Originally posted by Jonathan H
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But you have conceded more than once that this is your interpretation, which others are not obliged to share. So my point was that you were making a circular argument by expressing astonishment that Druitt's terrible murderous secret was mostly kept under wraps. I agree, it would have been astonishing if Druitt dunnit, and there were people who knew he'd dunnit, yet his identity never leaked outside of Mac's memos.
An alternative explanation is that nobody had any proof that he did have this terrible secret - all was 'rational theory' and conjecture (Mac), belief (the family - yet to be confirmed - and of course belief is quite different from knowledge), or malicious gossip (arguably Farqy) - and only on the part of a very small number of people. That would surely explain why the 'leak' never became a waterfall.
The justification that this is a theory -- and not mere fanciful speculation -- is that Mac claimed in public under his own name, in 1913 and 1914, that he knew the identity of Jack the Ripper. That it w as a secret he would never divulge.
Anderson also claimed in public under his own name that he knew the identity of the ripper - a 'definitely ascertained fact' - and he never did divulge the name. We only have Swanson's pencil suggesting one privately, and again it's Mac who hands us Kosminski's name as an alternative suspect.
My interpretation, as you know, is that Mac was not being dishonest when he said there was never any shadow of proof against Druitt or anyone else, merely his own 'rational theory', backed up with private info which implied his own family believed him guilty.
I'm still missing the crucial link between the family and Mac, which would still be hearsay regardless of how reputable the source may have been. Loose-lipped Victorian vicars and MPs don't impress me much.
Love,
Caz
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