Originally posted by Iconoclast
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One Incontrovertible, Unequivocal, Undeniable Fact Which Refutes the Diary
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Originally posted by Iconoclast View PostA Whitechapel in both Liverpool and London
And frankly you might as well add to your list that both Liverpool and London begin with the letter "L".
That's the type of level to which you have descended.
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Originally posted by Iconoclast View Post11) The discovery of the little-known September 17 ‘Jack the Ripper’ letter in whose hand the journal was written
To my untrained eye they look like they were written by different people.
Are you sure you are not fantasizing here?
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostBut I mean if Maybrick had gone to the doctor during the afternoon of 30 August he could then have caught the train to London and murdered Polly at 3.30am. He could then have gone back to Liverpool on the morning train and visited the doctor again on 31 August.
So this whole claim that the hoaxer got lucky is ridiculous.
It wasn't just GP records, Lord Orsam - there has been no evidence which places him in the wrong place (a la the Duke of Clarence, for example).
It is a fortunate coincidence for our hoaxer that that was so, is all I was arguing.
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostOn what basis do you say that the 17 September letter is in the same hand as the writer of the journal?
To my untrained eye they look like they were written by different people.
Are you sure you are not fantasizing here?
Which of course you will ...
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostIsn't this just a fact? I mean, are you saying that every murder in Whitechapel, London, must have been committed by someone from Liverpool?
And frankly you might as well add to your list that both Liverpool and London begin with the letter "L".
That's the type of level to which you have descended.
The coincidence lay in there being a Whitechapel in Liverpool which gave the 'hoaxer' the opportunity to build his motive for killing in Whitechapel, London.
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostWhat do you think has been discovered about Maybrick's arsenic addition since 1992 that wasn't known before then?
If these facts were well-established in 1889, it does not change the coincidence which once again worked in the hoaxer's favour.
I think you have focused on my use of 'well-established' where you may have been better employed arguing that his addiction was a not a rather convenient coincidence for our hoaxer.
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Originally posted by Iconoclast View PostFlorence’s comment in a letter to Brierley (‘The tale he told me …’)
What Florence said was this:
"M. has been delirious since Sunday, and I know that now he is perfectly ignorant of everything, even of the name of the street, and also that he has not been making any inquiries whatsoever. The tale he told me was a pure fabrication, and only intended to frighten the truth out of me. In fact he believes my statement, although he will not admit it."
So Florence was saying two things.
1. Maybrick is ignorant of everything (i.e. about her affair) and has not been making any inquiries.
2. The tale he told her was a lie intended to frighten the truth (of her affair) out of her.
The plain fact is that point 2 follows point 1. In other words, Maybrick had tried to scare her by telling her that he knew more than he really did about her affair and claiming had been making inquiries about it. But she didn't fall for his bluff and she worked out that he really knew nothing.
And then she concludes: "In fact he believes my statement, although he will not admit it." That sentence, beginning "In fact..", follows on from the previous two sentences and shows that she is only focussed on her adultery and Maybrick's knowledge of it.
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Originally posted by Iconoclast View PostThat is true. I guess we would need to establish exactly what the records say.
It wasn't just GP records, Lord Orsam - there has been no evidence which places him in the wrong place (a la the Duke of Clarence, for example).
It is a fortunate coincidence for our hoaxer that that was so, is all I was arguing.
It's the same for every single suspect, whether they lived in London or not.
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostYou only get to turn this into a Jack the Ripper comment by taking a sentence wholly out of context from the letter in which it was written.
What Florence said was this:
"M. has been delirious since Sunday, and I know that now he is perfectly ignorant of everything, even of the name of the street, and also that he has not been making any inquiries whatsoever. The tale he told me was a pure fabrication, and only intended to frighten the truth out of me. In fact he believes my statement, although he will not admit it."
So Florence was saying two things.
1. Maybrick is ignorant of everything (i.e. about her affair) and has not been making any inquiries.
2. The tale he told her was a lie intended to frighten the truth (of her affair) out of her.
The plain fact is that point 2 follows point 1. In other words, Maybrick had tried to scare her by telling her that he knew more than he really did about her affair and claiming had been making inquiries about it. But she didn't fall for his bluff and she worked out that he really knew nothing.
And then she concludes: "In fact he believes my statement, although he will not admit it." That sentence, beginning "In fact..", follows on from the previous two sentences and shows that she is only focussed on her adultery and Maybrick's knowledge of it.
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Originally posted by David Orsam View PostNo, you are making the claim so I want you to tell me.
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Originally posted by Iconoclast View PostThe coincidence lay in there being a Whitechapel in Liverpool which gave the 'hoaxer' the opportunity to build his motive for killing in Whitechapel, London.
What if the author of the diary had written: "Aha, I'll go and kill women in London because it begins with the letter "L" just like Liverpool"?
Would that have impressed you as another coincidence?
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Originally posted by Iconoclast View PostFeel free to want away. It's all there on the record in a thread started by Tempus Omnia Revelat. Given your propensity for tracking down the facts, this is a really easy one for you.
Otherwise I'm just going to come to the conclusion that can't support the claim.
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Originally posted by Iconoclast View PostIt was a 'tale' he told which was designed to frighten her. You can argue linguistic and syntactic logic, but you can't create a frightening tale from him knowing of their affair. That would be a frightening fact. Not a tale.
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