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Original paragraph in
The Washington Post - Sunday, June 16, 1895
The Washington Post - Sunday, June 16, 1895
Most similar paragraph from
The Chicago Tribune - Sunday, June 23, 1895
The Chicago Tribune - Sunday, June 23, 1895
Difference
LONDON, June 7.—For the time being at least Oscar Wilde has escaped the agony and ignominy of working the treadmill of old Pentonville
prison.
The influence of powerful friends, the expenditure of considerable money, or a combination of both, have saved him from the treadmill,
the punishment meted out to him when he was sentenced to two years at hard labor. Physicians have declared that Wilde has a weak heart. This declaration
is what has put off the dreaded day when he must jump on the wheel and do his share of the work.
Just now Wilde is performing the comparatively easy task of picking oakum in the Woorwood Scrubbs prison. Picking oakum is a species of
heaven to the work of the treadmill. It is believed that the regular and systematic life of the prison will soon restore Wilde’s health, which really is
badly shattered. When this improvement takes place there will be no longer any excuse for keeping him away from the treadmill of Pentonville, to which the
sentence of the judge practically condemned him.
Just what kind of picture Oscar Wilde, the fallen idol of aestheticism, will present in the treadmill, is comparatively easy to
foretell, for the reason that he will look and do exactly as the criminals who are working there now and who have worked there for the past many years.
All prisoners are the same there as far as externals go.
Wilde’s hair has already been cut short, his expensive clothing taken away from him and he gets neither more nor less than the common
thief imprisoned for housekeeping. The cutting of his long hair has made a complete change in his appearance, although his strongly-lined face can easily
be distinguished from a long line of the faces of fellow-criminals.
No Luxury Here.
At Pentonville the prison suit is of dirty drab canvas, marked with three arrows, heavy rough shoes, and an ugly Scotch cap. Life in
this prison is not pleasant by any means. Wilde’s sleeping accommodations will be of the scantiest. Cots are unknown to the prisoners there. A plank bed,
composed simply of a board raised six inches above the floor, without a mattress, is what he will sleep on. He will be given each week two clean sheets of
heavy coarse material and two rugs as rough as ordinary horse blankets. The rules about communication with the outside world are exceedingly severe. He
can neither write nor receive a letter from his friends or family until three months of his sentence have been served, and then he may write and receive
one letter a month, and be visited for twenty minutes by three friends.
At Pentonville, where Wilde is serving the sentence, the prison suit is of dirty drab canvas marked with three arrows, heavy rough
shoes, and an ugly Scotch cap. Life in this prison is not pleasant by any means. Wilde’s sleeping accommodations are the scantiest. Cots are unknown to
the prisoners there. A plank bed, composed simply of a board raised six inches above the floor, without a mattress, is what he sleeps on. He is given each
week two clean sheets of heavy, course material and two rugs as rough as ordinary horse blankets. The rules about communication with the outside world are
exceedingly severe. He can neither write nor receive a letter from his friends or family until three months of his sentence have been served, and then he
may write and receive one letter a month, and be visited for twenty minutes by three friends.
The treadmill is the great bugaboo of the English convict. It is almost barbaric in its severity and savors somewhat of the torture
inflicted upon unfortunates 500 years ago.
It is shaped somewhat like the wheel of a stern wheel steamer or of a paddle wheel of a ferryboat, except that the treadmill is
considerably wider than these. For the accommodation of the many involuntary workers at a height which a man of ordinary physique can easily reach is a
long bar of wood. When all is ready the prisoner jumps upon one of the steps of the wheel and grasps the bar with his hands. The steps are called floats
in the far land of Pentonville. The The weight of the men turn the wheel and as they sink down on one foot they must step up to the next float when it
comes round. It is much like climbing a particularly nasty flight of steep stairs with no ending at the top.
The treadmill is the great bugaboo of the English convict. It is almost barbaric in its severity and savors somewhat of the torture
inflicted upon unfortunates 500 years ago. It is shaped somewhat like the wheel of a stern-wheel steamer or the paddle-wheel of a ferry boat, except that
the treadmill is considerably wider than they are. For the accommodation of the many involuntary workers at a height which a man of ordinary physique can
easily reach is a long bar of wood. When all is ready the prisoner jumps up on one of the steps of the wheel and grasps the bar with his hands. The steps
are called floats in the far land of Pentonville. The weight of the men turns the wheel, and as they sink down on one foot they must step up to the next
float when it comes round. It is much like climbing a particularly nasty flight of steep stairs with no ending at the top.
Work Cannot Be Dodged.
What is more, there is no dodging or shirking the work. When the float comes round, Oscar Wilde like all his brother felons, must step
on it otherwise he will get an ugly knock on the shins by the ever-turning wheel which will peel the bark off from the knee to the instep. It is not
pleasant work by any means. It is the kind that completely takes the heart out of the most hardened criminal. At the end of a long day of ceaselessly
stepping from float to float there is nothing to show for the work. Each man is nothing more than a very insignificant section of a huge mass of
machinery. The work of the convicts in America is a heaven in comparison with it. But in Pentonville all that the workers of the treadmill have to look
forward to is the short breathing spells permitted by the prison regulations.
