cautious
Hello Jon. Thanks.
"I'm thinking Swanson is being cautious about believing Schwartz as a whole.
For what other reason would he use the qualifier "if" to begin the line?"
Can't disagree with that. I'd like to think that Swanson--not to mention Abberline and the Leman lads--took the story at face value and pursued it. And rightly so. And, in my own humble opinion, I think they began to "feel" the minor discrepancies. For example, Abberline tried to verify to whom it was that "Lipsky" was shouted. Schwartz could not say. BSM was supposed to have thrown Liz down, but her clothing was not really consonant with that claim. She was supposed in a fracas, yet she held the cachous.
Inductively, these are the sorts of things that would weigh on an investigator's mind. Moreover, when "Lipsky" is correctly seen as a racial slur and that BSM was "a drunken Gentile bully," it takes no particular genius to wonder--perhaps aloud--whether this were not concocted merely to save problems for the club.
To put it another way. In one of my favourite Cadfael episodes, the under sheriff, Hugh Berengar, is asking a mother about her son. She claims she can vouch for him. Hugh smiles benignly and says, "What mother wouldn't?"
Cheers.
LC
Hello Jon. Thanks.
"I'm thinking Swanson is being cautious about believing Schwartz as a whole.
For what other reason would he use the qualifier "if" to begin the line?"
Can't disagree with that. I'd like to think that Swanson--not to mention Abberline and the Leman lads--took the story at face value and pursued it. And rightly so. And, in my own humble opinion, I think they began to "feel" the minor discrepancies. For example, Abberline tried to verify to whom it was that "Lipsky" was shouted. Schwartz could not say. BSM was supposed to have thrown Liz down, but her clothing was not really consonant with that claim. She was supposed in a fracas, yet she held the cachous.
Inductively, these are the sorts of things that would weigh on an investigator's mind. Moreover, when "Lipsky" is correctly seen as a racial slur and that BSM was "a drunken Gentile bully," it takes no particular genius to wonder--perhaps aloud--whether this were not concocted merely to save problems for the club.
To put it another way. In one of my favourite Cadfael episodes, the under sheriff, Hugh Berengar, is asking a mother about her son. She claims she can vouch for him. Hugh smiles benignly and says, "What mother wouldn't?"
Cheers.
LC
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