Ben: Hi Fisherman,
...or, rather, replaced by a whole load of substitute "details", all more fanciful and ornamental than the original. That's what usually happens with parrotted or Chinese Whispered stories - they don't become reduced, they become enlarged on each retelling as the original gets supplanted by more and more elaborate fiction.
I do not live in your world of Chinese whispers, Ben - I live in the ordinary world, where people who are told fifty details wonīt be able to remember them.
...those who believe he was either honestly accurate or honestly mistaken will just have to accept the evidence as he related it, which is that he didn't recount the episode to anyone until the Sunday policeman and Monday lodger.
Fine. Then show me exactly where Hutchinson says this: "I did not recount the episode to anyone until..."
Or is this a case of the "arsenumbingly" obvious again?
I've already outlined the numerous problems I have with your "date confusion" hypothesis, so I won't go into them again.
Promise?
What I have trouble reconciling with your latest suggestion is the image of a supposedly chatty, gregarious Hutchinson divulging all to any pub-goer who would listen, with a mysterious failure of this group (women? handful? pubfull) to mention Hutchinson by name? Did they all want to pretend that the account was theirs and none of them wanted to be honest and helpful, i.e. "I was talking to a man in the pub, and he said..."?
I fail to see that we have more than one woman who would have "lent" the story. And you seem to have no problems with Hutch having lent it?
If Hutch told the story on Thursday, there would have been no murder so far. It would be a good story to tell in a pub, so why would he clam up about it? Suggestions?
Wouldn't they have found it rather interesting that Hutchinson mentioned this encounter with Kelly and a strange man, only for Kelly herself to get murdered later on that night? How did he still manage to confuse the date, when he supposedly had a conversation with others who could cement it for him? So he tells his tale at a pub on Thursday night ("guess what I saw in the early hours of this morning?"), goes to bed, Kelly gets murdered during the night unbeknownst to him, and he emerges from the Victoria Home to news of her murder...
...and he's confused himself into believing that the events of Wednesday night/Thursday morning had just happened? That he forgot all about last night at the pub, and convinced himself that he'd wandered in from "walking about all night", having experienced Romford, Kelly and everything else just a few hours ago, as opposed to about 27 hours ago.
That is not possible, Fisherman, unless he received a serious blow to the head on that Thursday night pub visit.
A/ We donīt know when he found out about the murder, and
B/ The woman who told the story could have heard it AFTER the murder, thus making the connection.
All very simple, I would have thought.
I am not saying that this must have been what happened - I am saying that it COULD have. Itīs another variant of the Hutchinson-must-not-have-lied to add to our growing collection.
I'm talking about the press interview. Had they asked anything about Kelly's clothing, the detail would have appeared in that interview. The fact that Hutchinson does provide details as to who he related his story to assures us that the press did quiz him on this point...
Alas, no. He may well have stated these matters without being asked. I donīt think the press would have asked this type of question at all. And I am the journalist, remember.
The onus of proof is on you, not me. If you make the claim that people flocked to that part of the East End from all over (because the prostitutes were super special there?), it is incumbent on you to back it up with evidence.
I would say that the exact reverse applies: If you want to claim that the prostitutes of Whitechapel only were used by those living in Whitechapel, you would propose a novelty in the world of prostitution, so you better go searching for THAT proof. It should not trouble you, since you are the one of us who most easily provides all kinds of proof.
No. Probably not.
Why? Why would a great chunk of meat with heaps of blood vessels in it, freshly cut from a body, not drip blood. Explain, please!
Or is the onus of proof on me?
What's wrong with me stating my intention to go on for hundreds more pages? I enjoy Hutchinson discussions, and I want them to go on for that long. I also want lots of Hutchinson debates, even though I do sometimes feel bad for other discussions (and other suspects) that completely fade out when a Hutchathon is in session. You can't "report" me for that. If you're reading anything sinister into my boyish, bright-eyed and bushy-tailed enthusiasm and zeal, such as a desire to intimidate others, I can't do much about that. But if it's upsetting you, I'll say no more about it.
Is upsetting me.
