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    Article MEMOIRS OF THE FREEMASONS OF NAPLES. ← Page 2 of 2
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Memoirs Of The Freemasons Of Naples.

the condition in which they were compelled to leave their parents , brothers , and distressed children . They were even deprived of the mournful consolation of discoursing with compassionate witnesses on the nature of their misfortunes . Equally concealed from the sig ht of the all-enlivening sun and the commerce of mankind , cruel uncertainty added to the load of their

sorrows . Two days after their imprisonment , a certain merchant of Naples , of the name of Ponsard , discovered the Polander walking very slowly through the street , not seemino- in the least sensible of the treachery he had been

guilty of . This merchant had been invited to the meeting , but unexpected business had prevented him from going . At sight of the traitor be was seized with such indignation , that he rushed into the street , and loaded him publicly with all the epithets his crime deserved ; for he bad been strictly informed of the whole transaction . The Polander endeavoured at first to

soothe Ins rage , denied the fact , and accused him of slander . Encouraged by the power of bis protector , he threatened Ponsard with the galleys , and immediately went to Pallante to inform him of the danger they were in of having their plot discovered . Thus , in an instant was an honest man snatched from the bosom of peace

and security , and forced to change the agreeable sight of a beloved wife and children for the horrid looks of an implacable jailor . Thus did these unfortunate prisoners for some time exist in all the horrors of an uncertain fate : each day , each momentbrought them nearer and neareras thej

-, , thought , to their last fatal doom , when , behold , on the fifth day of their imprisonment , their cars were invaded with the horrid noise of bolts and bars ; their different cells were open , in turn , and the traitor Pallante presented himself to them alternately . He went from one to the otherspoke to tliem with mildnessand

endea-, , voured to inspire them with , courage and fortitude ; he assured them that all that had been done was for their own safety , and that they had nothing more to do than to sign a declaration , intimating that the meeting was

intended merely for the sake of having some diversion with a stranger . He farther exhorted them to place entire confidence in him , and that ho could assure them that the affair would end well . That the King was very young , and easy to be prevailed upon ; that all the prisoners separately had taken bis advice ; that it was the only means of safety to themselves ; andto conclude

, , lie gave them bis word of honour that they should be all set at liberty the next dny . Such were the artful resolutions of Pallante . He took advantage of the terror they were in , and inspired them with a ray of hope , endeavouring by these means to deprive them of arms to defend their own cause . His

conduct iu regard to the youth Giambarba was quite different , as appeared iu the sequel by bis depositions in a court of justice . Pallante began at first with mildness to reproach him for so easily suffering himself to be seduced by the Freemasons . He was thoroughly convinced , he said , that that society was addicted ' to all

manner of vice , especially one in particular , that lie , Giambarba , was by that time too well acquainted with : "How was it possible , " added he , "that you should suffer yourself to he corrupted in that manner ? " Giambarba protested , in the strongest -manner , never to have had tho least connection with the Freemasonsand that

, he was entirely ignorant of the crime laid to his charge . Pallante doubted the truth of what he said , and threatened to stri p him if lie did not confess . The youth , recollecting the insinuating behaviour of this man " a few days before , when he took him . into his coach , a deadly

paleness overspread bis countenance , and he felt as if Ins blood were frozen in bis veins ; he no longer beheld Pallante in the light of a respectable magistrate , and by the resistance be made against bis endeavours to stri p him , be obliged the villain at length to honour his innocence and virtue . Giambarba was certainly much to be pitied ; so far from being a Freemasonlie bad not the least

, knowledge of the secrets or regulations of the society , and was even ignorant of the anecdote relating to the wooden ham before mentioned . After Pallante bad obtained the signature of the prisoner , ? , he denounced them to the Council , or the Chamber of Justice ; they obliged them to confirm their

declaration by oath . As they had named the Polander in their depositions , as one about to be admitted into the society , Criscouio , the fiscal judge , an upright and attentive magistrate , asked where he was . Pallante , who did not expect such a question , answered , that the Kingknew it . Criscouio ( who began to suspect some

treachery , especially as Pallante bad not mentioned the informer against the lodge ) added , that was not sufficient , and that it was absolutely necessary the tribunal should be informed of it , and afterwards to make their report to his Majesty : — "The judges , " continued be , " cannot possibly dispense with the appearance of bis man , who is

certainly a very material evidence . We . are told of a baptism , —we ought at least to know the person baptized , and the one who performed that ceremony ; but here we see neither the one nor the other . " Pallante again repeated that be had given an account of the whole transaction to bis Majesty . "Very well" replied

