Hi Lynn,
I'll address some of your questions. When I stated that no one heard an argument, I meant that no one heard an argument coming from the yard. Now it is possible that the singing drowned it out but it Mrs. Diemschutz and Morris Eagle were both very adamant that they believed they would have heard any loud sounds coming from the yard and they did not. Could it have been an argument in low tones as Fisherman has argued? It's possible but I see it as much more probable that if that argument ended in Liz's death that voices would have been raised.
You mentioned that in Victorian times women slapped gentlemen. If that was the rule how do you account for battered women like Liz and the treatment she received at the hands of Kidney?
c.d.
I'll address some of your questions. When I stated that no one heard an argument, I meant that no one heard an argument coming from the yard. Now it is possible that the singing drowned it out but it Mrs. Diemschutz and Morris Eagle were both very adamant that they believed they would have heard any loud sounds coming from the yard and they did not. Could it have been an argument in low tones as Fisherman has argued? It's possible but I see it as much more probable that if that argument ended in Liz's death that voices would have been raised.
You mentioned that in Victorian times women slapped gentlemen. If that was the rule how do you account for battered women like Liz and the treatment she received at the hands of Kidney?
c.d.
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