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  • March 1, 1856
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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, March 1, 1856: Page 12

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to wish for theijfl . A crafty female , employed by the government ^ was sent to the president to procure some drops for , as she pretended , a tyrannical husband . By these means the whole society was arrested ; and all of them , except the fortune-teller , by name Hieronyma Spara , confessed before being put to the torture .

" Where are now , " exclaimed she , " the Eoman princes , knights , and barons , who on so many occasions promised me their protection Where are the ladies who assured me of their friendship ! Where are my children , whom I have placed in such distinguished situations ! "

In order to deter others from like crimes , Gratiosa , the assistant of Spara , three other women , and Spara herself , who , up to the last , retained a hope of aid , were hanged in public . Some were executed in the same way months afterwards ; others were whipped , and the rest banished . This Spara was a Sicilian , and learnt the art from Tophana , at Palermo .

About the year 1670 , great excitement was produced in Prance by the art of poisoning . Mary Margaret d ' Aubray , daughter of the lieutenant-civil Dreux d'Aubray , was , in the year 1651 , married to the Marquis de Brinvilliers , son of Q-obelin , president of the Chamber of Accounts , who was worth thirty thousand livres a year , and to whom she brought a portion of two hundred thousand . He was a

colonel of horse in the regiment of Normandy , and during the course of his campaigns , became acquainted with one Grodin de Ste . Croix , a young man of distinguished family , then captain of that regiment of troops . Being a needy adventurer , the officer became a frequent visitor at the house of the marquis , and in a short time began to pay his addresses to the marchioness , who lost her husband , after she had helped to squander his large fortune . Her conduct , when newly a

widow , gave rise to so much uneasiness in her father , that he had Ste . Croix arrested by lettre de cachet , and thrown into the Bastille . While here , the young man became acquainted with an Italian , named Exili , from whom he learnt the art of making poison . In this he instructed the marchioness , who , when she acquired the skill , assumed the habit of a nun , distributed food to the poor , visited the hospitals , and gave the sick medicine , in order to try the strength of her poisons . By the force of bribes , she induced La Chaussee ,

Ste . Croix ' s servant , to poison her father , into whose service she got him introduced , and her brother : the former it took ten doses to kill ; the son died sooner . The daughter , Mademoiselle Aubray , could not be poisoned , owing to her great vigilance , and a suspicion she had that her father and brother had been poisoned .

The way in which her villany was detected is curious in the extreme . Ste . Croix , when preparing poison , usually wore a glass mask ; but this dropping off once by accident , he was suifocated and found dead in his laboratory . On his effects being searched by order of the government , there was found a small casket , to which Ste . Croix had affixed a written request that after his death it might be delivered to the Marchioness de Brinvilliers , or in case she should not

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1856-03-01, Page 12” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/frm_01031856/page/12/.
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Title Category Page
FICTION AND FACT. Article 1
NOTES OF A YACHT'S CRUISE TO BALAKLAVA. Article 4
SECEET POISONS. Article 10
CASE OF THE CARNATIC STIPENDIARIES. Article 14
SATURDAY HALF-HOLIDAYS, AND THE BETTER OBSERVANCE OF THE LORD'S DAY. Article 15
ADDRESS Article 17
TO THE EDITOR 0£ THE FREEMASONS MAGAZINE. Article 24
REVIEWS OF NEW BOOKS. Article 26
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 34
THE BOYS' SCHOOL. Article 35
PROVINCIAL GRAND OFFICERS. Article 36
GRAND LODGE OF CANADA. Article 36
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 39
METROPOLITAN. Article 39
INSTRUCTION. Article 48
PROVINCIAL. Article 49
ROYAL ABCH. Article 65
THE MARK DEGREE. Article 68
THE ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 68
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 68
SCOTLAND Article 69
FRANCE. Article 70
PRUSSIA. Article 70
COLONIAL. Article 71
INDIA. Article 71
AMERICA. Article 73
SUMMARY OF NEWS FOR FEBRUARY. Article 74
0bituary. Article 77
NOTICE. Article 79
TO COEEESPONDENTS. Article 79
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Untitled Article

to wish for theijfl . A crafty female , employed by the government ^ was sent to the president to procure some drops for , as she pretended , a tyrannical husband . By these means the whole society was arrested ; and all of them , except the fortune-teller , by name Hieronyma Spara , confessed before being put to the torture .

" Where are now , " exclaimed she , " the Eoman princes , knights , and barons , who on so many occasions promised me their protection Where are the ladies who assured me of their friendship ! Where are my children , whom I have placed in such distinguished situations ! "

In order to deter others from like crimes , Gratiosa , the assistant of Spara , three other women , and Spara herself , who , up to the last , retained a hope of aid , were hanged in public . Some were executed in the same way months afterwards ; others were whipped , and the rest banished . This Spara was a Sicilian , and learnt the art from Tophana , at Palermo .

About the year 1670 , great excitement was produced in Prance by the art of poisoning . Mary Margaret d ' Aubray , daughter of the lieutenant-civil Dreux d'Aubray , was , in the year 1651 , married to the Marquis de Brinvilliers , son of Q-obelin , president of the Chamber of Accounts , who was worth thirty thousand livres a year , and to whom she brought a portion of two hundred thousand . He was a

colonel of horse in the regiment of Normandy , and during the course of his campaigns , became acquainted with one Grodin de Ste . Croix , a young man of distinguished family , then captain of that regiment of troops . Being a needy adventurer , the officer became a frequent visitor at the house of the marquis , and in a short time began to pay his addresses to the marchioness , who lost her husband , after she had helped to squander his large fortune . Her conduct , when newly a

widow , gave rise to so much uneasiness in her father , that he had Ste . Croix arrested by lettre de cachet , and thrown into the Bastille . While here , the young man became acquainted with an Italian , named Exili , from whom he learnt the art of making poison . In this he instructed the marchioness , who , when she acquired the skill , assumed the habit of a nun , distributed food to the poor , visited the hospitals , and gave the sick medicine , in order to try the strength of her poisons . By the force of bribes , she induced La Chaussee ,

Ste . Croix ' s servant , to poison her father , into whose service she got him introduced , and her brother : the former it took ten doses to kill ; the son died sooner . The daughter , Mademoiselle Aubray , could not be poisoned , owing to her great vigilance , and a suspicion she had that her father and brother had been poisoned .

The way in which her villany was detected is curious in the extreme . Ste . Croix , when preparing poison , usually wore a glass mask ; but this dropping off once by accident , he was suifocated and found dead in his laboratory . On his effects being searched by order of the government , there was found a small casket , to which Ste . Croix had affixed a written request that after his death it might be delivered to the Marchioness de Brinvilliers , or in case she should not

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