Please reassure me that we're not back to this distressing business about lodging houses, passes and tickets?
Money is the thing here. Hutchinson had no money, according to himself. This if true would explain why he couldn't seek lodgings in Romford - plenty of them about, I understand - rather than hoofing it all the way back to the East End to arrive just in time to be the last person to see his dear friend Kelly alive.
And indeed, he recounts how he told his dear friend Kelly that he had no money. And yet.
And yet, by the time the Victoria Home was open the next morning, Hutchinson was able to enter, which means by then he had the money for a bed. If he was paying for his bed on a nightly basis.
If this is the case, where did he get it from?
If it is not the case, and he did not acquire money for his bed between the night and the morning, then this means he had paid in advance and so should have been able to enter the Victoria Home whenever he came knocking.
What a conundrum.
See, this is why I prefer Lewis Carroll. Nice and simple.
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