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
San Francisco Chronicle - Wednesday, June 5, 1895
San Francisco Chronicle - Wednesday, June 5, 1895
Most similar paragraph from
The San Francisco Examiner - Wednesday, June 5, 1895
The San Francisco Examiner - Wednesday, June 5, 1895
Difference
LONDON, June 4. - The Pall Mall Gazette says that it has been found necessary to confine Oscar Wilde in a padded room to prevent him
from doing violence to himself.
LONDON, June 4. - The Pall Mall Gazette says that it has been found necessary to confine Oscar Wilde in a padded room to prevent him
from doing violence to himself. It is said that he has become hopelessly insane.
That he should have become insane is no surprise to those who saw him the last day of his trial. A more abject, pitiable spectacle
could not be imagined. His face was haggard, his eyes sunken and bloodshot his hair unkempt and tossed. He appeared to be in an absolutely dazed
condition, and occasionally his body swayed to and fro as if he were suffering intense mental agony. He sat in a corner of the dock, his face turned
toward the witness stand and the jury, avoiding with nervous terror looking in the direction of the public galleries, where many men who had known him
were sitting. He had a bottle of smelling salts, with which he occasionally refreshed himself, and he sometimes sought relief in absently drawing lines on
a sheet of foolscap with a quill pen. His trembling hand got blotched all over with ink and great blots got on his cuff, but he looked like one in a
dream, unconscious of what he was doing.