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  • The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine
  • Sept. 1, 1856
  • Page 16
  • REVIEWS OF UEW BOOKS.
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, Sept. 1, 1856: Page 16

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Reviews Of Uew Books.

Inquisitors were different from those of whom we had heard spoken ; but Colonel Delille would not give up so easily . He said to me , ' Let us examine again the floors let us pour water upon them , and we shall see if it does not run through some part . ' The flags of marble were large and quite smooth . After we had poured the water , to the great displeasure of the Inquisitors , we examined all the interstices , to see if any oozed through . Yery soon Colonel Delille cried out that

he found what he sought for . In the joinings of a flag the water disappeared very quickly , as if there was an empty space beneath . Officers and men set to work to raise the flag , whilst the priests cried out against the desecration of their beautiful and holy house . A soldier struck a spring with the butt-end of his musket , which disclosed a flight of steps . I took a lighted taper , four feet long , from a table , in order to explore our discovery , but was stopped by one of the Inquisitors , who gently placed his hand upon my arm , * My son / said he , with a devout air , '6

' you ought not to touch that taper ; it is holy . ' Well , ' I replied , I require a holy light to fathom iniquity . ' I descended the steps , which were under a ceiling without any opening except the trap-door . Arrived at the bottom , we entered into a vast square room , called the Hall of Judgment . In the middle was a block of stone , upon which was fixed a chair for the accused . On one side of the room was another seat , more elevated , for the Inquisitor-General , called the Throne of Judgment ; and there were lower seats for the fathers . From this chamber we

passed to the right , and found small cells extending the whole length of the edifice . But what a spectacle presented itself to our eyes ! How the beneficent religion of the Saviour had been outraged by its professors ! These cells served as dungeons , where the victims of the Inquisition were immured , until death relieved them from their sufferings . Their bodies were left there to decompose , and that the pestilential smell might not incommode the Inquisitors , ventilators were made to carrv it off . In the cells we found the remains of some who had

died recently , whilst in others we found only skeletons , chained to the floor . In others we found living victims of all ages and both sexes , —young men and young women , and old men up to the age of seventy , but all as naked as the day they were born . Our soldiers first busied themselves to free these captives from their chains , and then took off part of their clothes to cover them . After having visited all the cells , and opened the prison-doors of those who yet lived , we went to visit another chamber on the left . There we found all the instruments of torture

that the genius of men or demons could invent . At this sight , the fury of our soldiers could not longer be contained , —they cried out that every one of these Inquisitors , monks and soldiers , should undergo the torture . We did not attempt to prevent them , and they immediately commenced the work upon the persons of the fathers . I saw them employ four kinds of torture , and then withdrew from the frightful scene , which lasted as long as there was a single individual in that antechamber of hell upon whom the soldiers could wreak their vengeance . When the victims of the Inquisition could be brought without danger from their prison

into the light of day , the news of their delivery spread abroad ; and those from whom the Holy Office had torn their relations or friends came to see if there was any hope to find them alive . About one hundred persons were rescued from their living tombs , and restored to their families . Many found a son or a daughter , a brother or a sister . Some found no one . A large quantity of powder was placed in the subterraneous passages of the building , the massive walls and towers were blown up into the air , and the Inquisition of Madrid ceased to exist . " ¦ " Boyle versus Wiseman . " London : Partridge and Co . In appropriate juxtaposition with the former book , appears on our table an account of the infamous persecution of one of his own clergy by Dr . Wiseman . This nefarious case is in the memory of most of our readers , who also recollect the thorough exposure given of the defendant cardinal , in a court which , unfortunately for him ,

had not the fear of the Inquisition before its eyes . Such a trial as this did more to open the eyes of thoughtful Catholics to the perilous position in which property and reputation stood in the clutches of a Church , whose highest ministers can stop witnesses , break promises , slander merit , and , after all , fall hack upon the aid of benighted credulity to reimburse their expenses , than volumes of polemics or whole libraries of controversial divinity . Mr . Boyle is a man of unim-

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1856-09-01, Page 16” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 12 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01091856/page/16/.
  • List
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Title Category Page
THE MARK DEGREE. Article 1
PENCILLINGS FROM THE SKETCH-BOOK OF A MADRAS OFFICER. Article 3
THE MONK OF ST. DUNSTAN. Article 10
A MASONIC BURIAL AT SEA. Article 13
MASONIC BONG. Article 14
TO THE OCEAN. Article 14
REVIEWS OF UEW BOOKS. Article 15
MUSIC. Article 18
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 20
MASONS IN THEIR HOURS OF RELAXATION. Article 29
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 30
METROPOLITAN. Article 31
PROVINCIAL. Article 32
SURREY. Article 46
ROYAL ARCH. Article 50
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 53
MARK MASONRY. Article 53
SCOTLAND. Article 54
COLONIAL. Article 55
INDIA. Article 56
AMERICA. Article 58
SUMMARY OE NEWS FOR AUGUST. Article 61
Obituary. Article 63
NOTICE. Article 64
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Page 16

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

Reviews Of Uew Books.

