Dublin Castle scandal In 1884, Irish nationalists alleged homosexual orgies among the staff at
Dublin Castle, the seat of the
British government's administration in Ireland until 1922. Amongst those charged with conspiracy to commit
gross indecency was Martin Oranmore Kirwan (1847–1904), a captain in the
Royal Irish Fusiliers who was the son of a
County Galway Anglo-Irish landlord. When Kirwan was a young lieutenant in the Dublin Militia, Saul had been one of his sexual partners. Saul was never called to give testimony – a matter which is still cause for speculation. Saul later stated on the witness stand that he was told that it wasn't because of his disreputable character that his testimony wasn't used, but because his evidence was too old, relating to events of a considerably earlier date. Kirwan was acquitted on the grounds that the Crown did not produce sufficient evidence, but he resigned his commission.
At Drury Lane In 1889, before news of the Cleveland Street scandal, Saul was briefly employed at
Drury Lane Theatre in
The Royal Oak, a five-act romantic drama spectacle based on the concealment of
Charles II in the
Boscobel Oak after the
Battle of Worcester, that opened in September of that year. Whether he worked behind the scenes or appeared on-stage in one of its tableaus is unknown: his name does not appear in the speaking-parts cast list. However, it was during the time
Alexander Meyrick Broadley, aka 'Broadley Pasha', who was implicated in the
Cleveland Street Scandal, was acting as a financial and business adviser to the manager of the theatre
Augustus Harris.
Cleveland Street scandal After living at a succession of addresses in London, in 1887 Saul had moved into a male brothel at 19 Cleveland Street run by fellow prostitute Charles Hammond, with whom he had previously lived. Saul was one of several professionals working there, but
telegraph boys were also recruited for part-time work. In 1889, when one of the boys was questioned at the
General Post Office regarding how he obtained a sum of money in his possession, the
Cleveland Street scandal broke, creating news stories around the globe. The first trial that resulted was a libel action by
Lord Euston, heir to the
Duke of Grafton, against
Ernest Parke, editor of the
North London Press. Parke had alleged Euston had been a visitor to the male brothel at the centre of the scandal. It came to court in January 1890, and Saul was called as a witness for the defence. Saul delivered his testimony in a manner described in one newspaper report as "brazen effrontery that reduced the court to shocked silence" He was also sharp, witty, and defiant. The line of questioning and his responses included: "And were you hunted out by the police?" – "No, they have never interfered. They have always been kind to me." "Do you mean they have deliberately shut their eyes to your infamous practices?" – "They have had to shut their eyes to more than me." At one point of the proceedings, a newspaper report noted that Saul "referred to himself as having nothing in his face but shame, and here he took out a handkerchief." In his summing up, the judge asked the jury to assess whether they could possibly accept the word of a "loathsome object" against that of Lord Euston. Parke was found guilty of libel and imprisoned. However Saul's testimony is likely to have been the truth, as Euston was well known in the homosexual underworld and was later subject to repeated blackmail. The Euston libel trial was Saul's last appearance in the press. He became a servant at a small family-run hotel, the Marlborough, at 23 Villiers Street in the Strand, before returning to Dublin, where in 1901 he was registered as a butler. In the Euston trial he confessed to having been in hospital several times, ==
The Sins of the Cities of the Plain ==