Cris-, couio , " in that ease the King is sole judge ; we have nothing further to do in the affair . " He then asked Bafli , the Greek professor , the name of a Freemason in that language , and was answered , Philanthropist , or a friend of mankind .

hue unexpected questions of Criseonio had sufficiently alarmed Pallante , who was then , though too late , sensible of the faults be bad . committed . In order in some measure to in'epare them , he sent privately to Ponsard , the Frenchman be had caused so unjustly to be imprisoned , and who bad by this time been detained a- month ; he offered to give him proofs of his favoureither b

, y money or interest , on condition of bis declaring himself to he the person who was to have been made a Freemason on the 2 nd of March . Ponsard rejected these proposals with horror , aud flatly refused to render himself an accomplice in such abominable treachery . Pallante did not desistbut made use of flatterypromises

, , , threats—but all in vain—even torments were made use of . Ponsard , having courageously resisted all they could do to him , was at last set at liberty , with strict orders to quit the country immediately . Furious at such unjust treatment , be left Naples , but re-entered the city on the opposite side , and without loss of time went to

the Marquis de Clermont , Ambassador from the French Court , to whom he made a faithful recital of all that had happened to him . The Ambassador immediatel y ordered bis coach , and made bis complaints to the King , and in the sequel supported the cause of Ponsard and the _ Freemasons in general , with so much force , that the societ

y will never forget the obligations they owe to him , and will always remember him with , gratitude and respect . ( To be continued . )

lhe Daily Review is the title of a newspaper about to be commenced at Edinburgh . It is to be of liberal politics , "with no exclusive adherence to any political party . " Mr . Guthrie , of the North . British Agriculturist , is to take- the general superintendence of its columns .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1861-03-02, Page 2” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 8 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_02031861/page/2/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
MEMOIRS OF THE FREEMASONS OF NAPLES. Article 1
STRAY THOUGHTS ON THE ORIGIN AND PROGRESS OF THE FINE ARTS. Article 3
MASTERPIECES OF THE ARCHITECTURE OF DIFFERENT NATIONS. Article 4
SOME OBSERVATIONS IN EGYPT. Article 5
THE GOOD EFFECTS OF FREEMASONRY. Article 6
MASONIC NOTES AND QUERIES. Article 7
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND ART. Article 8
Poetry. Article 9
BONIFAZIO. Article 9
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 9
FERRERS AND IVANHOE LODGE (No. 1081). Article 9
MASONIC BALLS. Article 10
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 11
GRAND LODGE. Article 11
METROPOLITAN. Article 12
PROVINCIAL. Article 12
ROYAL ARCH. Article 13
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 14
IRELAND. Article 14
COLONIAL. Article 16
INDIA. Article 16
Obituary. Article 18
NOTES ON MUSIC AND THE DRAMA. Article 18
THE WEEK. Article 18
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 20
TO CORRESPOONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Memoirs Of The Freemasons Of Naples.

the condition in which they were compelled to leave their parents , brothers , and distressed children . They were even deprived of the mournful consolation of discoursing with compassionate witnesses on the nature of their misfortunes . Equally concealed from the sig ht of the all-enlivening sun and the commerce of mankind , cruel uncertainty added to the load of their

sorrows . Two days after their imprisonment , a certain merchant of Naples , of the name of Ponsard , discovered the Polander walking very slowly through the street , not seemino- in the least sensible of the treachery he had been

guilty of . This merchant had been invited to the meeting , but unexpected business had prevented him from going . At sight of the traitor be was seized with such indignation , that he rushed into the street , and loaded him publicly with all the epithets his crime deserved ; for he bad been strictly informed of the whole transaction . The Polander endeavoured at first to

soothe Ins rage , denied the fact , and accused him of slander . Encouraged by the power of bis protector , he threatened Ponsard with the galleys , and immediately went to Pallante to inform him of the danger they were in of having their plot discovered . Thus , in an instant was an honest man snatched from the bosom of peace

and security , and forced to change the agreeable sight of a beloved wife and children for the horrid looks of an implacable jailor . Thus did these unfortunate prisoners for some time exist in all the horrors of an uncertain fate : each day , each momentbrought them nearer and neareras thej

