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Original paragraph in
Nanaimo Free Press - Thursday, June 27, 1895
Nanaimo Free Press - Thursday, June 27, 1895
Most similar paragraph from
The San Francisco Call - Sunday, June 23, 1895
The San Francisco Call - Sunday, June 23, 1895
Difference
London, Eng, June 26 — The weekly report of the Governor of Pentonville Prison, where Oscar Wilde, the erst-while aesthete, poet and
dramatist, is now languishing in durance vile, confirms the previous circulated denial of the assertion that the notes prisoner had lost his mind.
LONDON, ENG., June 22. — The weekly report of the Governor of Pentonville Prison, where Oscar Wilde, the erstwhile esthete, poet and
dramatist, is now languishing in durance vile, confirms the previous circulated denial of the assertion that the noted prisoner had lost his mind.
The report says that Wilde's health has been so robust that for the past three weeks he has bean furnishing power for a treadmill, in
accordance with the usual custom, and that he will shortly be put at the hard task of bag-making for the remainder of his term.
His conduct is reported as exemplary, which, if continued, will entitle him to release four months prior to the expiration of his
two-year sentence. He will not be allowed to see any of his friends before the latter end of August, and then only a limited number for a very short
time.
Notwithstanding the heinousness of Wilde's crimes, there is a marked tendency on the part of the public to regard him with more or less
pity, inasmuch as it is generally admitted that he has been made a scapegoat, and that the crime for which he has been incarcerated is so far from rare
that a wholesome application of the drastic methods applied in his case would involve many who now affect the most profound contempt for the dethroned
litterateur.
Notwithstanding the heinousness of Wilde's crime, there is a marked tendency on the part of the public to regard him with more or less
pity, inasmuch as it is generally admitted that he has been made a scapegoat, and that the crime for which he has been incarcerated is so far from rare
that a wholesale application of the drastic methods applied in his case would involve many who now affect the most profound contempt for the dethroned
litterateur.