There was such a stigma about suicide in those days (at least among the middle to upper classes) that brother William comes across to me as a reliable witness for admitting that Monty had written such a note and producing it at inquest to help establish the cause of death. It would have been a double-edged sword for the family to have their deceased relative regarded as a loony at best or a criminal at worst. Might William not have stated he was the sole relative in order to spare the other Druitts the indignity? That would be a very Victorian thing to do, along with Valentine's steadfast silence concerning the nature of the 'serious trouble at the school' that prompted him to sack Monty.
I can't entertain the theory that the serious trouble and subsequent suicide were incidental or isolated events, considering the two alleged suicide notes, addressed to Monty's boss and his brother, were found among his effects when William arrived at the school and had them searched.
But the cheques found on his body, together with the estate he left, could argue against him being fired for financial irregularities, or fired in his absence from the school. You don't fire someone for simply being absent, if they could have met with an accident or fallen seriously ill. That's just not cricket. You try to find out why they are missing in the first instance, and that would have involved Valentine contacting William or other relatives. But it never happened. It took Monty's unexpected and unexplained absence from Chambers to alert William and send him to Blackheath looking for clues. That leads me to conclude that his absence from the school was neither unexpected by Valentine nor unexplained.
Back to that 'serious trouble' then. And since Valentine had a brother serving on the cricket club committee it would have been par for the course (excuse the mixed sporting metaphors) for any serious trouble at the school to quickly result in Monty's dismissal from the club too, this time in his absence - obviously. As Andy mentioned, it's entirely normal to be absent from a cricket club in December in England.
As Jonathan H has often pointed out, we cannot be sure whether the suicide notes were opened and read by their respective recipients before or after Monty was officially dropped by the cricket club. But they must have had what they considered to be good grounds for doing so, especially if they were aware by then that the wretched man might have gone and done himself in.
Ah, those Victorian toffs - so frustratingly reticent on the subject of suicide, mental illness or 'improper' behaviour of any kind.
Love,
Caz
X
I can't entertain the theory that the serious trouble and subsequent suicide were incidental or isolated events, considering the two alleged suicide notes, addressed to Monty's boss and his brother, were found among his effects when William arrived at the school and had them searched.
But the cheques found on his body, together with the estate he left, could argue against him being fired for financial irregularities, or fired in his absence from the school. You don't fire someone for simply being absent, if they could have met with an accident or fallen seriously ill. That's just not cricket. You try to find out why they are missing in the first instance, and that would have involved Valentine contacting William or other relatives. But it never happened. It took Monty's unexpected and unexplained absence from Chambers to alert William and send him to Blackheath looking for clues. That leads me to conclude that his absence from the school was neither unexpected by Valentine nor unexplained.
Back to that 'serious trouble' then. And since Valentine had a brother serving on the cricket club committee it would have been par for the course (excuse the mixed sporting metaphors) for any serious trouble at the school to quickly result in Monty's dismissal from the club too, this time in his absence - obviously. As Andy mentioned, it's entirely normal to be absent from a cricket club in December in England.
As Jonathan H has often pointed out, we cannot be sure whether the suicide notes were opened and read by their respective recipients before or after Monty was officially dropped by the cricket club. But they must have had what they considered to be good grounds for doing so, especially if they were aware by then that the wretched man might have gone and done himself in.
Ah, those Victorian toffs - so frustratingly reticent on the subject of suicide, mental illness or 'improper' behaviour of any kind.
Love,
Caz
X
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