Originally posted by c.d.
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Originally posted by c.d.
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That was pretty much the plot of "The Murders in the Rue Morgue" by Edgar Allen Poe. When he wrote it, in 1841, the reclusive gorilla had a sort of mythical status; it had been observed from a distance, and skeletons found, but no live one captured, and it had never been studied up close.
By 1888, the gorilla was confirmed as a real animal, but it was unlikely anyone in the East End had ever seen one, or a photograph of one. At the same time, anthropologists firmly believed the paranthopus, or "missing link," existed at one time, and there was a current the myth that it might still exist somewhere (Conan Doyle has one conjured up by a medium in the 1926 book The Land of Mists), probably fueled by the discovery of the gorilla, descriptions of which made it sound more human, and more fantastic (in the Greek sense) than it was. Also at that time, criminalistics was a brand new discipline, and putting forth some pretty off-the-wall theories (although, to give it its due, we have it to thank for fingerprinting). One theory was the criminal "type," who could be identified by outward characteristics, and was theorized to be an atavistic human, who was born with characteristics of an earlier species of hominid, such as paranthopus, which made the person unable to conform his behavior to modern ideals or morality, or even simple right and wrong.
When you put the theory of the atavar, the theory of "the missing link," and the Poe story, only 45 years old at that time* together, it's less off the wall. Some big game hunter in a rich part of town brought back and anthropomorphic gorilla, or a missing link, and let it get loose, but since it's confining its attacks to the East End, he's not bothering to do anything about it. That's no weirder than an alien abduction theory, or any of the conspiracy theories we see today.
*For perspective, right now, The Exorcist is 40 years old, but still having a lot of effect on the way people think about both religion and the supernatural, and on the way people in Hollywood make horror movies.
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