Inquisitors were different from those of whom we had heard spoken ; but Colonel Delille would not give up so easily . He said to me , ' Let us examine again the floors let us pour water upon them , and we shall see if it does not run through some part . ' The flags of marble were large and quite smooth . After we had poured the water , to the great displeasure of the Inquisitors , we examined all the interstices , to see if any oozed through . Yery soon Colonel Delille cried out that

he found what he sought for . In the joinings of a flag the water disappeared very quickly , as if there was an empty space beneath . Officers and men set to work to raise the flag , whilst the priests cried out against the desecration of their beautiful and holy house . A soldier struck a spring with the butt-end of his musket , which disclosed a flight of steps . I took a lighted taper , four feet long , from a table , in order to explore our discovery , but was stopped by one of the Inquisitors , who gently placed his hand upon my arm , * My son / said he , with a devout air , '6

' you ought not to touch that taper ; it is holy . ' Well , ' I replied , I require a holy light to fathom iniquity . ' I descended the steps , which were under a ceiling without any opening except the trap-door . Arrived at the bottom , we entered into a vast square room , called the Hall of Judgment . In the middle was a block of stone , upon which was fixed a chair for the accused . On one side of the room was another seat , more elevated , for the Inquisitor-General , called the Throne of Judgment ; and there were lower seats for the fathers . From this chamber we

passed to the right , and found small cells extending the whole length of the edifice . But what a spectacle presented itself to our eyes ! How the beneficent religion of the Saviour had been outraged by its professors ! These cells served as dungeons , where the victims of the Inquisition were immured , until death relieved them from their sufferings . Their bodies were left there to decompose , and that the pestilential smell might not incommode the Inquisitors , ventilators were made to carrv it off . In the cells we found the remains of some who had

died recently , whilst in others we found only skeletons , chained to the floor . In others we found living victims of all ages and both sexes , —young men and young women , and old men up to the age of seventy , but all as naked as the day they were born . Our soldiers first busied themselves to free these captives from their chains , and then took off part of their clothes to cover them . After having visited all the cells , and opened the prison-doors of those who yet lived , we went to visit another chamber on the left . There we found all the instruments of torture

that the genius of men or demons could invent . At this sight , the fury of our soldiers could not longer be contained , —they cried out that every one of these Inquisitors , monks and soldiers , should undergo the torture . We did not attempt to prevent them , and they immediately commenced the work upon the persons of the fathers . I saw them employ four kinds of torture , and then withdrew from the frightful scene , which lasted as long as there was a single individual in that antechamber of hell upon whom the soldiers could wreak their vengeance . When the victims of the Inquisition could be brought without danger from their prison

into the light of day , the news of their delivery spread abroad ; and those from whom the Holy Office had torn their relations or friends came to see if there was any hope to find them alive . About one hundred persons were rescued from their living tombs , and restored to their families . Many found a son or a daughter , a brother or a sister . Some found no one . A large quantity of powder was placed in the subterraneous passages of the building , the massive walls and towers were blown up into the air , and the Inquisition of Madrid ceased to exist . " ¦ " Boyle versus Wiseman . " London : Partridge and Co . In appropriate juxtaposition with the former book , appears on our table an account of the infamous persecution of one of his own clergy by Dr . Wiseman . This nefarious case is in the memory of most of our readers , who also recollect the thorough exposure given of the defendant cardinal , in a court which , unfortunately for him ,

had not the fear of the Inquisition before its eyes . Such a trial as this did more to open the eyes of thoughtful Catholics to the perilous position in which property and reputation stood in the clutches of a Church , whose highest ministers can stop witnesses , break promises , slander merit , and , after all , fall hack upon the aid of benighted credulity to reimburse their expenses , than volumes of polemics or whole libraries of controversial divinity . Mr . Boyle is a man of unim-

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