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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
The San Francisco Examiner - Monday, April 8, 1895
The San Francisco Examiner - Monday, April 8, 1895
Most similar paragraph from
The Yorkshire Evening Post - Monday, April 8, 1895
The Yorkshire Evening Post - Monday, April 8, 1895
Difference
LONDON, April 7. - A report that Oscar Wilde had committed suicide at the Bow-street Police Station caused a widespread sensation
to-day. The report originated in the fact that when Wilde was about to be transferred from the police station in the prison van to the Holloway Jail he
was in a state of semi-collapse, suffering from hysteria, and said to the prison attendants that he would commit suicide if he had a chance.
This put them on the alert. Wilde was immediately subjected to a thorough search, and the police even removed his pearl breastpin and
handkerchief lest he might stab or strangle himself.
The prospect of conviction, with the consequent horrors of a convict's life, appalled Wilde. It is that aspect of the case which seems
to concern him exclusively, not the shame and degradation into which he is plunged. He is a person to whom the luxuries of life were everything, whose
sole thought was self-indulgence. To such a one the rigors and deprivations of a prison are the very worst kind of punishment.
Wilde’s legal advisers declare that they never had a client less able to bear up under trial, or whose anticipatory agonies were more
intense. As Wilde is heavy and flabby, with a constitution sadly undermined by dissipation, it would not in the least surprise his doctor if his troubles
came to a sudden end.
LONDON, April 7. - Oscar Wilde is suffering from insomnia. The prison surgeon on Saturday night gave him a sleeping drought. It had no
effect on him, and he continued pacing his cell all night long. He eats almost nothing, although he is allowed to have food sent to him from the outside.
Another prisoner cleans his cell. He is not allowed to smoke and is allowed to receive only a single visitor daily.
A Plea for Justice.
LONDON, April 7. - Sydney Grundy, the dramatist, has written the Daily Telegraph a letter regarding the removal of Oscar Wilde's name
from the program of his plays. He asks: "By what principle of justice or charity is an author's name blotted from his work? If a man is not to be credited
with what he has done well, by what right is he punished for what he has done ill."
Mr. Sydney Grundy writes to the Telegraph:—"I wonder on what principle of law, or justice, or common sense, or good manners, or
Christian charity, an author's name is blotted from his work. If a man is not to be credited with what he has done well, by what right is he punished for
what he has done ill?