Originally posted by caz
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Originally posted by caz
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Shirley Harrison once mused about Barrett's seeming ability to come up with quotes and phrases, despite not being well-read.
In the Gray tapes, Mike makes an odd reference to the novels of Colin Dexter (of Inspector Morse fame), and, in particular, The Dead of Jericho. His point was that Dexter used to include quotes at the top of his chapter headings, and Barrett evidently memorized a few of these in order to impress others, including Harrison.
As I say, Barrett appears to have been something of a magpie, and so was the diarist when it came to Crashaw.
The Crashaw quote is not an organic part of the text. It is a white elephant. 'Maybrick' makes no other literary quotes, unless one counts Donald McCormick, nor is his own poetic inability ("with the key I did flee") really suggestive of someone who could quote a difficult 17th Century metaphysical poet from memory.
I see Gary Barnett is chuckling elsewhere over the opinion that a middle-class protestant cotton broker whose tastes ran to money, women, horses, and arsenic wouldn't likely have been a connoisseur of a 17th Century Roman Catholic metaphysical poet.
Laugh all you want, but this opinion was shared by two doctorates who were lecturers in English Literature, John Omlor and Martin Fido. It was also shared by a woman who was specifically a Crashaw scholar--a friend of Omlor's.
Yes, there were a few religious types and few minor poets who read Crashaw, but that's world's away from Maybrick. Not many freemasons in the late Victorian Age were pro-Catholic. It wasn't absolutely forbidden, but most of them were anti-Catholic.
Just to mention a few names familiar to Ripperologists, Sir Robert Anderson, Chief Inspector Littlechild, and Supt. Charles Cutbush all had strong anti-Catholic leanings.
What evidence is there to suggest Maybrick read 17th Century metaphysical poetry? Or approved of Catholicism?
Have a good day.
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