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This page compares two reports at the document level. The column on the left shows the first report and the column in the middle shows the second. The column on the right highlights any differences between the two documents. Pink shows differences in the first report and purple in the second report. The Match percentage shows the percentage of similarity between the two documents.
Sydney Evening News - Friday, November 15, 1895
Our London correspondent gives an amusing description of a visit paid to Oscar Wilde in prison. He is as full of quaint and epigrammatic expressions as of old. His first reply to expressions of sorrow were: "The dawning of a moral sense is an exquisite sensation," and later on he said in his cell, "I always thought I was born to be a monk. Now, since my confinement here, I am convinced of it." The editor of the "Daily Chronicle" (Brilliant Massingham) has already engaged Oscar to write a series of prison thoughts and expressions under the heading of "Oscar Purified."
Evening Post - Saturday, November 30, 1895
A London correspondent gives an amusing description of a visit paid to Oscar Wilde in prison. He is as full of quaint and epigrammatic expressions as of old. His first reply to expressions of sorrow was, "The dawning of a moral sense is an exquisite sensation;" and later on, he said in his cell, "I always thought I was born to be a monk. Now, since my confinement here, I am convinced of it." The editor of the Daily Chronicle (Mr. Massingham), has already engaged Oscar to write a series of prison thoughts and expressions under the heading of "Oscar Purified."