Originally posted by Graham
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A snippet from my talk at York:
"I would suggest that the Diarist wrote as if he really didn't care all that
much about what his audience wanted to read and wanted to believe. He's not trying to prove nuthin' to nobody. In my opinion the intended audience is simply the Diarist. I would ask the question whether the true focus of the Diary is Jack the Ripper or the "James Maybrick" the Diarist purports to be. It's clear that the Diarist is meant to be James Maybrick but it is never said
explicitly. It reads like a poorly written novel if you are talking about plot
development and creative writing. It's certainly not a diary. Paul Begg described it as "a sort of confessional into which the supposed author wrote and perhaps exorcized his thoughts and emotions". The handwriting, far from being uniform, changes erratically from a controlled steady hand to a wildness, marked by blots and slashes. The Diarist shifts from emotional tenderness to acts of cannibalism; he's letting it all hang out in a matter of fact if flowery style. There are no dated entries; in fact some entries may
have been written at the same time. None of the victims is dignified with a name save for Kelly towards the end.
In brief, it's nothing like what you would normally associate with a diary. Maybrick, or whoever, does say at the end that he thinks the Diary will have a cautionary value after his death, but the majority of the text is written without thinking of the potential audience, and the diary becomes a bit of a nuisance to him at the end, and he thinks of destroying it. I hear echoes
of Anne's attempt to burn it in the Barrett's fireplace.....A gas fired one no less...
I believe a proper forger would have started by explicitly stating the facts of the JtR and Maybrick cases so that we know we're looking at the real deal, and then woven in this emotional roller coaster. Instead the Diarist's universe revolves strictly around himself. Cringe inducing rhymes are juxtaposed with furious and blood seeking outbursts. The Diarist rails against an unjust God; he's a third rate King Lear. "One day God will answer to me, so help me." Some have said it just doesn't ring true, unlike something the "real" Jack would have written by implication.. Just what, pray tell, does the "stereotypical Ripper" diarist sound like? "
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