JAne:
"My apologies Fisherman. He didn't lose a day - He just woke up on Sunday morning, thought Saturday was Friday, thought Friday was Thursday and thought Thursday was Wednesday. It could happen to anyone."
Perhaps it could, Jane. But if I was of that meaning, I would appreciate if you left it to myself to say so, instead of placing words in my mouth. What I am proposing is that he, when backtracking, came to believe that something that had happened on Thursday morning had in fact happened on Friday, nothing else than that.
What we have on Hutchinson seems to propose a man that lived a vagabonding life, in order to try and make ends meet. We may well be looking at a guy who wandered long stretches and slept in various places in order to find the odd income - sometimes he would not have slept at all, as we well know.
Such a life is one that is perhaps not always easy to keep track of datewise. And in it, it would reasonably not always be easy to tell afterwards if he was in Lambeth on Tuesday morning or if that was on the Wednesday - unless that was the day he ended up in Bethnal Green...?
Unless he kept to a pattern where he returned to the same venue on the same day, week after week - and I find it extremely hard to believe that he did - it would have been a life that would have been nigh on impossible to keep track of afterwards, datewise. It would in all probability not take long before it became impossible to nail what he did and where he was on the various days. To remeber where he had been the day before would reasonably be rather easy, but after that, with each passing day, it would become harder and harder. And the result would not necessarily be that he forgot or swopped whole days, but instead that different things started to drift in his mind and could end up as belonging to the wrong day.
Now, this does not mean that he would have forgotten on the whole that he had been in Lambeth and Bethnal Green. Nor would he forget what he had done as such. What he could easily have done, though, would be to mistake WHEN AND WHERE he had done it. Maybe he fixed a leak in Bethnal Green and afterwards came to think that he had done so in Lambeth.
He would not "loose" a day as in forgetting about it totally - we are not speaking of any amnesia here. And his schedule would not move by one perfect click, turning Monday to Tuesday, Tuesday to Wednesday, Wednesday to Thursday and so on, as you propose. That would be rather ridiculous to propose, and I really hope that was not why you did it - to make my suggestion look ridiculous? That would not be like you, Jane.
I would also like you to take one more look at what Walter Dew says. He tells us that in his experience "many people" with the best of intentions (hinting at Hutchinson and the likes of him) are wrong, not necessarily to person (like Maxwell), but to DATE AND TIME.
So, Jane, Walter Dew, with heaps of experience, tells us that "many people" who come forward with good intentions are people who in actuality have gotten the dates and times wrong. And I think we can safely assume that these people have normally not been kicked intheir heads by donkeys or any such thing. Instead, they have made a very common mistake. One that a number of posters out here find it totally incredible that George Hutchinson would have made, for some reason, in spite of the fact that Dew tells us very clearly that he can see no other explanation.
One parameter that has so far not been etered here, and that I suspect may have had a large impact too, would be if Hutchinson spent his meager earnings to some extent on drink. My guess is that it would not help in the least bit to keep track of things if you are partially or totally intoxicated inbetween things. That is not to say that he was a drinker - but we must realize the possibility that this belonged to the overall picture.
The best,
Fisherman
"My apologies Fisherman. He didn't lose a day - He just woke up on Sunday morning, thought Saturday was Friday, thought Friday was Thursday and thought Thursday was Wednesday. It could happen to anyone."
Perhaps it could, Jane. But if I was of that meaning, I would appreciate if you left it to myself to say so, instead of placing words in my mouth. What I am proposing is that he, when backtracking, came to believe that something that had happened on Thursday morning had in fact happened on Friday, nothing else than that.
What we have on Hutchinson seems to propose a man that lived a vagabonding life, in order to try and make ends meet. We may well be looking at a guy who wandered long stretches and slept in various places in order to find the odd income - sometimes he would not have slept at all, as we well know.
Such a life is one that is perhaps not always easy to keep track of datewise. And in it, it would reasonably not always be easy to tell afterwards if he was in Lambeth on Tuesday morning or if that was on the Wednesday - unless that was the day he ended up in Bethnal Green...?
Unless he kept to a pattern where he returned to the same venue on the same day, week after week - and I find it extremely hard to believe that he did - it would have been a life that would have been nigh on impossible to keep track of afterwards, datewise. It would in all probability not take long before it became impossible to nail what he did and where he was on the various days. To remeber where he had been the day before would reasonably be rather easy, but after that, with each passing day, it would become harder and harder. And the result would not necessarily be that he forgot or swopped whole days, but instead that different things started to drift in his mind and could end up as belonging to the wrong day.
Now, this does not mean that he would have forgotten on the whole that he had been in Lambeth and Bethnal Green. Nor would he forget what he had done as such. What he could easily have done, though, would be to mistake WHEN AND WHERE he had done it. Maybe he fixed a leak in Bethnal Green and afterwards came to think that he had done so in Lambeth.
He would not "loose" a day as in forgetting about it totally - we are not speaking of any amnesia here. And his schedule would not move by one perfect click, turning Monday to Tuesday, Tuesday to Wednesday, Wednesday to Thursday and so on, as you propose. That would be rather ridiculous to propose, and I really hope that was not why you did it - to make my suggestion look ridiculous? That would not be like you, Jane.
I would also like you to take one more look at what Walter Dew says. He tells us that in his experience "many people" with the best of intentions (hinting at Hutchinson and the likes of him) are wrong, not necessarily to person (like Maxwell), but to DATE AND TIME.
So, Jane, Walter Dew, with heaps of experience, tells us that "many people" who come forward with good intentions are people who in actuality have gotten the dates and times wrong. And I think we can safely assume that these people have normally not been kicked intheir heads by donkeys or any such thing. Instead, they have made a very common mistake. One that a number of posters out here find it totally incredible that George Hutchinson would have made, for some reason, in spite of the fact that Dew tells us very clearly that he can see no other explanation.
One parameter that has so far not been etered here, and that I suspect may have had a large impact too, would be if Hutchinson spent his meager earnings to some extent on drink. My guess is that it would not help in the least bit to keep track of things if you are partially or totally intoxicated inbetween things. That is not to say that he was a drinker - but we must realize the possibility that this belonged to the overall picture.
The best,
Fisherman
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