Compare Documents
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.
The Washington Post - Sunday, April 14, 1895
London, April 13. [...]The Oscar Wilde case has led to the arrest of two men who were implicated in the Cleveland street scandal. In the rooms of one of them, J.C. Goodchild, the police found a diary recording the foulest of acts, but nothing was discovered relating to Wilde. The revelations, however, show that the ramifications of a peculiar type of vice are almost past belief. It has transpired that Wilde’s friend Taylor is the son of a London merchant. He inherited an income of £3,500 a year, but dissipated his fortune in profligacy.
The Sun - Sunday, April 14, 1895
LONDON, April 13. - The Oscar Wilde case has led to the arrest of two men who were implicated in the Cleveland street scandal. In the rooms of one of them, J.C. Goodchild, the police found a diary recording the foulest of acts, but nothing was discovered relating to Wilde. The revelations, however, show that the ramifications of a peculiar type of vice are almost past belief . It has been learned that Wilde's friend Taylor is the son of a London merchant. He inherited an income of £3,500 a year, but dissipated his fortune in profligacy.
Mr. Robert Sherrard, an Anglo-American journalist, has instituted legal proceedings against the British Consul in Paris on the ground that the Consul publicly alleged that he (Sherrard) was an associate of Wilde and was guilty of crimes similar to those with which Wilde is charged.