them?
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