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  • May 1, 1794
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The Freemasons' Magazine, May 1, 1794: Page 14

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    Article JOHN COUSTOS, FOR FREEMASONRY, ← Page 3 of 5 →
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

John Coustos, For Freemasonry,

I was ordered back by the Inquisitors to my dismal abode , after they had declared to me , that if I turned Roman Catholic it would be of great advantage to my cause , otherways that I perhaps might repent of my obstinacy when it was too late . I replied , in-a respectful manner , that I could not accept of their offers . A few days after , I was again brought before the president of the Holy Officewho said

, , that the Proctor would read , in presence of the Court , the heads of the charge brought against me . The Inquisitors now offered me a counsellor , in case I desired one , to plead my cause . Being sensible that the person they would send me for this purpose was himself an Inquisitor , I chose rather to make my own defence in the best manner I could . I therefore desired that leave might be

granted me to deliver my defence in writing ; but this they refused , saying , that the Holy Office did not allow prisoners the use of pen , ink , and paper . I then begged they would permit me to dictate my justification , in their presence , to any person they should appoint ;

which favour was granted me . The heads of the indictment brought against me were : That I had infringed the Pope ' s orders , by associating in the sect of the Freemasons , they being a horrid compound of sacrilege , sodomy , and many other abominable crimes ; of v / hich . the inviolable secrecy observed therein , and the exclusion of women , were but too manifest indications ; a circumstance that gave the highest offence to , the whole kingdom : and the said Coustos , having

refused to discover to the Inquisitors the true tendency and design of their meetings , and persisting , on the contrary , in asserting , that Freemasonry was good in itself ; wherefore the Proctor of the Inquisition requires , that the said prisoner may be prosecuted . with , the utmost rigour , and for this purpose desires the Court would exert its whole authority , and even proceed . to tortures , to extort from him a confession , viz . :. that the several articles of which he stands accused are true . .- ' ¦ ' . « ¦ _ .

The Inquisitors then gave me the above heads , ordering me to sign them , which I absolutely refused . They then commanded me to be taken ba ' ck to my dungeon , without permitting me a single word in my justification .. I had now but too much leisure to reflect on their menaces , and to cast about for answers to the several articles concerning Masonry , whereof I stood accused ; all of which articles I remembered but too well . Six weeks after I appeared in presence of

two Inquisitors , and the person whom they had appointed to take down my defence ; which was little more than a recapitulation of what I before had asserted with regard to Masonry . " Your prisoner , " said I to them , " is deeply afflicted and touched " to the soul , to find himself accused ( by the ignorance or malice of " his enemies ) in an infernal charge , before the Lords of the Holy

" Office , for having practised the art of Freemasonry , which has been , " and is still , rever'd , not only by a considerable number of persons " of the highest quality in Christendom , but likewise by several sovereign " Princes and crowned heads , who , so far from disdaining to become " members of this Society , submitted , engaged , and obliged them" selves , at their admission , to observe religiously the constitutions

“The Freemasons' Magazine: 1794-05-01, Page 14” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/fmm/issues/fmm_01051794/page/14/.
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Title Category Page
Untitled Article 1
Untitled Article 2
LONDON: Article 2
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 3
THE FREEMASONS' MAGAZINE, OR GENERAL AND COMPLETE LIBRARY. Article 4
THOUGHTS ON MODERN WIT. Article 8
MARY QUEEN OF SCOTS TO QUEEN ELIZABETH. Article 9
QUEEN ELIZABETH TO SIR NICHOLAS THROGMORTON. Article 9
A SPEECH Article 10
JOHN COUSTOS, FOR FREEMASONRY, Article 12
KNIGHTS TEMPLARS IN ENGLAND, Article 16
Untitled Article 17
ACCOUNT OF A TOUR TO KILLARNEY, &c. IN A LETTER TO J. AND E, FRY. Article 18
THE LIFE OF MRS. ANNE AYSCOUGH, OR ASKEW. Article 22
AN ACCOUNT OF DRUIDISM. Article 26
A VIEW OF THE PROGRESS OF NAVIGATION. Article 33
ACCOUNT OF JOHN O'GROAT'S HOUSE. Article 38
MEMOIRS OF THE LATE . DR. PAUL HIFFERNAN. Article 39
SKETCH OF THE LIFE OF M. BRISSOT. Article 48
ON THE STUDY OF NATURAL PHILOSOPHY. Article 50
CHARACTER OF REGULUS. Article 55
PARLIAMENTARY PROCEEDINGS. Article 58
STRICTURES ON PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS Article 63
POETRY. Article 70
THE FIELD OF BATTLE. Article 73
MASONIC INTELLIGENCE. Article 74
MONTHLY CHRONICLE. Article 75
DEATHS. Article 80
BANKRUPTS. Article 81
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Page 14

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

John Coustos, For Freemasonry,

I was ordered back by the Inquisitors to my dismal abode , after they had declared to me , that if I turned Roman Catholic it would be of great advantage to my cause , otherways that I perhaps might repent of my obstinacy when it was too late . I replied , in-a respectful manner , that I could not accept of their offers . A few days after , I was again brought before the president of the Holy Officewho said

, , that the Proctor would read , in presence of the Court , the heads of the charge brought against me . The Inquisitors now offered me a counsellor , in case I desired one , to plead my cause . Being sensible that the person they would send me for this purpose was himself an Inquisitor , I chose rather to make my own defence in the best manner I could . I therefore desired that leave might be

granted me to deliver my defence in writing ; but this they refused , saying , that the Holy Office did not allow prisoners the use of pen , ink , and paper . I then begged they would permit me to dictate my justification , in their presence , to any person they should appoint ;

which favour was granted me . The heads of the indictment brought against me were : That I had infringed the Pope ' s orders , by associating in the sect of the Freemasons , they being a horrid compound of sacrilege , sodomy , and many other abominable crimes ; of v / hich . the inviolable secrecy observed therein , and the exclusion of women , were but too manifest indications ; a circumstance that gave the highest offence to , the whole kingdom : and the said Coustos , having

refused to discover to the Inquisitors the true tendency and design of their meetings , and persisting , on the contrary , in asserting , that Freemasonry was good in itself ; wherefore the Proctor of the Inquisition requires , that the said prisoner may be prosecuted . with , the utmost rigour , and for this purpose desires the Court would exert its whole authority , and even proceed . to tortures , to extort from him a confession , viz . :. that the several articles of which he stands accused are true . .- ' ¦ ' . « ¦ _ .

The Inquisitors then gave me the above heads , ordering me to sign them , which I absolutely refused . They then commanded me to be taken ba ' ck to my dungeon , without permitting me a single word in my justification .. I had now but too much leisure to reflect on their menaces , and to cast about for answers to the several articles concerning Masonry , whereof I stood accused ; all of which articles I remembered but too well . Six weeks after I appeared in presence of

two Inquisitors , and the person whom they had appointed to take down my defence ; which was little more than a recapitulation of what I before had asserted with regard to Masonry . " Your prisoner , " said I to them , " is deeply afflicted and touched " to the soul , to find himself accused ( by the ignorance or malice of " his enemies ) in an infernal charge , before the Lords of the Holy

" Office , for having practised the art of Freemasonry , which has been , " and is still , rever'd , not only by a considerable number of persons " of the highest quality in Christendom , but likewise by several sovereign " Princes and crowned heads , who , so far from disdaining to become " members of this Society , submitted , engaged , and obliged them" selves , at their admission , to observe religiously the constitutions

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