What is more, there is no dodging or shirking the work. When the float comes round Oscar Wilde, like all his brother felons, must step
on it, otherwise he will get an ugly knock on the shins by the ever turning wheel, which will peel the bark off from the knee to the instep. It is not
pleasant work by any means. It is the kind that completely takes the heart out of the most hardened criminal. At the end of a long day of ceaselessly
stepping from float to float there is nothing to show for it. Each man is nothing more than a very insignificant section of a huge mass of machinery. The
work of the convicts in America is play in comparison with it. In Pentonville all that the workers of the treadmill have to look forward to is the short
breathing spells permitted by the prison regulations.
Like Climbing Eleven Miles.
Oscar Wilde was sentenced to do hard labor, and this means that his time at treadmill will be four hours a day, the most severe work
provided for by the prison rules. Two hours of this is done before dinner and two hours after. Some idea of the awful physical strain of the work can be
gained from these facts. The men work twenty minutes and then have five minutes rest. In those twenty minutes they have made the equivalent of an ascent
of 6,000 feet, or a trifle more than a mile and an eighth. In four hours’ work they have done the same labor that a man would do in climbing eleven miles
of stairs. Going up four or five flights of stairs makes an ordinary man wish for an elevator.
Oscar Wilde was sentenced to do hard labor, and this means that his time at treadmill will be four hours a day, the most severe work
provided for by the prison rules. Two hours of this is done before dinner and two hours after. Some idea of the awful physical strain of the work can be
gained from these facts: The men work twenty minutes and then have five minutes’ rest. In those twenty minutes they have made the equivalent of an ascent
of 6,000 feet, or a trifle more than a mile and an eighth. In four hours’ work they have done the same labor that a man would do in climbing eleven miles
of stairs. Going up four or five flights of stairs makes an ordinary man wish for an elevator.
The disheartening feature of the treadmill is that the criminal is always just where he started from hour after hour and day after
day. No talking is allowed in the wheel, and the silence is unbroken, except for the creaking of the ponderous machinery as it whirls around.
The disheartening feature of the treadmill is that the criminal is always just where he started from hour after hour and day after day.
No talking is allowed on the wheel, and the silence is unbroken except for the creaking of the ponderous machinery as it whirls around.
The Scanty Menu.
The food of Pentonville prison is not what Wilde has been accustomed to by any means. On week days the prisoners get a dish of
"skilly" for breakfast. Skilly is not very palatable, being a species of tasteless mush, but it is said to be healthy. Dinner consists of a tin bowl of
broth, heavily charged with grease, and a chunk of bread as heavy as the traditional lead. Supper is a very light affair, consisting of bread and milk,
the milk being extremely thin and of a light blue shade, indicating an intimate acquaintance with water.
The food of Pentonville Prison is not what Wilde has been accustomed to by any means. On weekdays the prisoners get a dish of "skilly"
for breakfast. Skilly is not palatable, being a species of tasteless mush, but it is said to be healthy. Dinner consists of a tin bowl of broth, heavily
charged with grease, and a chunk of bread as heavy as the traditional lead. Supper is a light affair, consisting of bread and milk, the milk being
extremely thin and of a light blue shade, indicating an intimate acquaintance with water.
The rules against any of the prisoners getting food other than that of the regular fare are very severe. More money than Oscar Wilde
has at present would be required to bribe the warders to smuggle finer food to him. Besides all the warders watch on another, and no one of them could
enjoy a fat income from Wilde for any length of time without being discovered. Then the feeling against Wilde is so strong among the prisoners even that
his two years will be made as uncomfortable as they possibly can be. The felons of Wormwood have already shown a repugnance for him and in many little
ways have added their mite to the terrors of the prison.
The rules against any of the prisoners getting food other than that of the regular fare are severe. More money than Oscar Wilde has at
the present would be required to bribe the warders to smuggle food to him. Besides, all the warders watch one another and no one of them could enjoy a fat
income from Wilde for any length of time without being discovered. Then the feeling against Wilde is so strong among the prisoners that he will be made as
uncomfortable as they possibly can make him.
Charley Mitchell, the prize fighter, something over two years ago served a brief term in Pentonville for assaulting an old man.
Mitchell did treadmill work for a short time, and he afterward said that it almost killed him. After his first half hour at it he resorted to every
artifice to be excused from further work, but without avail, as the physicians said that he was the strongest man in the prison.
Charley Mitchell, the prize fighter, something over two years ago, served a brief term in Pentonville for assaulting an old man.
Mitchell did treadmill work for a short time, and he afterwards said that it almost killed him. After his first half hour at it he resorted to every
artifice to be excused from further work, but without avail, as the physicians said he was the strongest man in the place.