Showing 59 reports of 159.

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A FIN DE SIECLE TYPE. 1895-04-06 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 0 0 404
OSCAR WILDE TO STAY IN JAIL. Remanded Until Next Thursday, and the Judge Refuses to Accept Bail. Preserving in the Police Court the Insolent Demeanor Assumed at the Old Bailey. AWFUL STORIES OF THE WITNESSES. Only Once Did the Apostle of the Esthetic Shrink Under the Ordeal to Which He Was Subjected. 1895-04-07 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 0 64 2553
WILDE BREAKS DOWN. The Accused Man in a State of Utter Collapse. Prison Attendants Are Taking Every Pre- caution to Prevent Him From Committing Suicide. [Copyright, 1893, by the New York World.] 1895-04-08 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 3 23 377
COMMON SENSE FROM THE BENCH. 1895-04-08 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 0 0 25
WILDE NOT TO BE READ. His Books Taken From the Shelves of Two Libraries. Newark and St. Louis Relegate the Works of the Apostle of Estheticism to the Garret. 1895-04-10 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 0 10 137
OSCAR WILDE BREAKING DOWN. Brought Into Court, He Shows the Stain of the Prison Upon Him. Some Damaging Testimony and Then the Case Goes Over for One Week. HIS ACCOMPLICE LOST TO SHAME. Not Even the Prospect of Long Imprison- ment Serves to Bring a Realizing Sense of His Position. 1895-04-12 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 0 35 814
Was Not Oscar Wilde's Assistant. 1895-04-13 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 0 0 37
WILDE NOT THE ONLY OFFENDER. So Evil Is the West End of London That the Police Did Not Dare to Uncover Its Sins. [Copyright, 1895, by the New York World.] EVIL AT THE WEST END. 1895-04-14 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 3 4 220
OSCAR WILDE DOOMED. His Case Is So Black That No Power Can Save Him From Prison. 1895-04-14 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 1 10 502
Journalists Fight a Duel. 1895-04-18 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 5 3 63
WILDE WEARY OF JAIL. His Counsel Will Make a Desperate Fight for Bail. The Accused Author Arraigned at the Bow-Street Court and Held to An- swer for His Offense. 1895-04-20 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 9 43 180
DOES VICE FOLLOW CULTURE? MONSIGNOR CAPEL, IN VIEW OF THE WILDE CASE, AD- VANCES A MOST STARTLING THEORY ON THE SUBJECT. 1895-04-21 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 0 0 1270
WHICH ONE HAS THE LAUGH? Does Beardsley Fool the Brit- isher or Does the Britisher Fool Beardsley? Oscar Wilde Has Left a Vacant Ped- estal - Will the New Artist Occupy It? IS IT INSANITY OR ART? One of Those Things That No Fellow Can Understand, So, of Course, Every- body Buys. 1895-04-21 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 0 0 124
FOR OSCAR WILDE. Lord Alfred Douglass Intercedes With the Public in His Friend's Behalf. 1895-04-21 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 4 4 53
True Bill Against Wilde. 1895-04-23 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 5 5 37
OSCAR WILDE TO FIGHT. It Is Not True That He Will Plead Guilty. His Counsel Expected to Ask for Delay and to Make Application for Bail in the Meantime. 1895-04-24 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 11 10 125
WILDE A COMMON FELON He Has Cut His Hair and Lost His Swagger Air. Put in the Dock at the Old Bailey, He Pleads Not Guilty to the Charges Against Him. 1895-04-27 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 5 13 223
BILL NYE AND MR. WILDE. The Gentle Humorist Analyzes the Disgraced English Esthete. ALWAYS THOUGHT HIM A FRAUD. Their First Meeting, in Which William Made Use of Some Biting Sarcasm. 1895-04-28 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 1 20 1291
WILDE ON HIS TRIAL. Witness Shelly Not Spared by the Lawyers. Plenty of Evidence of the Guilt of the Prisoner Given Before the Case Was Adjourned Until Monday. 1895-04-28 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 0 5 171
