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  • #61
    d
    Originally posted by Scott Nelson View Post
    He probably won it in a card game with the electricians who brought it into the pub.
    A card game would need an element of intelligence so we can rule that out for a start.
    Three things in life that don't stay hidden for to long ones the sun ones the moon and the other is the truth

    Comment


    • #62
      Originally posted by James_J View Post
      I acknowledge and accept that graphology is not a dependable form of evidence. The graphologist who examined the Diary in 1992 was Hannah Koren. She is a forensic document analyst for a security department of the Israeli Government and has presented evidence in many fraud trials throughout Europe. I included her professional opinion of the Diary due to her extensive experience with document related cases and inquiries.

      Best Regards, James
      According to whom? If you look Anna Koren's website, her main list of references are letters from various former members of the Israeli government she impressed when she did her fortune telling routine on during radio shows. A phoney medium and palm reader can give you a similar performance.

      She doesn't appear to have any actual forensic document analysis qualifications.

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      • #63
        tempus fugit

        Hello Caroline. Thanks.

        Not having seen the original, I may presume time of day was indicated.

        Regarding the time of day, it was early enough to give Kate time to go to MECW. (All in my last essay.)

        Cheers.
        LC

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        • #64
          Originally posted by James_J View Post
          In reply to the Josh Billings suggestion, this does nothing to detract from the Diary. The date of the article is given as 15th October 1870. The Diary is not purported to be written until 1888. If Maybrick was attempting to include the matchbox through poetry or rhyme, he may naturally have gravitated to such a poem.
          James,
          the suggestion was made to support the Diary with the reasons you give. But you're probably correct in giving credit to Caz for her suggestion that the phrase "match box empty" was made in jotting ideas for his poems.

          Although coming from someone who isn't firmly on the Diary side yet, Caz may have stopped the chorus of "match box empty match box empty". It has a nice ring to it though.

          Comment


          • #65
            Originally posted by pinkmoon View Post
            d

            A card game would need an element of intelligence so we can rule that out for a start.
            So, he didn't buy it nor did he win it.... he nicked it from the back of their van!!??

            Comment


            • #66
              Originally posted by Chris View Post
              Ah, Caz, it's almost like old times, isn't it?

              Hugs and kisses

              Chris
              XXXXXXXXXX
              Almost, Chris. But not quite.

              In the old days you used to address me stiffly as Caroline Anne Morris, before giving me six of the best. Hugs and kisses were conspicuous by their po-faced absence.

              I shall accept your volte-face with good grace and at face value (and not put it down to an attempt at irony).

              Hugs and kisses back,

              Caz
              X
              "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


              Comment


              • #67
                Originally posted by pinkmoon View Post
                A card game would need an element of intelligence so we can rule that out for a start.
                Could have been snap?

                Love,

                Caz
                X
                "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


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                • #68
                  Caz

                  Admittedly I used to make the mistake of treating Maybrickology seriously, rather than as just a bit of fun. It's quite difficult to believe the person who wrote the Diary really expected it to be taken seriously, isn't it?

                  Comment


                  • #69
                    Originally posted by MayBea View Post
                    James,
                    the suggestion was made to support the Diary with the reasons you give. But you're probably correct in giving credit to Caz for her suggestion that the phrase "match box empty" was made in jotting ideas for his poems.

                    Although coming from someone who isn't firmly on the Diary side yet, Caz may have stopped the chorus of "match box empty match box empty". It has a nice ring to it though.
                    Hi May,

                    I'm sorry I didn't thank you for providing that Josh Billings example. It just goes to show you can rarely tie a few short words down to a definitely ascertained source, and usually one's biases are on full display when one tries. For every supposedly anachronistic word or phrase in the diary, someone somewhere has managed to find at least one reasonable example dating back further than 1888/9. Certainly nothing in the diary would have been impossible to include until after 1987 - the magic year before which the modern hoax conspiracy theorists seem terrified to go for some reason.

                    My recent observations regarding the tin match box entries have all been made by me in the past, so I doubt the chorus will ever fade and die completely. Another observation I have made several times is that the line:

                    I showed no fright and indeed no light

                    has always reminded me powerfully of:

                    He sipped no sup, and he craved no crumb

                    from Gilbert & Sullivan's hugely popular Yeomen of the Guard. Interestingly, the very first of its 423 performances at the Savoy Theatre was on October 3rd 1888, just three days after the murder in Mitre Square. It's hard for me not to imagine the diary author humming the tune as he wrote that line, and it would have been perfect timing for Sir Jim, when he was meant to be writing about the empty match box (that had not appeared in the papers) and eating Eddowes's kidney for supper before sending the other half to Lusk.

                    I have little doubt that the real James would have gone to the Savoy with his brother Michael to see the G&S operas during his frequent visits to London. So whoever wrote the diary would have done well to include the odd reflection of their work in Sir Jim's doggerel. And if nothing else rules out Mike Barrett's hand in the diary, that surely would.

