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  • Feb. 1, 1797
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The Freemasons' Magazine, Feb. 1, 1797: Page 48

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    Article REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. ← Page 9 of 10 →
Page 48

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Review Of New Publications.

said to have happened during the Invasion of the Papal Territories by the French , having been published in England , Mr . Berington , -who is wellknown to the Public by his former labours , comes forward to examine and refute their claims to belief . The prodig ies he writes agaiuts are as follows : ' At Ancona , a sea-port town in the papal territories , on Saturday between the 25 th and 26 th of June last , certain women , alarmed by the ' - report of a conspiracy for the plunder of the town , and massacre of its inhabitantsran

, in crowds to the cathedral , where was a picture of the Virgin Mary , reported to work miracles , and to which fhess women , it is said , were particularl y devout . While they were here farvently praying before the picture , a little child , whose unusual composure had been remarked , cried out to its mother , " That the Holy Virgin moved her eyes , " or , as another account states , " That the Holy Virgin had heard her mother ' s prayers . " Tims was the impression made . The mother looked , and beheld the prodigy . Others

beheld the same ; a general cry among the spectators ensued ; soon the whole town was in motion ; all flocked to the cathedral ; and the most incredulous , even the ringleaders of the conspiracy , returned , convinced , from inspection , of the reality of the prodigy . Thirteen days the picture continued to move its eyes , and it was only on the 8 th ot July , that the door of the church was closed . During that period , the French gentleman who writes the letteran emigantand formerla canon of Lyons , on the 28 th , at

mid-, , y night , was admitted to a near sight of the picture , the motions of the eyes of which he describes minutely . They moved first horizontally ; then opened wider than was their ordinary position ; and finally closed . These chanoes happened twice , during the quarter of an hour he remained before the picture . On the following day , at noon , he returned to the same spot , and

beheld the same motion ot the eyes , which he is ready to attest on oath . —On the 6 th of July , three painters , men of" probity , were introduced by authority , when the vicar-general , attended by his officers , directed them to take down the picture , and examine it . This they did ; and as their hands passed over the face , they observed the eyes to open ; and one of them afterwards assured the writer , that what struck him most was , to feel the eyes , as if they had been animated , move under his fingers ;

' Such is the relation from Ancona ; and on the 10 th , other accounts , which confirm the above , state , that the prodigies had not then , or only then , ceased , and that a statue of St . Ann , the mother of our lady , had joined the daughter , and also moved its eyes . This statue , to remove all suspicions of fraud , was examined by the same painters . ' VVecome now to Rome . About the time that the prodi gies at Ancona ceased , a series of the same commenced in the capital . On the 9 th' of July , as

some pious persons were praying before a picture of our lady , called of Archetto , it was observed to open and shut its eyes . The report soon spread through the city , while other persons , equally impressed with devotion , in the same street , before another picture , were heard'to exclaim , " Most Holy Virgin , favour us with a miracle . " Scarcely were the words uttered , when the eyes moved ; and presently , all the pictures , ' which are numerous in the streets , exhibited the same phenomenonmoving their eyes in various directions

, , and almost without interruption . The contagion , within a few . days , reached to the churches , where the same prodigies took place . The streets , meanwhile , incessantly resounded with the cry of Five Maria ! and canticles and hymns were sung . —Some similar motions were likewise observed in pictures of our Saviour , and in crucifixes ; and the wonders did not confine themselves within the walls of Rome , but extended to Civita Vecchia , and to other towns

