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Original paragraph in
London Star - Monday, May 20, 1895
London Star - Monday, May 20, 1895
Most similar paragraph from
The Yorkshire Evening Post - Monday, May 20, 1895
The Yorkshire Evening Post - Monday, May 20, 1895
Difference
It is an almost unprecedented thing for a trial of any importance to begin on the first day of a sessions of the Central Criminal Court.
Monday and Tuesday are usually devoted to the finding of true bills and the consideration of cases of minor importance by the Recorder and the Commons
Sergeant. Judges' cases are seldom touched before Wednesday, when the judge of assize whose name stands first on the rota leaves the decorous precincts of
the High Court for the dingy and ill-ventilated court in the Old Bailey. It was by special arrangement, therefore, that Mr. Justice Wills attended at the
Central Criminal Court this morning to begin the second trial of Oscar Wilde and Alfred Taylor on charges of gross indecency and offences against the
Criminal Law Amendment Act with regard to which the jury at the last sessions disagreed. No fresh indictment having been preferred, it was not necessary
to send the case a second time to the grand jury.
The preliminary task of swearing and charging the grand jury was performed, as usual by the Recorder, who was supported by the Lord Mayor
and sheriffs, and an unusually large muster of aldermen, all in their robes of office. In honor of the month, the bouquets were larger and gayer than
usual. And the little heaps of sweet herbs, first provided as a defence against gaol fever in the days of unreformed prisons, seemed bigger than
common.
While the case against the prisoners has been reduced by the
ELIMINATION OF SEVERAL COUNTS
of the indictment and the disqualification of one of the witnesses, it has been strengthened by the action of the Solicitor-General
himself taking up the case for the Crown. Sir F. Lockwood, Q.C., Mr. C. F. Gill, and Mr. Horace Avory make a destructive trio in the Treasury
prosecution,. On the side of the defence there is no change. In Sir Edward Clarke, Mr. Charles Mathews, and Mr. Travers Humphreys, Wilde possesses as
powerful a defensive combination as could be desired. Taylor is again represented by Mr. Grain.
Wilde, during the past fortnight, has been on bail. Taylor, however, has remained in Holloway Prison, and was brought to the Old Bailey
with other prisoners in the van this morning. He was placed at once in the dock, but, sitting at the back, was scarcely observed. He looked much paler
than when last before the Court, and seemed to have lost something in his air of jaunty self-confidence. Wilde reached the court shortly before eleven
o'clock, and, sitting at the solicitor's table, held a whispered consultation with Mr. Charles Mathews. All the counsel in the case were early in
attendance. When Mr. Justice Wills arrived, he and the Lord Mayor tried to sit down simultaneously on the same seat. It was the Lord Mayor's seat -- and
the Lord Mayor had it. Mr. Justice Wills is not used to playing second fiddle to lord mayors, but he took the second best seat with a good grace.
When the Clerk of Arraigns called upon Wilde to surrender to his bail, he stepped ponderously into the dock, with a slight, almost
imperceptible, bow towards the Bench, but no discoverable recognition of his fellow prisoner. There is little improvement in Wilde's appearance. Mental
trouble has cut very deeply into his face.
Before the jury were sworn,
Sir Edward Clarke said he desired to make
A PRELIMINARY APPLICATION
that the defendants might be tried separately.
His Lordship: Unless the Solicitor-General has anything to say --
Sir F. Lockwood: I have, my lord.
Sir Edward Clarke said the ground of his application practically was that it was the prisoners' right to be tried separately. A the last
trial there was an indictment of conspiracy. That had now been withdrawn, and there was no single count now standing on the indictment on which both
prisoners could be convicted.
Sir F. Lockwood strenuously opposed the application. He pointed out that one of the counts charged Taylor with procuring certain persons
to commit illegal acts with Wilde. The history of these cases cases was so bound up together that it was impossible to inquire into one without inquiring
into the other. It was, therefore, the fairest course towards the accused that there should be but one inquiry.
His Lordship said he had anticipated this application, and had already considered it carefully with regard to the evidence. His own
opinion was-- his lordship did not put it higher than an opinion -- that it was much fairer that the defendants should be tried separately.
Sir F. Lockwood: As your lordship pleases. In that case I propose, my lord, to take the case of
Sir Edward Clarke at once objected on behalf of Wilde on the ground that he would be prejudiced in the eyes of the jury by having the
case against Taylor heard first.
His Lordship assured the learned counsel that, whatever the result of the first trial might be, he and the jury would endeavor to insure
that it should have no influence on the second. Moreover, he thought it was within the right of the prosecution to elect in what order the cases should be
taken.
Sir Edward Clarke: Then I make a further application, which I shall repeat at the end of Taylor's trial, and that is that Wilde's case
may stand over till the next sessions.
Sir Edward Clarke : Then I shall ask, in the event of Taylor being tried first, that Wilde's case shall stand over til! the next
sessions.
His Lordship said the application had better be postponed till the end of the first trial, significantly adding, "if there should be an
acquittal, so much the better for the other prisoner."
The jury was thereupon sworn to try Taylor, whose plea of "Not guilty" was of course taken at the last sessions. In the meantime his
lordship
AGREED TO RELEASE WILDE
on the same bail as before till to-morrow. His sureties had left the court, however, Sir Edward Clarke said they would be sent for at
once. Pending their return Wilde was taken downstairs to renew his acquaintance with the Old Bailey cells.
