id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt chapter-012 chapter-012 .txt text/plain 6445 397 84 "I'll bring it to you, Frank, but there's nothing in it." A day or two later he showed me the letter, and after I had read it he produced a copy of the telegram which Lord Alfred Douglas had sent to his father in reply. A little later Oscar told me that Queensberry accompanied by a friend had called on him. "I said to him, 'I suppose, Lord Queensberry, you have come to apologise for the libellous letter you wrote about me?' All "people of importance" agreed that he would lose his case against Queensberry; "no English jury would give Oscar Wilde a verdict against anyone," was the expert opinion. I am not certain and my notes do not tell me whether Bosie Douglas came in with Oscar or a little later, but he heard the greater part of our talk. ./cache/chapter-012.txt ./txt/chapter-012.txt