                    In the Spring/Summer of 1888, The Mikado was enjoying a very successful revival, featuring Ko-Ko, the Lord High Executioner, who at one point confides:

                    Why, I never even killed a bluebottle!

                    Early on in the diary, before a proposed visit to Michael 'this coming June' (ie June 1888), Sir Jim writes:

                    For how could one suspect that I could be capable of such things, for am I not, as all believe, a mild man, who it has been said would never hurt a fly.

                    Sir Jim writes of his proposed visit for June:

                    June is such a pleasant month, the flowers are in full bud,
                    the air is sweeter and life is almost certainly much rosier
                    I look forward to its coming with pleasure. A great deal of
                    pleasure.

                    And from The Mikado:

                    The flowers that bloom in the spring, Tra, la,
                    Breathe promise of merry sunshine -
                    As we merrily dance and we sing, Tra, la,
                    We welcome the hope that they bring, Tra, la,
                    Of a summer of roses and wine.

                    I had better stop there, before I launch into three little maids versus eight little whores - again!

                    Love,

                    Caz
                    X
                    Last edited by caz; 12-18-2013, 09:14 AM.
                    "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


                    Comment


                    • #70
                      Originally posted by Chris View Post
                      Caz

                      Admittedly I used to make the mistake of treating Maybrickology seriously, rather than as just a bit of fun. It's quite difficult to believe the person who wrote the Diary really expected it to be taken seriously, isn't it?
                      Absolutely, Chris. That's what I have been arguing for ages. I don't believe for one minute the person who wrote the diary (I don't credit it with a capital D) expected it to be taken seriously. It was a prank, a spoof, a burlesque, a hoax, a practical joke - which would surely not have been taken seriously had it emerged in the LVP, while the Maybrick and ripper cases were still huge talking points.

                      Love,

                      Caz
                      X
                      "Comedy is simply a funny way of being serious." Peter Ustinov


                      Comment


                      • #71
                        You each make great and interesting points! I clearly represent the other camp - believing that the Diary is genuine. I appreciate your arguments and you are perfectly entitled to disagree.

                        I intent to continue researching questions and theories about the Diary & hope you can provide more intriguing and fascinating insights!

                        Best Regards, James.

                        Now you're looking for the secret, but you won't find it, because of course, you're not really looking. You want to be fooled.

                        Comment


                        • #72
                          Originally posted by Kaz View Post
                          So, he didn't buy it nor did he win it.... he nicked it from the back of their van!!??

                          Hi kaz,I thank you for saying what I dare not and I think that has to be the most logical conclusion.
                          Three things in life that don't stay hidden for to long ones the sun ones the moon and the other is the truth

                          Comment


                          • #73
                            Originally posted by James_J View Post
                            I acknowledge and accept that graphology is not a dependable form of evidence. The graphologist who examined the Diary in 1992 was Hannah Koren. She is a forensic document analyst for a security department of the Israeli Government and has presented evidence in many fraud trials throughout Europe. I included her professional opinion of the Diary due to her extensive experience with document related cases and inquiries.

                            Best Regards, James

                            Forensic document analysis is a legitimate, well documented discipline--graphology is pseudo-scientific claptrap. Ms Koren's qualifications as a the former do nothing to validate anything she says when acting as the latter.

                            It's like a neurosurgeon moonlighting as a phrenologist.
                            Last edited by Magpie; 12-18-2013, 12:21 PM.
                            “Sans arme, sans violence et sans haine”

                            Comment


                            • #74
                              Originally posted by James_J View Post
                              In response to the final comment, made by Magpie, do you care to elaborate ? Graphology has been included and exhibited in numerous legal proceedings and professional consultancies. While I do accept that there is debate concerning the accuracy of graphology, the inclusion of yet another professional opinion, in favor of the diary, must be included.

                              Kind Regards & Best Wishes! James.
                              Sorry, in the US at least, graphology is not admissible in court. Any graphologist who testifies as an expert is doing so only in relation to document authentication and are not allowed to provide any sort of testimony outside that scope. So graphologists may advertise that they have extensive court experience, but it's not as a graphologist.
                              “Sans arme, sans violence et sans haine”

                              Comment


                              • #75
                                Originally posted by James_J View Post
                                The possibility of an antiquated forgery is extremely thin, if not impossible. References made by the author of the Diary were not publicly known before 1984 & not published until 1987. There is no conceivable means by which a forger, operating at or around the time of the Ripper crimes, could have gained sufficient knowledge of the case to include references such as the empty tin matchbox. It is either genuine or a modern forgery.
                                Several references within the Diary were not publicly known before 1984 and not published until 1987. I draw specific attention to the tin matchbox found with the body of Catharine Eddowes - evidence which was deliberately withheld from the public sphere. Further off-hand references to obscure private details of the case also strengthen the historical integrity of the Diary. These facts are critical.
                                Hello James , Is it so far beyond the realms of possibility that the Author was indeed privy to inside information that was not in the public Sphere ..
                                just because it was not revealed to the masses , it does not necessarily have follow that the killer was the only one to know ..

                                cheers

                                moonbegger

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