Phil, this is disgraceful of you and very ugly of you. Pay attention.
I said from the start that this was far fetched and I did not expect anyone to believe it. As for the Royal Conspiracy, I said, quote: "SO-CALLED" unquote. Look at pictures of Prince Eddy and Druitt and you can see the resemblance.
Attacking me on a public forum, using my real name and not my pseudonym, belittling my post-- absolutely revolting and totally unforgivible BTW I always thought that the most powerful and poignant religious statement I ever read was in a Peanuts cartoon by Charles Schulz: Snoopy is writing a book on religious debate entitled "Has It Ever Occurred to You that You could Be Wrong?" Maybe more people should ask themselves that question before resorting to libel.
I will be polite, however. Maybe it's time I LEFT. I have read more drivel here than in the many books on JtR I have on my shelves, and I have Richard Wallace's Lewis Carroll anagram BS.
God keep you
Darkendale
good-bye I was enjoying my time here, but best I go before I resort to saying something I will certainly regret.
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An 'open mind' refers to being willing to LISTEN, not blindly AGREEING.Originally posted by Jon Guy View PostC`mon Phil, what about that open mind of yours ?!?!
Was there ANY reference to Prince Eddy in ANY connection with the crimes BEFORE Stephen Knight or Stowall (if Eddy actually was his suspect)?? As far as I know, the closest reference to a 'Royal Conspiracy' before the late 1960s/early '70s was referring to a cover-up by police/government officials, more along the line to cover butts that no one was ever convicted.Last edited by C. F. Leon; 06-28-2013, 10:13 PM.
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Hello Phil,
Thanks – I think!Well, Sally, you have gone down in my estimation for providing a defence for this idea. Though as always I admire, your grace and humour in doing so.
I wasn’t providing a defence for the idea – I was defending the right of people to present their ideas regarding the case on a public message forum. Whether you or I agree with them or not has little to do with the principle.
Quite right – I don’t.Surely you cannot condone statements like:
This could account for the suspicion of Prince Eddy, be the true reasoning behind the so-called Royal Conspiracy,
Absolutely. Not a shred. A popular myth only.There WAS, IS NOT and NEVER HAS BEEN a royal conspiracy!!!!
There has never been any evidence of one. Not a shred.
I can't agree. Reasoning is dependent on the state of knowledge one possesses – you cannot reason with what you do not know.So there cannot be any "true reasoning" behind it except in the minds of the logically chanllenged and perhaps bored (Casebook is a bit like that at the moment).
I think the repetitive, obsessive posting wars do more damage than the ‘drivel’, as you put it. The drivel can be easily dismissed – and invariably is – by more knowledgeable members of the forum. You only have to look at (e.g.) the Van Gogh thread to see that.But if you think that serious people don't judge us by drivel like this thread, I believe you are sadly mistaken.
Anyway, I think perhaps I’m on the wrong thread for a conversation of this sort, so…
It’s your decision, of course – but I hope you’ll stay, Phil, as you know.Maybe I was wrong to return - I didn't intend to.
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Well, RavenDarkenDale was merely musing.
Is it forbidden ?
He even admitted that his scenario was far-fetched.
And we have all read equally far-fetched posts on serious threads, which is certainly worse for ripperology.
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A little knowledge of English history might help you Darkdale.
AffAIRS amongst the aristocracy were common, once the wife produced the heir and spare, wives had discreet affairs as did husband. Cuoples were placed in rooms near their lovers at weekend parties.
Most kings of England have had a mistress or two. King Edward like other members of the ruling class took his mistresses from discreet married ladies from the aristocracy. In the 1890s it was Daisy, Countess of Warwick.
The mistress who was permitted to visit Edward at his deathbed was Alice Kepple. A much younger married woman [ Edward had no children by his mistresses] who is an ancestor of Camilla, herself a mistress later wife of Prince Charles. She was the companion of Edward's last years and would be placed near him at dinner parties etc.
Alexandra would have been fully aware of Edward's mistresses, Edward treated her with the greatest respect in public and expected others to.
It may be immoral, but they had a code and were powerful enough to behave as they wished as long as they behaved well in public and were discreet.
Miss MarpleLast edited by miss marple; 06-28-2013, 01:25 PM.
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Well, Sally, you have gone down in my estimation for providing a defence for this idea. Though as always I admire, your grace and humour in doing so.
Surely you cannot condone statements like:
This could account for the suspicion of Prince Eddy, be the true reasoning behind the so-called Royal Conspiracy,
There WAS, IS NOT and NEVER HAS BEEN a royal conspiracy!!!!
There has never been any evidence of one. Not a shred.
