I realise this may enrage more serious researchers and appear in bad taste. Apologies if this brings the field into disrepute!
But would anyone else admit to finding abundant dark humour in our interest, especially in some of its leading characters?
I accept it wasn't very amusing being eviscerated on some backstreet.
(Though, to adapt the crucifixion joke in The Life of Brian: 'At least it got you out in the open-air.')
But what are people's most amusing suspects or tit-bits?
In descending order, these are mine:
1. 'Dr' Francis 'unnatural offences' Tumblety - everything about him is comedy-gold, especially his choice of dinner-party exhibits.
2. 'This man became insane owing to many years indulgence in solitary vices.'
One's forced to ask, if they were solitary, how did Macnaghten hear about this grotesque insult to Victorian values? The only conclusion is that a central register was kept of bishop-bangers.
I shudder to think how else Kosminski's hobby became widely known. Maybe it was combined with his unsavoury gutter-picnics?
3. DS William Thick - crazy name, crazy guy!
4. The mugshot of Micheal Ostrog, plus his ridiculous crimes.
5. Montague John Druitt - 'He was sexually insane', is Mcnaghten's thundering assessment.
But as an ex-public school boy, Oxford man and minor public-school teacher, Monty was surely no stranger to 'solitary vices'? Yet, McN leaves this despicable crime unmentioned. Possibly only foreigners indulged in it.
So what else could have caused him to become sexually bonkers?
I suspect he had an unguarded childhood glimpse of some female ankle or piano leg.
Yours,
Dr Grimesby Roylott
But would anyone else admit to finding abundant dark humour in our interest, especially in some of its leading characters?
I accept it wasn't very amusing being eviscerated on some backstreet.
(Though, to adapt the crucifixion joke in The Life of Brian: 'At least it got you out in the open-air.')
But what are people's most amusing suspects or tit-bits?
In descending order, these are mine:
1. 'Dr' Francis 'unnatural offences' Tumblety - everything about him is comedy-gold, especially his choice of dinner-party exhibits.
2. 'This man became insane owing to many years indulgence in solitary vices.'
One's forced to ask, if they were solitary, how did Macnaghten hear about this grotesque insult to Victorian values? The only conclusion is that a central register was kept of bishop-bangers.
I shudder to think how else Kosminski's hobby became widely known. Maybe it was combined with his unsavoury gutter-picnics?
3. DS William Thick - crazy name, crazy guy!
4. The mugshot of Micheal Ostrog, plus his ridiculous crimes.
5. Montague John Druitt - 'He was sexually insane', is Mcnaghten's thundering assessment.
But as an ex-public school boy, Oxford man and minor public-school teacher, Monty was surely no stranger to 'solitary vices'? Yet, McN leaves this despicable crime unmentioned. Possibly only foreigners indulged in it.
So what else could have caused him to become sexually bonkers?
I suspect he had an unguarded childhood glimpse of some female ankle or piano leg.
Yours,
Dr Grimesby Roylott
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