Are you not, Ben, the guy who often tells me not to write too long ...?
You now elaborate in a lengthy manner over a number of points I have made and you call them "not even remotely applicable".
On doing so, you - among other things - make it clear that you consider a falling-out with his father on Toppys behalf "not even remotely applicable". And itīs fine by me if you hold this belief. Apparently you seem to think that there was no reasonable way in which Toppy could have sunk into the circumstances in East End; if his father did not want to "save" him, other relatives would.
In conclusion with this, we can deduct that no man or woman, born somewhere else than in the East End, would EVER end up there, as long as he/she had any relative left on earth.
It makes one wonder where the Eastenders came from?
And I do not "need" to posit the existence of "some family feud" at all, since we all know - giving it some afterthought - that people DO migrate between social conditions. And that, Ben, is EXTREMELY trivial, regardless of the address they end up in belongs to the East End or not.
You display a total unflexibility when it serves your purposes, Ben, and that appllies as a rule. You tell us that plumbers served a seven-year education and that you - how was it - "very unlikely that Toppy was able to start his lifelong career as a plumber in his early twenties. I'd say that's unheard of for the Victorian period".
That was what you wrote earlier, and we all know, thanks to Samīs contribution, that apparently heaps of people of all sorts of educations and ages started carreers as "plumbers" in the Victorian period.
Then again, you can get EXTREMELY flexible when other purposes have to be served; we are adviced not to put any belief in Hutchisnon telling us that he could afford to give Kelly rather substantial money from time to time. And of course, that passage did not fit in with your picture of a desperately poor Hutchinson, living a "squalid" life.
Him being out of work, though, is something you galdly take on board, and would you believe it - it serves well to bolster your thinking. So in this particular instance, we are told to BELIEVE what Hutchinson says...? Howīs that for flexibility?
Such antics, Ben, become a burden once you start to tell me that my suggestion that people may migrate from a slightly more prosperous address to a "lower" one is not even "remotely applicable".
"by far the most logical explanation to all of them is that Toppy was not the George Hutchinson who signed the police statement. That way, all of those problems are resolved"
...but the price tag becomes unsurmountable as long as the signatures tally - and they do. Which is why I remain at my stance that very trivial explanations will lie behind Toppys East End saga. In the end, it will amount to a prime example of the saying that life has itīs ups and downs, and nothing more than that.
Oh, and I HAVE read "The people of the abyss". Didnīt come across Toppy in it, though.
Fisherman
You now elaborate in a lengthy manner over a number of points I have made and you call them "not even remotely applicable".
On doing so, you - among other things - make it clear that you consider a falling-out with his father on Toppys behalf "not even remotely applicable". And itīs fine by me if you hold this belief. Apparently you seem to think that there was no reasonable way in which Toppy could have sunk into the circumstances in East End; if his father did not want to "save" him, other relatives would.
In conclusion with this, we can deduct that no man or woman, born somewhere else than in the East End, would EVER end up there, as long as he/she had any relative left on earth.
It makes one wonder where the Eastenders came from?
And I do not "need" to posit the existence of "some family feud" at all, since we all know - giving it some afterthought - that people DO migrate between social conditions. And that, Ben, is EXTREMELY trivial, regardless of the address they end up in belongs to the East End or not.
You display a total unflexibility when it serves your purposes, Ben, and that appllies as a rule. You tell us that plumbers served a seven-year education and that you - how was it - "very unlikely that Toppy was able to start his lifelong career as a plumber in his early twenties. I'd say that's unheard of for the Victorian period".
That was what you wrote earlier, and we all know, thanks to Samīs contribution, that apparently heaps of people of all sorts of educations and ages started carreers as "plumbers" in the Victorian period.
Then again, you can get EXTREMELY flexible when other purposes have to be served; we are adviced not to put any belief in Hutchisnon telling us that he could afford to give Kelly rather substantial money from time to time. And of course, that passage did not fit in with your picture of a desperately poor Hutchinson, living a "squalid" life.
Him being out of work, though, is something you galdly take on board, and would you believe it - it serves well to bolster your thinking. So in this particular instance, we are told to BELIEVE what Hutchinson says...? Howīs that for flexibility?
Such antics, Ben, become a burden once you start to tell me that my suggestion that people may migrate from a slightly more prosperous address to a "lower" one is not even "remotely applicable".
"by far the most logical explanation to all of them is that Toppy was not the George Hutchinson who signed the police statement. That way, all of those problems are resolved"
...but the price tag becomes unsurmountable as long as the signatures tally - and they do. Which is why I remain at my stance that very trivial explanations will lie behind Toppys East End saga. In the end, it will amount to a prime example of the saying that life has itīs ups and downs, and nothing more than that.
Oh, and I HAVE read "The people of the abyss". Didnīt come across Toppy in it, though.
Fisherman
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