To return to the title of the thread, I am far from convinced that 'one off instance' is the 'incontrovertible... etc,' that refutes the Diary. If this 3 word phrase is to be presented as proof of a modern hoax then it raises the question of other linguistic anachronisms. If the hoaxer was careless enough to use this phrase, which is unusual now, and apparrently unheard of at the time, then how on earth did he avoid any other mistakes?
For someone from the late 20th Century to create the diary of a Victorian, arsenic addicted serial killer and the only debating point is the phrase 'one off instance'? They are either a genius, or luckier than it's plausible to accept.
For someone from the late 20th Century to create the diary of a Victorian, arsenic addicted serial killer and the only debating point is the phrase 'one off instance'? They are either a genius, or luckier than it's plausible to accept.
Comment