Observer:
I'm no medical expert, but I'm assuming that Liz Stride's heart would have taken more time to cease than Polly Nichols.
Not only that, Observer - you are also apparently assuming that Nicholsīheart would stop more or less immediately upon being cut never to twitch the slightest after that. Without being any expert, that is.
"May have felt", being the operative words here. I believe Polly Nichols was long gone, still, silent, beyond repair, stone dead, by the time Cross, and Paul found her.
I know. And I also know that you ground this assumption on no evidence at all. Plus I know you are welcome to it - I assume that she was anything but long gone, and I do so on meagre evidence too. But at least there IS some evidence supporting my take, the warm body, the twitch Paul felt, the blood that was flowing as both Neil and Mizen saw her.
Gone she may have been - but she may NOT have been long gone.
I don't know? What do you mean? Neil is on record, he appeared at the inquest. No I wasn't there but there were individuals there who recorded what Neil stated, and he stated under oath, that when he found the body he noticed that blood oozed out of the neck wound.
... and since we now know that oozing can point to a lot of blood pouring out, Iīm quite fine with the wording. Especially since we know that the word "profusely" was used in the initial paper reports.
Also, I'm confused here. what do you mean by
"How do you know the remove of time that had passed since the neck was cut? It could be seconds only"
I was referring to when Paul saw her, of course. You are correct that we need to count in minutes - perhaps two, three or so - before Neil got to her. Which means, of course, that the profusion of blood coming out of her neck at that stage points us in the direction of a very recent death.
Neil did not sate "oozed profusely", you're putting words into his mouth.
No - YOU are putting words into MY mouth. I have no said that Neil said this, have I?
You mean, bled profusely to the newspapers, allegedly. Oozed at inquest, entirely different to bled profusely.
And where does that put the wording "oozed profusely"? Eh? A lie? A modern invention?
Slow dying stream when Mizen arrived! Dying stream? She'd been nearly decapitated at least 5 minutes before Mizen arrived, in my opinion 15 minutes, and a stream is still visible, come of it man.
What would you call a running liquid? I call it a stream, and I accept that it can be anything from miniscule to broad.
Nichols had bled out by the time Neil arrived at the scene, her heart had stopped beating, and the little blood that was left in her body, oozed slowly out through the wound by the action of gravity. Both Neil, and Mizen witnessed this phenomena, and said as much at inquest, under oath.
Aha - so she had bled out, which was why she was still bleeding? Great stuff.
Tosh indeed, zooming in from Sweden. I've just had a look in the mirror, and all I see, is the George Cooney lookalike that's been there for some time now (I wish) not a hint of horse muck.
What has Sweden got to do with it? WOuld it help if I aquired a British citizenship? Is that what it takes? Wow.
Cross knew, believe me.
BELIEVE YOU? Dear me ...! Cross wasnīt even called Cross, Observer.
However, I am much inclined to agree that he knew - but the story he told the inquest was not that he knew, was it? And when it comes to Neilīs jumping between the terms bled profusely and oozed blood, you seem quite eager to go with the inquest reports in order to cut away the bit you donīt esteem.
And now you do the same, by NOT listening to the inquest.
So letīs count standards here, one, two ... ouch!
Fisherman
I'm no medical expert, but I'm assuming that Liz Stride's heart would have taken more time to cease than Polly Nichols.
Not only that, Observer - you are also apparently assuming that Nicholsīheart would stop more or less immediately upon being cut never to twitch the slightest after that. Without being any expert, that is.
"May have felt", being the operative words here. I believe Polly Nichols was long gone, still, silent, beyond repair, stone dead, by the time Cross, and Paul found her.
I know. And I also know that you ground this assumption on no evidence at all. Plus I know you are welcome to it - I assume that she was anything but long gone, and I do so on meagre evidence too. But at least there IS some evidence supporting my take, the warm body, the twitch Paul felt, the blood that was flowing as both Neil and Mizen saw her.
Gone she may have been - but she may NOT have been long gone.
I don't know? What do you mean? Neil is on record, he appeared at the inquest. No I wasn't there but there were individuals there who recorded what Neil stated, and he stated under oath, that when he found the body he noticed that blood oozed out of the neck wound.
... and since we now know that oozing can point to a lot of blood pouring out, Iīm quite fine with the wording. Especially since we know that the word "profusely" was used in the initial paper reports.
Also, I'm confused here. what do you mean by
"How do you know the remove of time that had passed since the neck was cut? It could be seconds only"
I was referring to when Paul saw her, of course. You are correct that we need to count in minutes - perhaps two, three or so - before Neil got to her. Which means, of course, that the profusion of blood coming out of her neck at that stage points us in the direction of a very recent death.
Neil did not sate "oozed profusely", you're putting words into his mouth.
No - YOU are putting words into MY mouth. I have no said that Neil said this, have I?
You mean, bled profusely to the newspapers, allegedly. Oozed at inquest, entirely different to bled profusely.
And where does that put the wording "oozed profusely"? Eh? A lie? A modern invention?
Slow dying stream when Mizen arrived! Dying stream? She'd been nearly decapitated at least 5 minutes before Mizen arrived, in my opinion 15 minutes, and a stream is still visible, come of it man.
What would you call a running liquid? I call it a stream, and I accept that it can be anything from miniscule to broad.
Nichols had bled out by the time Neil arrived at the scene, her heart had stopped beating, and the little blood that was left in her body, oozed slowly out through the wound by the action of gravity. Both Neil, and Mizen witnessed this phenomena, and said as much at inquest, under oath.
Aha - so she had bled out, which was why she was still bleeding? Great stuff.
Tosh indeed, zooming in from Sweden. I've just had a look in the mirror, and all I see, is the George Cooney lookalike that's been there for some time now (I wish) not a hint of horse muck.
What has Sweden got to do with it? WOuld it help if I aquired a British citizenship? Is that what it takes? Wow.
Cross knew, believe me.
BELIEVE YOU? Dear me ...! Cross wasnīt even called Cross, Observer.
However, I am much inclined to agree that he knew - but the story he told the inquest was not that he knew, was it? And when it comes to Neilīs jumping between the terms bled profusely and oozed blood, you seem quite eager to go with the inquest reports in order to cut away the bit you donīt esteem.
And now you do the same, by NOT listening to the inquest.
So letīs count standards here, one, two ... ouch!
Fisherman
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