No, I'm not suggesting that, nor believe such a thing.
I think Macnaghten met with the Druitts, or a Druitt in 1891.
Or, less likely, after conferring with Farquharason, he merely consulted the press accounts of Druitt's suicide and discovered that in certain details the MP was mistaken.
I therefore advocate what you call one of the 'unattractive' options; that Macnaghten recalled very well that Druitt was not a doctor, but decided to put on file this notion that he might have been (or ... might not have been, if we were misinformed?) a mad physician in case the tale resurfaced in Dorset, and Scotland Yard would take another tabloid bashing -- and perhaps from the new Liberal govt. too -- if their cupboard was bare about the real fiend.
The Ripper saga is quite different from what most secondary sources think.
Melville Macnaghten was scrambling for years trying to protect everybody, as he knew that the repentent murderer had wanted the story to come out a decade after his self-murder -- and it was not going to be a tale which did his beloved Yard any favours.
Not unless he got in first with a veiled version which had the 'police' onto the Ripper before he took the fateful plunge.
Mac's memoirs, written in the shadow of death, conceded that this was not true.
Sims gives us what I argue is a fictionalised glimpse of contact between Mac and the Druitts in 1891 (becoming the Yard and the pals in 1888) in a couple of his Edwardian accounts of the mythical super-efficient hunt for the 'demented doctor'.
I think Macnaghten met with the Druitts, or a Druitt in 1891.
Or, less likely, after conferring with Farquharason, he merely consulted the press accounts of Druitt's suicide and discovered that in certain details the MP was mistaken.
I therefore advocate what you call one of the 'unattractive' options; that Macnaghten recalled very well that Druitt was not a doctor, but decided to put on file this notion that he might have been (or ... might not have been, if we were misinformed?) a mad physician in case the tale resurfaced in Dorset, and Scotland Yard would take another tabloid bashing -- and perhaps from the new Liberal govt. too -- if their cupboard was bare about the real fiend.
The Ripper saga is quite different from what most secondary sources think.
Melville Macnaghten was scrambling for years trying to protect everybody, as he knew that the repentent murderer had wanted the story to come out a decade after his self-murder -- and it was not going to be a tale which did his beloved Yard any favours.
Not unless he got in first with a veiled version which had the 'police' onto the Ripper before he took the fateful plunge.
Mac's memoirs, written in the shadow of death, conceded that this was not true.
Sims gives us what I argue is a fictionalised glimpse of contact between Mac and the Druitts in 1891 (becoming the Yard and the pals in 1888) in a couple of his Edwardian accounts of the mythical super-efficient hunt for the 'demented doctor'.
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