1. We seem to have a man that puts a real good effort into writing neatly when signing the police report
None of the witness signatures strike me as particularly "neat" at all. They seem like largely spidery scrawls to me.
so neatly, in fact, that he tries a curled capital H
We do not know if he wrote more open loops back in 1888; ten years have passed when we make his aquaintance again, as a writer.
And yes, an element of style is more probable to change than the leaning of the text.
If the leaning is consistent and the number of times a writer lifts his pen stays the same inbetween signatures, then that is far more important when weighing the pros and cons than are elements of style.
And you are...?
That's not meant to be offensive, but you've gone from a sensible concession that you're not an expert to making ironclad proncouncements about a field in which you have admittedly no experience. No, you cannot assert that angles and pen-lifting are more important that the actual style of the signature. The "style" refers, after all, to the general look of the signautre, so it must logically regarded as the most obvious aspect for comparison. Fundamentally, I do not take your attempts to trivilase the differences whilst exaggerating the similarities remotely seriously, and I find them to be at odds with the findings of actual experts on this topic, not least because the majority of them to date have opined that Toppy was not the witness.
It seems, Ben, that David Knott on another thread has stated that Toppy had East end connections and that he was probably NOT a plumber in 1888, this after having spoken to his relatives. So maybe you´re the one hawking rotten fish here...?
Is there something hidden in his specific manner of writing that tells us that he would never change an element of style.
Just because we know that Toppys signature looked very much the same in 1898 and 1911, it does not mean that it must have done so ten years earlier, does it?
Best regards,
Ben
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