I found the diary, at least the program, compelling and entertaining. One thing that caught my attention, was one person's quote, "he met a man in a pub who gave him the book and said, 'you might find this interesting', it's not good enough."
Why? I think that's actually a rather realistic turn of events. What ripperologists find so difficult in understanding is how a man could discover such a document and sit on it in silence all that time, only then to hand it to another with little to no explanation.
Of course, anyone who had a previous passion for this case would have screamed from the rooftops upon it's discovery, but the man who discovered it had absolutely no want whatsoever to have anything to do with this.
And it's not like he simply handed it to some stranger in a pub, this was a man he shared drinks with almost every day. Why him? Well, maybe he was the only man he knew would "do something with it", which tells me the original owner appreciated that something needed to be done with this document, but he didn't want to be the one to do it. I don't think he really cared what was done with the document; publish it or burn it, all he knew was he didn't want anything to do with it, but something needed to be done.
I admit that, if the document is true, that it is a funny way to end the story, but it is fitting. I mean, almost all the victims stories began that day in a pub, so why not all this end in a pub?
Why? I think that's actually a rather realistic turn of events. What ripperologists find so difficult in understanding is how a man could discover such a document and sit on it in silence all that time, only then to hand it to another with little to no explanation.
Of course, anyone who had a previous passion for this case would have screamed from the rooftops upon it's discovery, but the man who discovered it had absolutely no want whatsoever to have anything to do with this.
And it's not like he simply handed it to some stranger in a pub, this was a man he shared drinks with almost every day. Why him? Well, maybe he was the only man he knew would "do something with it", which tells me the original owner appreciated that something needed to be done with this document, but he didn't want to be the one to do it. I don't think he really cared what was done with the document; publish it or burn it, all he knew was he didn't want anything to do with it, but something needed to be done.
I admit that, if the document is true, that it is a funny way to end the story, but it is fitting. I mean, almost all the victims stories began that day in a pub, so why not all this end in a pub?
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