WILDE SUED FOR DIVORCE. The Wife of the Fallen Man Has Instructed Her Lawyer to Begin Proceedings. SHE WAS ONCE DEVOTED TO HIM. Always a Good Wife, She Even Followed Her Husband in His Fad as the Leader of Estheticism. 1895-04-30 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 1 11 382
OSCAR WILDE DENIES IT ALL. His Lawyers Put the Poet on the Stand in His Own Behalf. Why He Accepted a Verdict of Not Guilty in the Queensberry Case. TOLD THE TRUTH AT THAT TIME. But His Counsel Advised Him That He Could Not Secure a Conviction of the Marquis. 1895-05-01 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 9 41 403
YET WILDE BEARS THE STIGMA. Disagreement of the Jury Called to Try the Poet for Grave Offenses. It Is Said That Five Were for Ac- quittal and Seven for Par- tial Conviction. NOT LIKELY TO BE TRIED AGAIN. As th Case Stands It Is Thought the Accused Man Will Never More Hold Up His Head. [Copyright, 1895, by the New York World.] 1895-05-02 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 0 20 827
WILDE'S MANY IDIOCIES. 1895-05-02 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 0 0 1091
OSCAR WILDE TO PLEAD INSANITY. This Course Taken by His Coun- sel in Opposition to Family Wishes. Doctors Delighted at Making the Subject of Heredity a Point of Law. TALK OF SCIENTIFIC RESTRAINT. The Poet's Father Was Very Eccentric, and Wilde Himself Has Always Had a Craze for Notoriety. 1895-05-03 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 1 11 475
WILDE TO GET BAIL. The Amount Will Be Fixed by the Court To-Day. 1895-05-04 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 6 6 62
OSCAR WILDE GETS BAIL. 1895-05-05 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 2 4 289
WILDE'S BAIL. He May Go Free by Furnishing Bond. 1895-05-05 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 14 12 44
CASE FIXING ABROAD. 1895-05-06 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 0 0 426
WILDE TO BE RELEASED. Has Secured Sureties and His Bond Has Been Signed. He May Never Be Tried, as Prominent Churchmen Urge That the Case Be Dropped. 1895-05-07 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 10 3 187
WILDE RELEASED ON BAIL Son of the Esthete's Accuse One of the Sureties. Many People Believe the Poet Guilty Only of a Romantically Expressed Friend- ship for Lord Alfred. 1895-05-08 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 1 21 275
QUEENSBERRY ON WHEELS. 1895-05-14 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 0 0 73
WILDE'S HEALTH IMPROVES. He Will Appear for Trial and Is Hopeful of Acquittal. 1895-05-19 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 6 8 59
TO COMFORT LADY WILDE. Mrs. Frank Leslie Will Go to London to Her Mother-in-Law. 1895-05-20 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 6 7 52
FATHER AND SON IN A STREET FIGHT. The Marquis of Queensberry and Lord Alfred Douglas Give Piccadilly a Sensation. Did Not Fight According to Rule, but Both Went in for Blood. TOO MUCH FOR THE YOUNG MAN. How the Old Man Chastised His Offspring in Public for the Honor of the Family. 1895-05-22 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 4 38 1066
DOUGLAS OF HAWICK HAD A BLACK EYE. Why the Marquis of Queensbery Fought in the Street With His Son. Some of the Doings of Oscar Wilde After His Release From Jail. FLED BEFORE THE OLD NOBLEMAN. Warned That He Would Be in Serious Danger if He Did Not Stay Away From Lord Alfred Douglas. [Copyright, 1895, by the New York World.] 1895-05-23 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 1 22 1573
WILDE ON TRIAL. The Conviction of Taylor Has Made Him Uncomfortable. 1895-05-23 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 2 26 334
AN ANGLO-SAXON OUTCROP. 1895-05-23 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 0 0 357
WILDE'S CASE CONTINUES. No New Evidence Elicited and One Part of the Indictment Quached. 1895-05-24 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 6 4 114
