And ...
No worries, Mr B.
On a related sub-issue, one I've argued about since 2008. This concerns the line [allegedly] left by the deceased Druitt and read out, or summarized by the coroner at the inquest:
"Since Friday I felt I was going to be like mother, and the best thing was for me to die."
For decades it was interpreted by various secondary sources, researchers and Whitechapel buffs to mean that a tormented Druitt feared he was going insane like his mother and decided to kill himself instead.
Sure, it might mean that, based on the premise that he was not "Jack the Ripper", which he might not have been
As with the date of Druitt's dismissal this interpretation might be right (or might be wrong) but, long ago, it hardened into an accepted fact, and thus no other interpretations were possible (or, frankly, welcome).
On the other hand, if Druitt was the Ripper then the line more likely meant that he feared he was going to be sectioned like his mother, though in his case for being a homicidal maniac, and he preferred death to disgrace and intolerable confinement in an asylum.
For years this revisionist interpretation was universally and flatly rejected because Montague Druitt could not have been, or, was extremely unlikely to have been the Ripper.
Confirmation that mine is a legitimate alternate way to interpret the source arrived in 2013 with the discovery of the extraordinary "The True History of Jack the Ripper" by Guy Logan, written in 1905. This tabloid hack was known to George Sims, who in turn knew the truth about Druitt from police chief and close friend, Melville Macnaghten. Logan's open mix of fact and fiction -- although readers deliberately would not know which was which -- has the Druitt/Ripper figure (Mortemer Slade) say, to himself, that he would rather kill himself than end his days in a madhouse for his maniacal atrocities.
There is other accurate data about Druitt in Logan that I think comes from Macnaghten via Sims. This includes Mortemer Slade being an Oxonian, an athlete, has a family history of suicide, is a childless bachelor, leaves false word he is going abroad and does not drown himself instantly after eviscerating Mary Kelly. Slade is also the fair-mustached man seen by Lawende with Eddowes and even MP Henry Farquharson, with a different name of course, arguably makes a walk-on appearance.
No worries, Mr B.
On a related sub-issue, one I've argued about since 2008. This concerns the line [allegedly] left by the deceased Druitt and read out, or summarized by the coroner at the inquest:
"Since Friday I felt I was going to be like mother, and the best thing was for me to die."
For decades it was interpreted by various secondary sources, researchers and Whitechapel buffs to mean that a tormented Druitt feared he was going insane like his mother and decided to kill himself instead.
Sure, it might mean that, based on the premise that he was not "Jack the Ripper", which he might not have been
As with the date of Druitt's dismissal this interpretation might be right (or might be wrong) but, long ago, it hardened into an accepted fact, and thus no other interpretations were possible (or, frankly, welcome).
On the other hand, if Druitt was the Ripper then the line more likely meant that he feared he was going to be sectioned like his mother, though in his case for being a homicidal maniac, and he preferred death to disgrace and intolerable confinement in an asylum.
For years this revisionist interpretation was universally and flatly rejected because Montague Druitt could not have been, or, was extremely unlikely to have been the Ripper.
Confirmation that mine is a legitimate alternate way to interpret the source arrived in 2013 with the discovery of the extraordinary "The True History of Jack the Ripper" by Guy Logan, written in 1905. This tabloid hack was known to George Sims, who in turn knew the truth about Druitt from police chief and close friend, Melville Macnaghten. Logan's open mix of fact and fiction -- although readers deliberately would not know which was which -- has the Druitt/Ripper figure (Mortemer Slade) say, to himself, that he would rather kill himself than end his days in a madhouse for his maniacal atrocities.
There is other accurate data about Druitt in Logan that I think comes from Macnaghten via Sims. This includes Mortemer Slade being an Oxonian, an athlete, has a family history of suicide, is a childless bachelor, leaves false word he is going abroad and does not drown himself instantly after eviscerating Mary Kelly. Slade is also the fair-mustached man seen by Lawende with Eddowes and even MP Henry Farquharson, with a different name of course, arguably makes a walk-on appearance.
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