[Editorial, The Argus (Melbourne), Wednesday 23 March 1898, page 4]

...

The account of the Paris trial, published in our columns yesterday, was nothing but a picture of justice burlesqued, of a complaisant tribunal smirking at the leaders of a mob, and swaying easily to popular clamour. That spectacle is grave enough, but it is as nothing compared to the visions conjured up of what France, even on the threshold of the twentieth century, may be capable of in one of those fits of "red fool fury" to which the nation has yielded before.

...

notes:

This piece relates to the subsequent trial of Emile Zola, not of Dreyfus