First off, that poor woman.
What a terrible way to go. Whatever ones thoughts are on her character, surely most can agree and point a finger towards the desperation of these women as the culprit of them leading such depriving, life-style choices.
To think one be born into life, and than as a child (whom, if you weren't privileged) would have to struggle through so much; and then if you survived to enter adulthood, there was a greater possibility of getting some form of illness and dying than-- that, or either ending in some other terrible way, such as an accident (like a ship sinking or mine explosion) or a violent homicide.
People look at these women and analyze them, but does anyone try to identify and relate to them on any different level than that? That could have been you, given the right circumstances---and what would you have done to survive?
That woman died in the most horrendous way; in a small, filthy, ill-lit, vermin-infested room. Can anyone imagine the panic that poor young woman went through? Does anyone even really care, to say the least? And what of the other women; like Polly Nicholas and her face (apparently) etched with pain?
We don't know anything about this victim, so we try to find answers--some look towards obvious solutions, while some others look more towards fantastical tales, and some are in-between on certain ideas and views of who this woman was.
I believe this woman could have been a rather introverted character, and there is possibly a good indication that she may have suffered from 'depression' (that's a hypothesis--she probably was an alcoholic for a reason.) I'm indifferent to the romanticized image of her being such a good-looking buxom lass, it may or may not be true. I do however believe that she was someone possessed of an above average education and possibly intelligence; that in comparison with the normal Whitechapel prostitute.
Well, that's my two pence on "Marie Jeanette"...
What a terrible way to go. Whatever ones thoughts are on her character, surely most can agree and point a finger towards the desperation of these women as the culprit of them leading such depriving, life-style choices.
To think one be born into life, and than as a child (whom, if you weren't privileged) would have to struggle through so much; and then if you survived to enter adulthood, there was a greater possibility of getting some form of illness and dying than-- that, or either ending in some other terrible way, such as an accident (like a ship sinking or mine explosion) or a violent homicide.
People look at these women and analyze them, but does anyone try to identify and relate to them on any different level than that? That could have been you, given the right circumstances---and what would you have done to survive?
That woman died in the most horrendous way; in a small, filthy, ill-lit, vermin-infested room. Can anyone imagine the panic that poor young woman went through? Does anyone even really care, to say the least? And what of the other women; like Polly Nicholas and her face (apparently) etched with pain?
We don't know anything about this victim, so we try to find answers--some look towards obvious solutions, while some others look more towards fantastical tales, and some are in-between on certain ideas and views of who this woman was.
I believe this woman could have been a rather introverted character, and there is possibly a good indication that she may have suffered from 'depression' (that's a hypothesis--she probably was an alcoholic for a reason.) I'm indifferent to the romanticized image of her being such a good-looking buxom lass, it may or may not be true. I do however believe that she was someone possessed of an above average education and possibly intelligence; that in comparison with the normal Whitechapel prostitute.
Well, that's my two pence on "Marie Jeanette"...
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