-, , thought , to their last fatal doom , when , behold , on the fifth day of their imprisonment , their cars were invaded with the horrid noise of bolts and bars ; their different cells were open , in turn , and the traitor Pallante presented himself to them alternately . He went from one to the otherspoke to tliem with mildnessand

endea-, , voured to inspire them with , courage and fortitude ; he assured them that all that had been done was for their own safety , and that they had nothing more to do than to sign a declaration , intimating that the meeting was

intended merely for the sake of having some diversion with a stranger . He farther exhorted them to place entire confidence in him , and that ho could assure them that the affair would end well . That the King was very young , and easy to be prevailed upon ; that all the prisoners separately had taken bis advice ; that it was the only means of safety to themselves ; andto conclude

, , lie gave them bis word of honour that they should be all set at liberty the next dny . Such were the artful resolutions of Pallante . He took advantage of the terror they were in , and inspired them with a ray of hope , endeavouring by these means to deprive them of arms to defend their own cause . His

conduct iu regard to the youth Giambarba was quite different , as appeared iu the sequel by bis depositions in a court of justice . Pallante began at first with mildness to reproach him for so easily suffering himself to be seduced by the Freemasons . He was thoroughly convinced , he said , that that society was addicted ' to all

manner of vice , especially one in particular , that lie , Giambarba , was by that time too well acquainted with : "How was it possible , " added he , "that you should suffer yourself to he corrupted in that manner ? " Giambarba protested , in the strongest -manner , never to have had tho least connection with the Freemasonsand that

, he was entirely ignorant of the crime laid to his charge . Pallante doubted the truth of what he said , and threatened to stri p him if lie did not confess . The youth , recollecting the insinuating behaviour of this man " a few days before , when he took him . into his coach , a deadly

paleness overspread bis countenance , and he felt as if Ins blood were frozen in bis veins ; he no longer beheld Pallante in the light of a respectable magistrate , and by the resistance be made against bis endeavours to stri p him , be obliged the villain at length to honour his innocence and virtue . Giambarba was certainly much to be pitied ; so far from being a Freemasonlie bad not the least

, knowledge of the secrets or regulations of the society , and was even ignorant of the anecdote relating to the wooden ham before mentioned . After Pallante bad obtained the signature of the prisoner , ? , he denounced them to the Council , or the Chamber of Justice ; they obliged them to confirm their

declaration by oath . As they had named the Polander in their depositions , as one about to be admitted into the society , Criscouio , the fiscal judge , an upright and attentive magistrate , asked where he was . Pallante , who did not expect such a question , answered , that the Kingknew it . Criscouio ( who began to suspect some

treachery , especially as Pallante bad not mentioned the informer against the lodge ) added , that was not sufficient , and that it was absolutely necessary the tribunal should be informed of it , and afterwards to make their report to his Majesty : — "The judges , " continued be , " cannot possibly dispense with the appearance of bis man , who is

certainly a very material evidence . We . are told of a baptism , —we ought at least to know the person baptized , and the one who performed that ceremony ; but here we see neither the one nor the other . " Pallante again repeated that be had given an account of the whole transaction to bis Majesty . "Very well" replied

Cris-, couio , " in that ease the King is sole judge ; we have nothing further to do in the affair . " He then asked Bafli , the Greek professor , the name of a Freemason in that language , and was answered , Philanthropist , or a friend of mankind .

hue unexpected questions of Criseonio had sufficiently alarmed Pallante , who was then , though too late , sensible of the faults be bad . committed . In order in some measure to in'epare them , he sent privately to Ponsard , the Frenchman be had caused so unjustly to be imprisoned , and who bad by this time been detained a- month ; he offered to give him proofs of his favoureither b

, y money or interest , on condition of bis declaring himself to he the person who was to have been made a Freemason on the 2 nd of March . Ponsard rejected these proposals with horror , aud flatly refused to render himself an accomplice in such abominable treachery . Pallante did not desistbut made use of flatterypromises

, , , threats—but all in vain—even torments were made use of . Ponsard , having courageously resisted all they could do to him , was at last set at liberty , with strict orders to quit the country immediately . Furious at such unjust treatment , be left Naples , but re-entered the city on the opposite side , and without loss of time went to

the Marquis de Clermont , Ambassador from the French Court , to whom he made a faithful recital of all that had happened to him . The Ambassador immediatel y ordered bis coach , and made bis complaints to the King , and in the sequel supported the cause of Ponsard and the _ Freemasons in general , with so much force , that the societ

y will never forget the obligations they owe to him , and will always remember him with , gratitude and respect . ( To be continued . )

lhe Daily Review is the title of a newspaper about to be commenced at Edinburgh . It is to be of liberal politics , "with no exclusive adherence to any political party . " Mr . Guthrie , of the North . British Agriculturist , is to take- the general superintendence of its columns .

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