Thanks Mariab
I argue it is a backdated rewrite because it too snugly fits in with the needs of thw wroiters who were the omp,y people whos aw it, outside of the Mac family.
Also, the conventional wisdom about Macnaghten -- often mistaken -- is that it is a 'draft' from which he then removed all personal references from for the final official copy. But there are details [eg. the train pass, the cop witness, the surgical knives] which are not personal opinion.
I think that people have had it backwards because of the order in which they were first revealed to the public.
The official version was not sent and therefore, in a sense, it was the 'draft', Mac's first go at how to deploy Druitt, howto both reveal and conceal, and Aberconway, because its contents were disseminated to the public, was the 'final' version.
I argue that the indispensable Mac Memoir chapter, 'Laying the Ghost of Jack the Ripper', is the real 'third' version and the most accurate -- despite not having Druitt's name.
To Stewart
I'm confused?
I have a copy of the relevant pages from the A to Z, on the Aberconway Version, and it does not have the actual words about the Cutbush case, nor the actual words of what came after the three suspects about other victims -- just summaries.
Do you mean that in the latest edition of this book a complete transcription?
What I really want to know is whether Mac claimed that Cutbush and Cutbush were related, or did he drop that detail?
The thing about Macnaghten is that everything he says and does is calculated for effect, like the thespian walking the boards which he day-dreamed of being as an adolescent.
I argue it is a backdated rewrite because it too snugly fits in with the needs of thw wroiters who were the omp,y people whos aw it, outside of the Mac family.
Also, the conventional wisdom about Macnaghten -- often mistaken -- is that it is a 'draft' from which he then removed all personal references from for the final official copy. But there are details [eg. the train pass, the cop witness, the surgical knives] which are not personal opinion.
I think that people have had it backwards because of the order in which they were first revealed to the public.
The official version was not sent and therefore, in a sense, it was the 'draft', Mac's first go at how to deploy Druitt, howto both reveal and conceal, and Aberconway, because its contents were disseminated to the public, was the 'final' version.
I argue that the indispensable Mac Memoir chapter, 'Laying the Ghost of Jack the Ripper', is the real 'third' version and the most accurate -- despite not having Druitt's name.
To Stewart
I'm confused?
I have a copy of the relevant pages from the A to Z, on the Aberconway Version, and it does not have the actual words about the Cutbush case, nor the actual words of what came after the three suspects about other victims -- just summaries.
Do you mean that in the latest edition of this book a complete transcription?
What I really want to know is whether Mac claimed that Cutbush and Cutbush were related, or did he drop that detail?
The thing about Macnaghten is that everything he says and does is calculated for effect, like the thespian walking the boards which he day-dreamed of being as an adolescent.
Comment