Originally posted by Iconoclast
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In your post you say, "in selecting 1891 - he was 100% stating that he was not seeking a document to create a hoax himself in", while, at the very same time, telling me he should actually have been asking for a document up to as late as 1899 (or 1901 to include the entire Victorian period) if he wanted to fake a Ripper diary. So the logic of your position is utterly baffling.
This game you want to play of criticising the wording of the request is just silly. No doubt, with hindsight and thirty or forty years to think about it, a better request could have been worded. But if you assume that Barrett has decided to write a fake diary of Jack the Ripper. the first thought that would surely and naturally have popped into his mind would have been that he needed to obtain a genuine Victorian diary with blank pages on which the text could be written. Then he would have thought that he needed one from around the time of the Ripper murders. Because he surely wanted his fake diary to look authentic and, ideally, pass scientific tests. Does he really need to have given it any more thought than that?
This over-analysis of the wording of the request is ridiculous.
And the irony of it is that when explaining why you think he made the request, you say "he was checking to see if he could source a genuine document from around the time of the murders with sufficient blank pages" . I mean come on Ike. In terms of the time period, it's the exact same thing I said, yet when I say it, you ask why he chose a period from around the time of the murders!!!
Your own explanation makes no sense because, under your theory, he had seen the photograph album-cum diary. But that photograph album is undated and could have come from any time period. Barrett couldn't have known what century it came from let alone what decade. So why did he need to limit himself to 1880 to 1890 if he wanted to replicate what he'd seen? That makes zero sense. Nor is the photograph album or scrapbook, or whatever you want to call it, an obvious diary. So why did he only ask for a diary? Using your own logic, how could a little red 1891 diary have ever passed itself off for a diary of Jack the Ripper?
And then who could possibly have come knocking at his door asking for the diary back? Wouldn't it have been someone who knew what the diary looked like? So how could any other substitute which looked nothing like the large black photograph album possibly suffice? And wouldn't that person have known it was a diary of Jack the Ripper? Wouldn't they have expected about 60 pages of Victorian style writing in it? How would handing over a blank diary from, say, 1882 have possibly helped Barrett achieve what he wanted to achieve?
Honestly, what a stupid theory. While the other one you mention (but don't adopt) is equally stupid. What a stupid pair of theories!
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