Jon:
"You must notice though that by the time Phillips arrived, her right arm had slipped down to her belly, assuming Phillips is being precise."
Phillips assumes that the right arm was always in the same position. He says as much. And nobody says anything to contradict it.
"Your 1st witness, Spooner saw her right hand"
He saw a hand with a doubled-up paper, just like the paper we know was in her LEFT hand. The cachous and that pare was carefully collected. If she had been holding grapes in a paper in her right hand, I suspect them too would have been equally carefully collected. To me, Spooner was very obviously mistaken, and the mistake is a very trivial one.
If he was NOT mistaken, then you are correct. But I don´t think you are, to be perfectly honest.
"Blackwell, noted that her "neck & chest (& heart) were warm", so he also opened her dress. He observed: The right hand was open and on the chest, and was smeared with blood."
Yes! It WAS open, it WAS on the chest (Phillips himself, I think, sometimes say over her belly, and sometimes "over her chest", so I believe it was in the area where the belly meets the chest, quite simply. If you bend your elbow and put you ninety degree angled arm across your body, it ends up over the top of the belly, very close to the chest), and it WAS smeared with blood. But we can´t conclude that Blackwell SAW all of this at first gaze. He knew, however, at the inquest that this was the exact state of affairs, and he would be uninformative if he did not take it all up.
"I think the photo you included in your dissertation showed where the right arm came to rest, but not where it began."
Not agreed, I´m afraid. But the issue may have been spoken of in relation to the inquest, which was why Phillips felt the need to set it straight. How he did that is shown by this passage:
"[Coroner] Have you formed any opinion as to the manner in which the deceased's right hand became stained with blood? - It is a mystery. There were small oblong clots on the back of the hand. I may say that I am taking it as a fact that after death the hand always remained in the position in which I found it - across the body. "
He would have consulted both Blackwell and Johnston, and quite probably Lamb too, to be able to state this in such a firm manner. Why would he guess such a thing, at any rate?
And keep in mind that Lamb, FIRST to examine her of these officials, spoke of the left HAND but the right ARM.
The best,
Fisherman
"You must notice though that by the time Phillips arrived, her right arm had slipped down to her belly, assuming Phillips is being precise."
Phillips assumes that the right arm was always in the same position. He says as much. And nobody says anything to contradict it.
"Your 1st witness, Spooner saw her right hand"
He saw a hand with a doubled-up paper, just like the paper we know was in her LEFT hand. The cachous and that pare was carefully collected. If she had been holding grapes in a paper in her right hand, I suspect them too would have been equally carefully collected. To me, Spooner was very obviously mistaken, and the mistake is a very trivial one.
If he was NOT mistaken, then you are correct. But I don´t think you are, to be perfectly honest.
"Blackwell, noted that her "neck & chest (& heart) were warm", so he also opened her dress. He observed: The right hand was open and on the chest, and was smeared with blood."
Yes! It WAS open, it WAS on the chest (Phillips himself, I think, sometimes say over her belly, and sometimes "over her chest", so I believe it was in the area where the belly meets the chest, quite simply. If you bend your elbow and put you ninety degree angled arm across your body, it ends up over the top of the belly, very close to the chest), and it WAS smeared with blood. But we can´t conclude that Blackwell SAW all of this at first gaze. He knew, however, at the inquest that this was the exact state of affairs, and he would be uninformative if he did not take it all up.
"I think the photo you included in your dissertation showed where the right arm came to rest, but not where it began."
Not agreed, I´m afraid. But the issue may have been spoken of in relation to the inquest, which was why Phillips felt the need to set it straight. How he did that is shown by this passage:
"[Coroner] Have you formed any opinion as to the manner in which the deceased's right hand became stained with blood? - It is a mystery. There were small oblong clots on the back of the hand. I may say that I am taking it as a fact that after death the hand always remained in the position in which I found it - across the body. "
He would have consulted both Blackwell and Johnston, and quite probably Lamb too, to be able to state this in such a firm manner. Why would he guess such a thing, at any rate?
And keep in mind that Lamb, FIRST to examine her of these officials, spoke of the left HAND but the right ARM.
The best,
Fisherman
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