Compare Paragraphs
This page compares two reports at the paragraph level. The column on the left shows the first report in its entirety, and the column in the middle identifies paragraphs from the second report with significant matching content. The column on the right highlights any differences between the two matching paragraphs: pink shows differences in the first report and purple in the second report. The Match percentage underneath each comparison row in this column shows the percentage of similarity between the two paragraphs.
Original paragraph in
New Zealand Herald - Thursday, August 15, 1895
New Zealand Herald - Thursday, August 15, 1895
Most similar paragraph from
Grey River Argus - Tuesday, September 10, 1895
Grey River Argus - Tuesday, September 10, 1895
Difference
OSCAR WILDE.
Oscar Wilde, the esthete, now doing time at Pentonville, has been taken off the treadmill, and put to picking oakum, with making
matches to follow. The doctors absolutely refuse his being continued on the mill. He is in good health. Recently he asked a friend to send him St.
Augustine's works and some historical books. His plays are about to make their re-appearance on the English stage. The Grand Theatre announces the
production of "The Ideal Husband," according to a London dispatch of June 30th, and prints Wilde's name, as the author, in large letters on the bill. Lord
Alfred Douglas has bought and furnished in a most luxurious manner a bijou residence not far from Sorrento, Italy. He has openly declared that his avowed
object is to await the release of Oscar Wilde, when he will at once transport him to the Italian coast. Young Douglas has written a sonnet which he told a
French journalist would be the first piece of reading Oscar Wilde would have from the outside world. "Dorian Gray" has been translated into French, and
the Parisians are raving over it.
Oscar Wilde, the esthete, now doing time at Pentonville, has been taken off the tread-mill, and put to picking oakum, with making
matches to follow. The doctors absolutely refuse his being kept on the mill. He is in good health. Recently he asked a friend to send him St. Augustine's
works and some historical books. His plays are about to make their re-appearance on the English stage. The Grand Theatre announces the production of "The
Ideal Husband" according to a London dispatch of June 30th, and prints Wilde's name as the author, in large letters on the bill. Lord Alfred Douglas has
bought and furnished in a most luxuious manner a bijou residence not far from Sorrento, Italy. He has openly declared that his avowed object is to await
the release of Oscar Wilde, when he will at once transport him to the Italian coast. Young Douglas has written a sonnet which he told a French journalist
would be the first piece of reading Oscar Wilde would have from the outside world. "Dorian Gray" has been translated into French, and the Parisians are
raving over it.