Originally posted by Ben
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Originally posted by Ben
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Originally posted by Ben
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Originally posted by Ben
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I have to agree with Jon that you misinterpreted almost every aspect of the above report. A decent thesaurus, together with a better grasp of Victorian parlance and press-speak, could have helped in this regard.
Originally posted by Wickerman
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The press are fishing for info concerning his status as a ripper suspect, but the police are fobbing them off with a brief statement on his status as an ex-suspect in the Farmer case. Something along the lines of: ‘We are no longer investigating Isaacs in connection with the recent attempted murder’ is sufficient to provide the bones for that press report. The implication is that the police had suspected his connection with that crime, and the press choose to infer from this that he wasn’t being connected ‘with the mutilations’. Either that, or it is frustrated press-speak, to squeeze in a mention of their favourite topic because the police are saying nothing about their inquiries in that direction.
Originally posted by Ben
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The following might help with the word “exhaustive”, which you appear to be confusing with “exhausting”:
exhausting = tiring, hard, testing, taxing, difficult, draining, punishing, crippling, fatiguing, wearying, grueling, sapping, debilitating, strenuous, arduous, laborious, enervating, backbreaking
exhaustive = thorough, detailed, complete, full, total, sweeping, comprehensive, extensive, intensive, full-scale, in-depth, far-reaching, all-inclusive, all-embracing, encyclopedic, thoroughgoing
Now apply this to your own interpretation and you may see where you were going astray before:
Originally posted by Ben
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If the press get it right about East End detectives making ‘every enquiry in the neighbourhood concerning the suspect’, that would be in relation to Isaacs’s whereabouts on the night of the Kelly murder, as a result of what Cusins and Oakes reported. And if a simple though exhaustive inquiry has found him in prison for the Farmer attack, one wonders why these detectives were tiring themselves out going round the neighbourhood, ‘looking and looking’ in vain for clues, if another simple inquiry might find him again in prison when the earlier, more serious crime was committed in Miller’s Court. The alternatives seem to be: a) he was not yet in prison then, so could have been pacing about that night at the prospect; or b) he was in prison, but the police were looking into his whereabouts for the previous murders, still open to the possibility that he was the ripper, and that someone else killed Kelly.
Love,
Caz
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