Bridewell, you have not responded to my answer to your previous question on the other thread -- which is your right of course.
But it is answered.
Your theory here is perfectly reasonable.
eg. this source says one thing, he says another.
Therefore, Macnaghten is an unreliable source manipulating untraceable data, depending on his audience.
My counter is:
1. Unlike 'Kosminski' and Ostrog (except for a brief mention in the police publication in 1888, as 'dangerous') Druitt, albeit un-named, begins as a Ripper suspect among his own people in Dorset before Macnaghten has heard of him. Essentially Farquharson's distorted profile of the deceased surgeon's son becomes Sims' instantly shattered suicide familiar to Edwardians as the 'police' solution to the whole mystery.
and,
2. In the one document for the public under his own knighted name, the de-factor third version of his 'Report', Mac eliminated 'Kosminski' (or Aaron Kosminski) and Michael Ostrog from contention. They are nothing. He did this long before, respectively, Martin Fido and Philip Sudgen discovered that they are not viable -- in Ostrog's case absolutely so. Mac also drops the American suspect and any reference to Cutbush. He also concedes that the real 'Protean' Ripper was not a suspect for years after he killed himself, matching the Farquharson revelation, but disagrees with the MP on a crucial element -- the maniac did not kill himself within hours of the final murder. This is true of the real Montie, rather than Sims' 'shrieking, raving fiend' who could not function even for 'a single day'.
But it is answered.
Your theory here is perfectly reasonable.
eg. this source says one thing, he says another.
Therefore, Macnaghten is an unreliable source manipulating untraceable data, depending on his audience.
My counter is:
1. Unlike 'Kosminski' and Ostrog (except for a brief mention in the police publication in 1888, as 'dangerous') Druitt, albeit un-named, begins as a Ripper suspect among his own people in Dorset before Macnaghten has heard of him. Essentially Farquharson's distorted profile of the deceased surgeon's son becomes Sims' instantly shattered suicide familiar to Edwardians as the 'police' solution to the whole mystery.
and,
2. In the one document for the public under his own knighted name, the de-factor third version of his 'Report', Mac eliminated 'Kosminski' (or Aaron Kosminski) and Michael Ostrog from contention. They are nothing. He did this long before, respectively, Martin Fido and Philip Sudgen discovered that they are not viable -- in Ostrog's case absolutely so. Mac also drops the American suspect and any reference to Cutbush. He also concedes that the real 'Protean' Ripper was not a suspect for years after he killed himself, matching the Farquharson revelation, but disagrees with the MP on a crucial element -- the maniac did not kill himself within hours of the final murder. This is true of the real Montie, rather than Sims' 'shrieking, raving fiend' who could not function even for 'a single day'.
Comment