Originally posted by Abby Normal
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Those Damned Cachous
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Cachou anecdote.
In several Ripper books in French (translated or originally written), they are talking about cashews. (cachou is the way we translate often cashews in French, even if the proper term is "noix d'acajou").
Until I found out what they really were, i was confused, especially in parallel of the grapes story. Those are two very expensive items.
One question: was Stride taking a cachou because she had a bad breath du to alcohol? gum disease? (she had no teeth on the lower jaw)
or
was she involved very recently in a intimate activity and needed to change the taste in her mouth?
To me, if she just did a fellatio to her killer, I would consider Stride not being a ripper victim more seriously.Is it progress when a cannibal uses a fork?
- Stanislaw Jerzy Lee
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Originally posted by Jon Guy View PostAbsolutely, Abby.
The fact that she is found dead holding them kind of points to the fact she was holding them when she was killed."Is all that we see or seem
but a dream within a dream?"
-Edgar Allan Poe
"...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."
-Frederick G. Abberline
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Originally posted by RockySullivan View PostWere they given to her moment before she was killed? Why? To distract her maybe. I don't think there a red herring necessarily. If they were given to her by the killer, was he not afraid the cachous would point to him or did he not have a chance to take them from her
Many people point to the fact that she had them when she was found as meaning that BS man could not have been her killer, because if he was, she would have dropped them. That was my point about being a red herring."Is all that we see or seem
but a dream within a dream?"
-Edgar Allan Poe
"...the man and the peaked cap he is said to have worn
quite tallies with the descriptions I got of him."
-Frederick G. Abberline
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Originally posted by RockySullivan View PostWhy is that sir john?
I think the sexual aspect for him was the mutilations.
I'm not saying he was impotent, more like he wasn't turned on the way heterosexual men can be turned on by the female form.Is it progress when a cannibal uses a fork?
- Stanislaw Jerzy Lee
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Originally posted by SirJohnFalstaff View PostI don't think JtR was interested sexually (I mean more common sexuality) with his victims.
I think the sexual aspect for him was the mutilations.
I'm not saying he was impotent, more like he wasn't turned on the way heterosexual men can be turned on by the female form.
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Originally posted by Abby Normal View PostHi rocky
Many people point to the fact that she had them when she was found as meaning that BS man could not have been her killer, because if he was, she would have dropped them. That was my point about being a red herring.
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I don't see the cachous as an unexpected thing for Stride to have. She was known to be clean, and evidently cared for her appearance. She was wearing a corsage that night, and had a history of doing housework for middle-class families, who would have required her to be presentable as a condition of employment. A packet of breath mints wouldn't be at all out of character for someone like that to buy and carry.- Ginger
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Originally posted by Ginger View PostI don't see the cachous as an unexpected thing for Stride to have. She was known to be clean, and evidently cared for her appearance. She was wearing a corsage that night, and had a history of doing housework for middle-class families, who would have required her to be presentable as a condition of employment. A packet of breath mints wouldn't be at all out of character for someone like that to buy and carry.
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Originally posted by RockySullivan View PostDo you think the ripper was sexually attracted to the disfigurement caused by the mutilations, having a fetish for bloody body parts, cut up sex organs, opened intenstines & fecal matter etc. he did smear the feces and the way he placed the intestines over the shoulder point to that. Does this make the ripper a necrophile?
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Small parcels were often wrapped in tissue paper.
Stall holders would by a tin of sweets and then sell them a couple to the half-penny and it was common to wrap such in tissue paper, pieces of fruit would also sometimes be wrapped in tissue, [the type that you ate the skin, apples are one I well remember coming that way even as late as the 1960s.G U T
There are two ways to be fooled, one is to believe what isn't true, the other is to refuse to believe that which is true.
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