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<h2> JEHOVAH THE RIPPER. * </h2>
<p>* November, 1888.<br/></p>
<p>The Whitechapel monster has once more startled and horrified London, and
again he has left absolutely no clue to his identity. He is the mystery of
mysteries. He comes and goes like a ghost. Murder marks his appearance,
but that is all we know of him. The rest is silence. The police, the
vigilance societies, and the private detectives are all baffled. They can
only stare at each other in blind dismay, as helpless as the poor victims
of the fiend's performances. All sorts of theories are started, but they
are all in the air—the wild conjectures of irresponsible
imaginations. All sorts of stories are afloat, but they contradict each
other. As for descriptions of the monster, it is easy enough to say that
the police have advertised for nine or ten "wanted" gentlemen, of various
heights, dimensions, colors, and costumes, who are all the very same
person.</p>
<p>We have no desire to dabble in murder, nor do we aspire to turn an honest
penny by the minute description of bodily mutilations. But while the
Whitechapel atrocities are engaging the public attention, we are tempted
to contribute our quota of speculation as to the monster's identity. We
thought of doing so before, but we reflected that it was perfectly useless
while such a pig-headed person as Sir Charles Warren was at the head of
the police. Now, however, that he is gone, and there is a chance of
common-sense suggestions being fairly considered, we venture to propound
our theory, in the hope that it will at least be treated on its merits.</p>
<p>Well now, to the point. Our theory is that the Whitechapel murderer is———
"Whom?" the reader cries. Wait awhile. Brace up your nerves for the dread
intelligence. The East-end fiend, the Whitechapel devil, the slaughterer
and mutilator of women, is—Jehovah!</p>
<p>"Blasphemous!" is shouted from a million throats. But science is used to
such shriekings. We pause till the noise subsides, and then proceed to
point out that our theory fulfils the grand condition of fitting in with
all the facts.</p>
<p>The Whitechapel murderer is shrouded in mystery. So is Jehovah. The
Whitechapel murderer comes no one knows whence and goes no one knows
whither. So does Jehovah. The Whitechapel murderer appears in different
disguises. So does Jehovah. The Whitechapel murderer's movements baffle
all vigilance. So do Jehovah's. The Whitechapel murderer comes and goes,
appears and disappears, with the celerity and noiselessness of a ghost. So
does Jehovah, who <i>is</i> a ghost. Thus far, then, the similarity is
marvellously close, and a <i>prima facie</i> case of identity is
established.</p>
<p>It will very likely be objected that Jehovah is incapable of such
atrocities. But this is the misconception of ignorance or the politeness
of hypocrisy. Jehovah has written his autobiography, and on his own
confession his murderous exploits were very similar to those of the
Whitechapel terror. Appealing to that incontrovertible authority, we
propose to show that he has every disposition to commit these enormities.</p>
<p>According to his own history of himself, Jehovah is passionately fond of
bloodshed. The sanguine fluid which courses in our veins is the only thing
that appeases him. "Without shedding of blood," he tells us through the
pen of St. Paul, "there is no remission" of any debts owing to him. He
called on Abraham, his friend, to stick a knife into his own son. He slew
the first-born of every family in Egypt in a single night. He accepted the
blood of a young virgin offered him by Jephthah. He slew 50,070 men at
Beth-Shemesh for looking into his private trunk. He ordered his "chosen"
friends, a famous set of banditti, to exterminate, men, women, children,
and even animals, and to "leave alive nothing that breatheth." He
massacred 70,000 citizens of Palestine because their king took a census, a
social experiment to which he has a rooted antipathy. He had a house
especially built for him, and gave orders that it should daily be drenched
with blood. According to one of his candid friends, Archdeacon Farrar,
"the floor must literally have swum with blood, and under the blaze of
Eastern sunlight, the burning of fat and flesh on the large blazing altar
must have been carried on amid heaps of sacrificial foulness—offal
and skins and thick smoke and steaming putrescence." On one occasion, when
in a state of murderous frenzy, he cried out, "I will make mine arrows
drunk with blood, and my sword shall devour flesh."</p>
<p>Jehovah's passion for bloodshed is proved out of his own mouth. Let us now
see his love of mutilation. He generally did this by proxy, and enjoyed
the spectacle without undergoing the trouble. Some of his friends took a
gentleman named Adoni-bezek, and "cut off his thumbs and his great toes."
Wishing to kill a certain Eglon, the king of Moab, he sent an adventurer
called Ehud with "a present from Jehovah." The present turned out to be an
eighteen-inch knife, which Ehud thrust into Eglon's belly; a part of the
body on which the Whitechapel murderer is fond of experimenting. Jehovah's
friend David, a man after his own heart, mutilated no less than four
hundred men, and gave their foreskins to his wife as a dowry. Incurring
Jehovah's displeasure and wishing to conciliate him, he attacked certain
cities, captured their inhabitants, and cut them in pieces with saws,
axes, and harrows.</p>
<p>Jehovah is particularly savage towards females. He cursed a woman for
eating an apple, and instead of killing her on the spot, he determined to
torture her every time she became a mother. A friend of his—and we
judge people by their friends—cut a woman up into twelve pieces, and
sent them to various addresses by parcels' delivery. Another of his
friends, called Menahem, made a raid on a certain territory, and "all the
women therein that were with child he <i>ripped up</i>." Jehovah himself,
being angry with the people of Samaria, promised to slay them with the
sword, dash their infants to pieces, and <i>rip up</i> their pregnant
women. No doubt he fulfilled his promise, and he would scarcely have made
it if he had not been accustomed to such atrocities. It appears to us,
therefore, that he is fully entitled to the name of Jehovah the Ripper.</p>
<p>We have not exhausted our evidence. Far more could be adduced, but we hope
this will suffice. It may, of course, be objected that Jehovah has
reformed, that he is too old for midnight adventures, that he has lost his
savage cunning, and that his son keeps a sharp eye on the aged assassin.
But the ruling passion is never really conquered; it is even, as the
proverb says, strong in death. We venture, therefore, to suggest that the
Whitechapel murderer is Jehovah; and although keen eyes may detect a few
superficial flaws in our theory—for what theory is perfect till it
is demonstrated?—we protest that it marvellously covers the facts of
the case, and is infinitely superior to any other theory that has hitherto
been broached.</p>
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