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1797-02-01, Page 48” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 25 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01021797/page/48/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON: Article 2
TO READERS, CORRESPONDENTS,&c. Article 3
THE SCIENTIFIC MAGAZINE, AND FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY, Article 4
MEMOIRS OF HER LATE IMPERIAL MAJESTY, CATHARINE II. Article 6
REFLECTIONS UPON TRAGEDY. Article 10
ON THE NATIONAL MANNERS OF THE FRENCH AND ENGLISH. Article 12
ON THE INFLUENCE OF THE SEASONS ON THE MENTAL POWERS. Article 14
ANECDOTE. Article 17
MEMOIRS OF THE LATE COLONEL FREDERICK. Article 18
NEW OXFORD GUIDE: OR HUMOROUS SUPPLEMENT TO ALL FORMER ACCOUNTS, OFTHAT ANCIENT CITY AND UNIVERSITY. Article 21
YORICK AND ELIZA. Article 26
ON THE IMPASSIBILITY OF INSECTS. Article 27
ON THE EXISTENCE OF MERMAIDS. Article 28
BON MOT OF A SPANIARD. Article 31
ORIGINAL LETTER FROM ADDISON TO A LADY. Article 32
DESCRIPTION OF AN UNFREQUENTED CAVE, NEAR BESANCON, IN FRANCE. Article 33
FREEMASONS' REPOSITORY. Article 34
ROYAL ARCH. Article 38
REVIEW OF NEW PUBLICATIONS. Article 40
POETRY. Article 50
EPILOGUE, TO THE SAME, Article 50
EPILOGUE Article 51
MARY, A TALE. Article 52
SONG. Article 53
OCCASIONAL ADDRESS, SUNG BY THE CHILDREN OF THE FREEMASONS' FEMALE CHARITY, FEBRUARY- 9, 1797. Article 53
SONNET. Article 53
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 54
REPORT OF THE PROCEEDINGS OF THE BRITISH PARLIAMENT. Article 56
HOUSE OF COMMONS. Article 57
MONTHLY CHRONICLE . Article 62
FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE. Article 67
OBITUARY. Article 70
LIST OF BANKRUPTS. Article 73
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Page 48

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Review Of New Publications.

said to have happened during the Invasion of the Papal Territories by the French , having been published in England , Mr . Berington , -who is wellknown to the Public by his former labours , comes forward to examine and refute their claims to belief . The prodig ies he writes agaiuts are as follows : ' At Ancona , a sea-port town in the papal territories , on Saturday between the 25 th and 26 th of June last , certain women , alarmed by the ' - report of a conspiracy for the plunder of the town , and massacre of its inhabitantsran

, in crowds to the cathedral , where was a picture of the Virgin Mary , reported to work miracles , and to which fhess women , it is said , were particularl y devout . While they were here farvently praying before the picture , a little child , whose unusual composure had been remarked , cried out to its mother , " That the Holy Virgin moved her eyes , " or , as another account states , " That the Holy Virgin had heard her mother ' s prayers . " Tims was the impression made . The mother looked , and beheld the prodigy . Others

beheld the same ; a general cry among the spectators ensued ; soon the whole town was in motion ; all flocked to the cathedral ; and the most incredulous , even the ringleaders of the conspiracy , returned , convinced , from inspection , of the reality of the prodigy . Thirteen days the picture continued to move its eyes , and it was only on the 8 th ot July , that the door of the church was closed . During that period , the French gentleman who writes the letteran emigantand formerla canon of Lyons , on the 28 th , at

mid-, , y night , was admitted to a near sight of the picture , the motions of the eyes of which he describes minutely . They moved first horizontally ; then opened wider than was their ordinary position ; and finally closed . These chanoes happened twice , during the quarter of an hour he remained before the picture . On the following day , at noon , he returned to the same spot , and

beheld the same motion ot the eyes , which he is ready to attest on oath . —On the 6 th of July , three painters , men of" probity , were introduced by authority , when the vicar-general , attended by his officers , directed them to take down the picture , and examine it . This they did ; and as their hands passed over the face , they observed the eyes to open ; and one of them afterwards assured the writer , that what struck him most was , to feel the eyes , as if they had been animated , move under his fingers ;

' Such is the relation from Ancona ; and on the 10 th , other accounts , which confirm the above , state , that the prodigies had not then , or only then , ceased , and that a statue of St . Ann , the mother of our lady , had joined the daughter , and also moved its eyes . This statue , to remove all suspicions of fraud , was examined by the same painters . ' VVecome now to Rome . About the time that the prodi gies at Ancona ceased , a series of the same commenced in the capital . On the 9 th' of July , as

some pious persons were praying before a picture of our lady , called of Archetto , it was observed to open and shut its eyes . The report soon spread through the city , while other persons , equally impressed with devotion , in the same street , before another picture , were heard'to exclaim , " Most Holy Virgin , favour us with a miracle . " Scarcely were the words uttered , when the eyes moved ; and presently , all the pictures , ' which are numerous in the streets , exhibited the same phenomenonmoving their eyes in various directions

, , and almost without interruption . The contagion , within a few . days , reached to the churches , where the same prodigies took place . The streets , meanwhile , incessantly resounded with the cry of Five Maria ! and canticles and hymns were sung . —Some similar motions were likewise observed in pictures of our Saviour , and in crucifixes ; and the wonders did not confine themselves within the walls of Rome , but extended to Civita Vecchia , and to other towns

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