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One Incontrovertible, Unequivocal, Undeniable Fact Which Refutes the Diary

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  • Thanks, Sooth -

    I'm pleased that you approve.

    However, to respond as I surely ought - SADDO??

    I think any further response to that would be missing the point.

    Jane x

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    • One tries my friend..one tries...

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      • Originally posted by Jane Welland View Post
        The lyrics are indeed lovely, but you forgot this bit...

        Just before our love got lost you said
        I am as constant as a northern star
        And I said, constant in the darkness
        Wheres that at?
        If you want me Ill be in the bar

        Disenchanted for the afternoon,

        Jane x

        P.S. That's Brucey, I believe...
        Actually, constantly in the darkness, but happy in the darkness, and not playing childish games of hide and seek.

        You could pass on to someone else at the bar that her troubles over my identity are most keenly answered by the light of that northern star.

        PS As you believe, you are of course correct with The Boss.

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        • Originally posted by Soothsayer View Post
          I'll say it again, page 184 of 'Scotland Yard Investigates'. You can argue until you're blue in the face that the 'F' is a 'P' or a Sonic the Hedgehog badge, etc.. You can cite the clouds as good examples of random things bearing messages for the needy. But if you look at the photograph from Evans and Rumbelow, you will see less of clouds and more of confusion. When you do so, and rationalise that confusion, then I'd like to hear how you explain the 'FM' away.
          The S.O. and I are looking at that very page in my copy of Evans and Rumbelow right now...

          How much is it worth on eBay, for a copy that doesn't show a darn thing but dingy wall and a few blood-splatters?
          ~ Khanada

          I laugh in the face of danger. Then I run and hide until it goes away.

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          • Originally posted by Khanada View Post
            The S.O. and I are looking at that very page in my copy of Evans and Rumbelow right now...

            How much is it worth on eBay, for a copy that doesn't show a darn thing but dingy wall and a few blood-splatters?
            Extraordinary. I should perhaps have been clearer. You're looking for the black lines which form an 'F'-like shape and the black llines right next to it - in the right order for the journal - which form an 'M'-like shape.

            Does this help?

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            • With the M at the Chapman scene and the possible M on Eddowes face, an M at the Kelly scene seems plausible. It's cut off so you don't have to believe if you don't want to. The Diary doesn't fall on the photograph.
              I think Poste House might make the strongest case although that's iffy too for both sides.
              Originally posted by Jessica Pisces View Post
              Unfortunately I also found "match box empty" in a poem by Josh Billings, American humourist (1818-1885).
              Scratch one more incontrovertible, unequivocal, undeniable fact...!
              Sorry Mr. Harris. RIP. I still like your RDS.
              Josh Billings was the second greatest American humourist after Mark Twain. We all quote him. He's credited with the phrase, "The squeaky wheel gets the grease."

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              • Originally posted by Jessica Pisces View Post
                With the M at the Chapman scene and the possible M on Eddowes face, an M at the Kelly scene seems plausible. It's cut off so you don't have to believe if you don't want to. The Diary doesn't fall on the photograph.
                I think Poste House might make the strongest case although that's iffy too for both sides.

                Scratch one more incontrovertible, unequivocal, undeniable fact...!
                Sorry Mr. Harris. RIP. I still like your RDS.
                Josh Billings was the second greatest American humourist after Mark Twain. We all quote him. He's credited with the phrase, "The squeaky wheel gets the grease."
                Jessica,

                Just to pursue a point - is that your real name?

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                • Jessica is my trade name. Ha ha. Pisces is not even my sign. But fishy stuff is my life.

                  I see lots of fine research done by Diary researchers go to waste like the discovery of Peter Kurten's multiple handwritings. (The Dusseldorf Ripper's handwriting spells Kurtens for the handwriting arguement!) But then again, I see Vesicas!

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                  • Originally posted by Jessica Pisces View Post
                    Jessica is my trade name. Ha ha. Pisces is not even my sign. But fishy stuff is my life.

                    I see lots of fine research done by Diary researchers go to waste like the discovery of Peter Kurten's multiple handwritings. (The Dusseldorf Ripper's handwriting spells Kurtens for the handwriting arguement!) But then again, I see Vesicas!
                    Can you see letters on the wall of old photographs?

                    Where do you see the circles? (Assuming you meant vesica pisces?).
                    Last edited by Soothsayer; 06-24-2009, 11:07 PM.

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                    • The use of the phrase "spreads mayhem" in the Diary is an absolute clincher as far as I'm concerned. As a compound phrase in itself, and in terms of the noun being used to mean "chaos/confusion/panic", this is a distinctly late 20th Century coinage.

                      Not wishing to spread mayhem on these boards, I refer anyone who's interested to Howard's JTRForums site, where this has been discussed at length.
                      Kind regards, Sam Flynn

                      "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)

                      Comment


                      • Originally posted by Sam Flynn View Post
                        The use of the phrase "spreads mayhem" in the Diary is an absolute clincher as far as I'm concerned. As a compound phrase in itself, and in terms of the noun being used to mean "chaos/confusion/panic", this is a distinctly late 20th Century coinage.

                        Not wishing to spread mayhem on these boards, I refer anyone who's interested to Howard's JTRForums site, where this has been discussed at length.
                        Sam,

                        according to a Big Book I have, the words 'mayhem' and 'maim' have the same root, and originally meant in a legal sense the removal of a body part from a person to render that person unsuitable for either combat or self-defence. The use of 'mayhem' according to my Big Book dates back until at least the 17th century. I'd say the author of the Diary got it about right reference the Whitechapel Killings.

                        Cheers,

                        Graham
                        We are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze

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                        • Mayhem

                          The sole definition of 'mayhem' from the 1887 Standard Dictionary -

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                          SPE

                          Treat me gently I'm a newbie.

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                          • Then does one 'create' or 'spread' or 'commit' mayhem? Does one 'create' or 'spread' or 'commit' burglary?

                            Graham
                            We are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze

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                            • Hi Graham,

                              The specific meaning of "mayhem" for "panic/chaos/confusion" - which, to my mind - is how the phrase gets used in the Diary ("This May spreads mayhem throughout this fair land"), stems from a popular misinterpretation of 1950s reportage, where violent sports were reported in popular press as "licensed mayhem" (and variants thereof). In that (1950s) sense, "mayhem" evidently still retained its long-held meaning of "physical injury"... but then the public got hold of it, and over subsequent decades, the word "mayhem" came to mean what most people would think it means today.

                              Before this point, however, "mayhem" referred quite unambiguously to personal physical injury. To believe that the diarist meant to say that he "spread personal physical injury throughout this fair land" is stretching things too far. Nobody ever "spread personal physical injury" anywhere - still less nationwide. Anyone, if they're being honest with themselves, can see that the diarist is referring to the confusion and chaos that the Ripper case caused to spread throughout the country as a whole. That being the case, the diarist was using a distinctly modern meaning of the word.

                              Furthermore, the precise juxtaposition of the verb "to spread" and the noun "mayhem" (in any sense) - as a compound term - doesn't seem to have occurred in print until the early 1980s.
                              Kind regards, Sam Flynn

                              "Suche Nullen" (Nietzsche, Götzendämmerung, 1888)

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                              • But let's for a moment assume that the Diary is an old forgery, how did the very late Victorians interpret and use the word 'mayhem'? If indeed they ever did outside a court of law?

                                Well, I'm off to create a little drunkenness, meself.

                                Cheers,

                                Graham
                                We are suffering from a plethora of surmise, conjecture and hypothesis. - Sherlock Holmes, The Adventure Of Silver Blaze

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