The beginning of the Solicitor-General's opening was distinctly moderate in tone and he echoed Sir Edward Clarke's appeal against
prejudice, expressing a hope that Taylor too might have a most impartial trial." "But I believe," he added, "that such an appeal is absolutely and
entirely unnecessary." He described Taylor as a young man of good family who had been educated at one of the large public schools, and at his majority
inherited a large sum of money. For a short time he held a commission in a militia regiment. But apparently, his fortune being exhausted, for some time
before the events with which the jury would have to deal he had followed no occupation of any sort or kind. Wilde (and the distinguished counsel's voice
took a deeper and stronger inflection in mentioning him) was a man of high literary attainments, a man who had
ACHIEVED SOME DISTINCTION
by his dramatic works, and apparently, at the time of which counsel was speaking, had a house in Tite-st., Chelsea, suited to his
condition and life, in which he lived with his wife and children, and had also a sitting room and a bedroom at the Savoy Hotel. Taylor lived at 13, Little
College-st., Westminster, and the first charge with which counsel would deal was that Taylor attempted to procure the commission of certain acts by Oscar
Wilde with Charles Parker.
Sir Frank then went over the well-known details of the intimacy of the Parkers and Wood with Taylor and Wilde, and called Charles
Parker.
The witness (Charles Parker) is a fresh-colored lad with a face that would rather attract than repel a stranger. Neatly dressed in blue
serge, he rather gruffly followed Mr. C. F. Gill's questions, which were, as his lordship presently pointed out, rather leading in character. the old
story was gone through again to the last detail.
The prisoner Taylor is not of a literary turn. At the former trial he made no notes, but sat with folded arms and a complacent mien,
leaving the literary department to his more distinguished companions. Being now left blooming alone, he obtained a few sheets of foolscap and scribbled
notes to his counsel.
Parker concluded his evidence by stating that after his arrest with Taykor in 1894 he made up his mind to leave London, and
enlisted.
"His arrest?" his lordship interposed. "On what charge?"
Mr. Gill hummed and hawed till the judge added, "I only want to know, you know. You leave the impression that there is something
mysterious. What were you arrested for?"
Witness: For being in a house in Fitzroy-st.
Mr. Gill: Really for being there for a felonious purpose. There were men there dressed as women.
His Lordship: Then I suppose they were charged with consorting together to commit acts of indecency. Much better to have the whole thing
out.
In that case, said Mr. Grain, better at the same time have it out that both Taylor and Parker were
DISCHARGED BY THE MAGISTRATE.
He proceeded to cross-examine Parker with a view to showing that he was introduced to Taylor by a man named Harrington. This he denied.
Then, as to blackmailing, Mr. Grain asked, "Have you ever taken hush money from anyone?"
Be careful, you know. You have been in that box before. Have you threatened to charge people with offences unless they paid you money? -
No.
You know Wood and Allen? - Yes.
Have you not admitted you received £30 for your share of hush money obtained by them? - They never told me it was hush money. They gave
it to me.
That was just before you enlisted? - Yes.
Did either of them tell you how they obtained that money? - Yes, they got it out of some gentleman.
Had you committed the acts mentioned with the man they got the money out of? - Yes.
Do you know a person of the name of Macklin? - I have heard the name. I have heard Taylor speak of him.
Do you know a person named Clarke, who lived at 3, Northumberland mansions? - Yes.
Macklin came to your rooms when you were living at Camera-sq. about May, 1894? - I know the man you mean. I did not know his name was
Macklin.
Did you take a number of letters from Clarke out of his pocket? - No. I think he gave me one of Clarke's letters.
Did you, about Whitsuntide, 1894, go to Clarke's rooms and ask him for £10? - Yes.
Did you take his letter with you? - No, nothing.
What did you go to Clarke for? -
I WANTED THE MONEY
to go away to America.
Where is Clarke now? - I don't know.
His Lordship: What is he?
Witness: A silver-broker, I think, or something in the silver trade. He was then in the business with his brother-in-law at Bond-st.
Mr. Grain: Did you at that interview take his watch from his pocket? - No
Did he not threaten to charge you with stealing his gold watch and chain? - No. He said if I did not go away he would send for the
police.
The witness denied point-blank that Clarke introduced to him another man named Durnbach, or that he had ever threatened Clarke about
letters he had written to Durnbach. His story was that Taylor introduced him to Durnbach, whom he afterwards introduced to Clarke.
Mr. Grain left it at that, He had obtained enough for his purpose.
William Parker, the elder brother, and a coarser copy of the last witness, generally corroborated his evidence about the introduction to
Wilde, and his selection of Charlie as "the boy for me." he also gave positive evidence of misconduct of a grave nature with Taylor.
Before adjourning for lunch Mr. Lockwood put out a feeler as to the length of time his lordship was prepared to sit. Mr. Justice Wills
had a heart for any fate, and suggested that the case should be
FINISHED TO-DAY,
early or late. To facilitate this desirable end the adjournment for lunch was curtailed.
In the afternoon the first witness was Alfred Wood, with regard to whom the indictment alleges an introduction of the witness by Taylor
to Wilde for an illegal purpose. Wood, who is a smooth-tongued fellow with a deliberate, non-committal manner of speech, which does not make him seem any
the more ingenuous, described his acquaintance with Taylor, and visits to the snuggery at Little College-st. It was not at all clear, however, that Taylor
was responsible, at least directly, for the introduction to Wilde. This was effected by a third person, whose name was not now given. At the last trial it
was openly stated that the third person was Lord Alfred Douglas who, while at Salisbury, arranged the meeting at the Café Royal by correspondence with
Wilde, and telegraphed to Wood the time of the rendezvous.
The case is proceeding.