So there cannot be any "true reasoning" behind it except in the minds of the logically chanllenged and perhaps bored (Casebook is a bit like that at the moment).
But if you think that serious people don't judge us by drivel like this thread, I believe you are sadly mistaken.
Maybe I was wrong to return - I didn't intend to.
Phil
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Hi Phil...
Ah Ha! Well at least you saw it coming, Phil…I'll be attacked, I know, for being too purist and censorious
Does it though? Consider – discerning readers familiar with the case are unlikely to adhere to this type of speculation; readers unfamiliar with the case may accept it at face value – but are hardly likely to suspect Ripperology to be the home of lunatics and fantasists due to their lack of case awareness.There is a current thread on improving Ripperology - I'm sorry to say that I find this type of speculation does exactly the opposite. Based on nothing, it taints all of us interested in the subject with the suspcion that we are all lunatics with only a fragile fingerhold on reality.
I suspect a bigger problem in the ‘seen as a bunch of loons’ scenario is the frequent, insistent and at times aggressive pushing of factually weak theories (suspect orientated or otherwise) via rhetoric and misrepresentation. That does make ripperologists look like lunatics with only a fragile fingerhold on reality.
It isn’t what you or I may prefer, no – but really? I’d have thought that was a little strong, myself. There is nothing whatever to prevent those who seek to rely on the above from doing so.It degrades all those who seek to rely on genuine research, logic, established historical methods and gaining any sort of respect.
Nah. They’re worse. Funny, but worse. Not that anybody with more than a handful of brain cells would adhere to any ‘famous Ripper’ theories – for obvious reasons. Famous does not equal obscure: famous equals known. There is simply no room in what is already known about the lives of the famous for a secret Ripper existence.But frankly, I regard threads like this as worse that those by Van Goghites and Sickerteenies - immature and deplorable.
Tsk Tsk Phil. I dunno…Tossing off (sorry out) the scenario is an exactly correct terminology.
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Well - on the basis on which you are working Dale, anything is possible.
I could equally argue that Princess Alexandra was the killer, seeking revenge on whores for her husband's infidelity! And I don't believe or promote such an idea.
There is no basis for such a hypothesis. Indeed, your proposal does not even cite a particular bastard, we have to accept there was one.
And where is any solid foundation for a belief that "Eddy" had any connection with the murders - or resembled Druitt. They might, in the flesh have looked very different, in build, colouring etc, so that no one could have mistaken them.
The "fascination" with Eddy is simply the glamour of the royal connection associated with the post-Watergate belief in conspiracies (which Stephen Knight rode all the way to the bank). I might add that he, at least, in the 70s found some connections (albeit not ones that stood up to scrutiny) and has "Hobo" Gorman's then unchallenged statements to support him. Your idea has not even that!
In my view, to be taken seriously you would have to produce evidence of a specific royal bastard, demonstrate that he resembled Eddy, discover some biographical details of pre and post 1888 activities and whereabouts etc etc. Without that there is nothing to discuss - you might as well assert that somewhere in the universe 2+2=5. It doesn't here, I suppose it MIGHT in a black hole!
There is a current thread on improving Ripperology - I'm sorry to say that I find this type of speculation does exactly the opposite. Based on nothing, it taints all of us interested in the subject with the suspcion that we are all lunatics with only a fragile fingerhold on reality. It degrades all those who seek to rely on genuine research, logic, established historical methods and gaining any sort of respect.
I'll be attacked, I know, for being too purist and censorious. But frankly, I regard threads like this as worse that those by Van Goghites and Sickerteenies - immature and deplorable.
Tossing off (sorry out) the scenario is an exactly correct terminology.
Sorry, Dale, but it had to be said.
Phil
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Tossing out a scenerio
This is just an exercise in possibilities.
1.)Prince Eddy, son of Edward VII is forever entangled in JtR lore, even though he can be proven to be elsewhere during the murders.
2.) Montague John Druitt, named as a suspect by MacNaughton, looks a lot like Prince Eddy. While a possibility exists that he could have committed at least some of the murders, there is no tangible prove he was even involved. Perhaps sufficient evidence for making a case for him once did exist, but has become lost as have many papers from the JtR files.
Now, here's the thing. Edward VII was an incurable rake and was believed to have bastard children by at least one mistress. Queen Alexandria was reported to have brought his mistress and children to say goodbye when the King lay dying.
Now suppose JtR was a bastard son of Edward VII. This could account for the suspicion of Prince Eddy, be the true reasoning behind the so-called Royal Conspiracy, and even might be the basis of Druitt's suspicion.
None of you will likely take this seriously but it isn't as far fetched as it initially may seem.
Not saying this is how it is, just musing on possibilities.
God Bless
DarkendaleTags: None

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