Originally posted by caz
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Gary was obviously responding to Ero's claim that Maybrick would have known Mitre Square because he had an office in Lime Street. Ero further implied that Maybrick would have known 'Whitechapel' because Sarah Richardson's "aunt" had once lived in Mile End Old Town, etc.
Of course, heaven forbid that you would ever challenge the thought process of anyone who believes the diary is genuine--so instead you blame me for Ero's suggestion?
I was merely wondering why if Maybrick had such familiarity with the East End, as Ero suggested, why the narrator of this hot mess had to familiarize himself with the streets surrounding Middlesex Street, since it was less than 0.3 miles from a square that Maybrick allegedly knew so well.
I never once claimed that the real Maybrick would have known these backstreets. You seem to have confused yourself once again. Maybe if you occasionally saw fit to challenge those who believe the Diary is genuine, instead of enabling them, you wouldn't make such mistakes.
Originally posted by caz
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There is utterly no indication that the diary's narrator had ANY knowledge of the real James Maybrick's past association with the City of London. There is NOTHING in the text to suggest this.
Are you trying to imply that the hoaxer had knowledge of the office in Lime Street, and of Gustave Witt, and of Sarah Robertson's living arrangements in London during the 1860s and 70s?
Based on what, exactly?
And if the hoaxer did have such knowledge, why didn't they exploit it? It would have added a great deal of verisimilitude and local colour to the text. Instead, the reader gets nothing but a handful of vagaries from someone who is clearly just trying to bluff their way through by having Maybrick visit his brother Michael in London. His choice of this particular slum came down to nothing more than a whim of 'Whitechapel London/Whitechapel Liverpool."
This was not written by anyone with any real knowledge of Maybrick's life.
What you really seem to be suggesting is that the hoaxer DID have knowledge of Maybrick's earlier life in London--which is why he was chosen as a Ripper suspect---but inexplicably chose not to allude to any of it, which strikes me as an utterly irrational thing for a hoaxer to have done.
On what do you base this strange belief? Are you suggesting that the coincidence is simply too great that a Liverpool businessman would have tried to set himself up in the City of London in his youth?
I'm trying to understand your point, but I'm not entirely sure that you even have one.
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