Fisherman
...or, rather, replaced by a whole load of substitute "details", all more fanciful and ornamental than the original. That's what usually happens with parrotted or Chinese Whispered stories - they don't become reduced, they become enlarged on each retelling as the original gets supplanted by more and more elaborate fiction.
I do not live in your world of Chinese whispers, Ben - I live in the ordinary world, where people who are told fifty details wonīt be able to remember them.
...those who believe he was either honestly accurate or honestly mistaken will just have to accept the evidence as he related it, which is that he didn't recount the episode to anyone until the Sunday policeman and Monday lodger.
Fine. Then show me exactly where Hutchinson says this: "I did not recount the episode to anyone until..."
Or is this a case of the "arsenumbingly" obvious again?
I've already outlined the numerous problems I have with your "date confusion" hypothesis, so I won't go into them again.
Promise?
What I have trouble reconciling with your latest suggestion is the image of a supposedly chatty, gregarious Hutchinson divulging all to any pub-goer who would listen, with a mysterious failure of this group (women? handful? pubfull) to mention Hutchinson by name? Did they all want to pretend that the account was theirs and none of them wanted to be honest and helpful, i.e. "I was talking to a man in the pub, and he said..."?
I fail to see that we have more than one woman who would have "lent" the story. And you seem to have no problems with Hutch having lent it?
If Hutch told the story on Thursday, there would have been no murder so far. It would be a good story to tell in a pub, so why would he clam up about it? Suggestions?
Wouldn't they have found it rather interesting that Hutchinson mentioned this encounter with Kelly and a strange man, only for Kelly herself to get murdered later on that night? How did he still manage to confuse the date, when he supposedly had a conversation with others who could cement it for him? So he tells his tale at a pub on Thursday night ("guess what I saw in the early hours of this morning?"), goes to bed, Kelly gets murdered during the night unbeknownst to him, and he emerges from the Victoria Home to news of her murder...
...and he's confused himself into believing that the events of Wednesday night/Thursday morning had just happened? That he forgot all about last night at the pub, and convinced himself that he'd wandered in from "walking about all night", having experienced Romford, Kelly and everything else just a few hours ago, as opposed to about 27 hours ago.
That is not possible, Fisherman, unless he received a serious blow to the head on that Thursday night pub visit.
A/ We donīt know when he found out about the murder, and
B/ The woman who told the story could have heard it AFTER the murder, thus making the connection.
All very simple, I would have thought.
I am not saying that this must have been what happened - I am saying that it COULD have. Itīs another variant of the Hutchinson-must-not-have-lied to add to our growing collection.
I'm talking about the press interview. Had they asked anything about Kelly's clothing, the detail would have appeared in that interview. The fact that Hutchinson does provide details as to who he related his story to assures us that the press did quiz him on this point...
Alas, no. He may well have stated these matters without being asked. I donīt think the press would have asked this type of question at all. And I am the journalist, remember.
The onus of proof is on you, not me. If you make the claim that people flocked to that part of the East End from all over (because the prostitutes were super special there?), it is incumbent on you to back it up with evidence.
I would say that the exact reverse applies: If you want to claim that the prostitutes of Whitechapel only were used by those living in Whitechapel, you would propose a novelty in the world of prostitution, so you better go searching for THAT proof. It should not trouble you, since you are the one of us who most easily provides all kinds of proof.
No. Probably not.
Why? Why would a great chunk of meat with heaps of blood vessels in it, freshly cut from a body, not drip blood. Explain, please!
Or is the onus of proof on me?
What's wrong with me stating my intention to go on for hundreds more pages? I enjoy Hutchinson discussions, and I want them to go on for that long. I also want lots of Hutchinson debates, even though I do sometimes feel bad for other discussions (and other suspects) that completely fade out when a Hutchathon is in session. You can't "report" me for that. If you're reading anything sinister into my boyish, bright-eyed and bushy-tailed enthusiasm and zeal, such as a desire to intimidate others, I can't do much about that. But if it's upsetting you, I'll say no more about it.
Is upsetting me.
Fisherman
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