I don;t really foloow much of what you say but then I do not have access to the article you wrote.
Perhaos if I did I would have a better sense of all this.
I would just say that the Vicar writes about a murdrer who had plenty of time to confess after the final murder, of Kelly, and then expired for reasons not given.
The murderer had been a man of good (not great) position (eg a barrister?) and had an unblemished record, was not from the East End but went there to help out poor harlots and was 'at one time a surgeon'.
That last bit is not true of Druitt but it is exactly the same falsehood as the one peddled by Griffiths and Sims (on behalf of Macnaghten) the difference being that the Vicar is being up-front that he is mixing fact with fcition to protect people's reputations.
The Vicar also acribes the crimes to 'epileptic mania' whose manifestations included homicide, suicide, shrieking, raving -- and a kind of demented, amnesiac fury.
All of these elments appear in Sims, often for melodramatic purposes.
They also appear in Mac's memoirs: 'furious madness' and a 'diseased body'.
Sims in 1899 rudely and inaccurately dismisses the Vicar's tale on the basis that the drowned doctor had no time to confess anything to anybody. He only had enough manical energy to stagger to his watery grave.
We know, of course, that Druitt had three weeks to confess to a legion of clergymen. Therefore the Vicar's tale fits Druitt better, yet we know that behind the 'drowned doctor' is nevertheless ... Druitt.
Macnaghten in his memoirs stepped back from the melodramatic conjunction of Sims' 'shrieking, raving fiend', allowing for a loose day and a night btween the Kelly murder and the suicide.
That is also enough time for Druitt to confess to a priest; confess to 'his own people' about his 'Protean' madness and 'diseased body' and they then realised he was 'absented' 'soon after' the 'awful glut' of Miller's Ct.
Sims has the drowned doctor confessing to other doctors of his need to kill harlots before he begins his spree.
Whereas Druitt was a lawyer, and so was Lonsdale and so was his older brother William: a barrister confessing to other barristers -- one of whom was also a priest?
Perhaos if I did I would have a better sense of all this.
I would just say that the Vicar writes about a murdrer who had plenty of time to confess after the final murder, of Kelly, and then expired for reasons not given.
The murderer had been a man of good (not great) position (eg a barrister?) and had an unblemished record, was not from the East End but went there to help out poor harlots and was 'at one time a surgeon'.
That last bit is not true of Druitt but it is exactly the same falsehood as the one peddled by Griffiths and Sims (on behalf of Macnaghten) the difference being that the Vicar is being up-front that he is mixing fact with fcition to protect people's reputations.
The Vicar also acribes the crimes to 'epileptic mania' whose manifestations included homicide, suicide, shrieking, raving -- and a kind of demented, amnesiac fury.
All of these elments appear in Sims, often for melodramatic purposes.
They also appear in Mac's memoirs: 'furious madness' and a 'diseased body'.
Sims in 1899 rudely and inaccurately dismisses the Vicar's tale on the basis that the drowned doctor had no time to confess anything to anybody. He only had enough manical energy to stagger to his watery grave.
We know, of course, that Druitt had three weeks to confess to a legion of clergymen. Therefore the Vicar's tale fits Druitt better, yet we know that behind the 'drowned doctor' is nevertheless ... Druitt.
Macnaghten in his memoirs stepped back from the melodramatic conjunction of Sims' 'shrieking, raving fiend', allowing for a loose day and a night btween the Kelly murder and the suicide.
That is also enough time for Druitt to confess to a priest; confess to 'his own people' about his 'Protean' madness and 'diseased body' and they then realised he was 'absented' 'soon after' the 'awful glut' of Miller's Ct.
Sims has the drowned doctor confessing to other doctors of his need to kill harlots before he begins his spree.
Whereas Druitt was a lawyer, and so was Lonsdale and so was his older brother William: a barrister confessing to other barristers -- one of whom was also a priest?
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