WILDE IS UNDER FIRE. Sir Frank Lockwood Cross-Questions the Writer. Says He Knows What Is Decency - Letters to Lord Alfred Douglas Read in Court. 1895-05-25 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 0 42 390
OSCAR WILDE HAS BEEN FOUND GUILTY. Sentenced by the Court to Two Years' Imprisonment With Hard Labor. The Judge Regrets That the Law Will Not Permit a More Severe Penalty. TAYLOR GETS THE SAME SENTENCE. Both Men Are Guilty as Charged, and the Wilde Verdict Brings in Some Parties Not Named. [Copyright, 1895, by the New York World.] 1895-05-26 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 0 78 1491
The San Francisco Examiner - Sunday, May 26, 1895 1895-05-26 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 0 0 125
ARE PUT IN PRISON GARB. Wilde and Taylor Appear at Pentonville With Cropped Hair. 1895-05-27 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 6 8 52
OSCAR WILDE'S LIFE IN PRISON To Be Put in the Treadmill if He Has Physical Strength. After That He Will Be Set to Picking Oakum Like Any Common Felon. JAIL FARE AND CONVICTS' DRESS. His Privileges Will Depend Upon His Good Behavior, but He Cannot Escape the Plank Bed. [Copyright, 1895, by the New York World.] 1895-05-28 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 4 68 809
NO HOME LIFE IN FRANCE. 1895-05-28 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 0 0 74
WILDE WILL PICK OAKUM. As His Heart Is Weak He Will Not Do Treadmill Work. 1895-06-02 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 4 8 59
AS WILDE APPEARED TO QUEENSBERRY. 1895-06-03 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 0 1 126
OSCAR WILDE IS INSANE. Is Confined in a Padded Cell, as He Is Violent. 1895-06-05 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 0 1 39
WILDE IS ON THE TREADMILL. Pentonville Prison Authorities Say He Is Well and Working. Not the Slightest Foundation for the Story of His Dangerous Insanity Exists. ABLE TO DO THE HARDEST TASKS. Bag-Making Will Be His Work for the Future - May Earn Four Months' Rebate. [Copyright, 1895, by the New York World.] 1895-06-06 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 1 3 262
WHERE WILDE IS TREADING WIND. Stamped With a Broad Arrow and Fed on Mush, He Turns the Wheel. Pentonville, the Prison Where the Poet Is Confined, and How It Is Regarded by Convicts. AMERICAN JAIL A HOTEL BESIDE IT. Men Who Have Tried Both Say That a California Prison Is Better Than Living on the Outside. 1895-06-09 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 1 29 1055
Wilde Must Stay in Jail. 1895-06-18 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 14 15 21
Oscar Wilde on the Treadmill. [From a sketch made from life for an English paper and reproduced in the New York World.] 1895-06-29 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 0 0 70
WILDE PICKS OAKUM. The Pentonville Treadmill Is Too Hard Work for the Poet. 1895-07-01 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 14 14 94
WILDE'S JAIL LIFE. 1895-07-06 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 1 14 1439
Oscar Wilde Is a Bankrupt. 1895-07-26 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 23 23 31
Wilde Picking Oakum. 1895-07-28 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 4 4 50
WILDE'S FUTURE. Belief That When He Leaves Prison He Will Be Aided to Begin Anew in Some Foreign Country. 1895-08-25 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 19 3 84
THE RESULT OF A LIBEL SUIT. 1895-09-04 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 0 0 47
OSCAR WILDE FAILING. Belief That His Prison Life Is En- feebling Him. A General Sympathy for the Convict is Growing Up in Literary and Artistic Circles. (Copyright, 1895, by the New York "World.") 1895-09-29 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 2 2 178
FOR WILD'S RELEASE. Writers of All Countries Refuse to Sign a Petition Asking for His Pardon. 1895-11-27 The San Francisco Examiner United States English 9 8 63

Showing 59 reports of 159.