"I never saw an ugly thing in my life: for let the form of an object be what it may, - light, shade, and perspective will always make it beautiful." -- John Constable
John Constable (alias Lacey; pen-name Clerophilus Alethes) (born in Lincolnshire, 10 November 1676 or 1678; died 28 March 1743) was an English Jesuit controversial writer.
the Abbé Courayer (1681—1776; Dict. Nat. Biog. XII, 328) who championed Anglican orders, came over to England in 1728, was lionized, and eventually buried in the cloisters of Westminster; and
Charles Dodd vere Hugh Tootell, who wrote, Constable maintained, with a prejudice against Jesuits.
The chief writings of Constable are:
"Remarks on Courayer's Book in Defense of English Ordinations, wherein their invalidity is fully proved", an answer to Courayer's "Dissertations" of 1723;
"The Stratagem Discovered to show that Courayer writes 'Booty', and is only a sham defender of these ordinations", by "Clerophilus Alethes" (8vo, 1729), against Joseph Trapp, The Church of England Defended Against the Calumnies and False Reasoning of the Church of Rome (1727):
"Doctrine of Antiquity concerning the Eucharist" by "Clerophilus Alethes" (8vo, 1736);
"Specimen of Amendments proposed to the Compiler of 'The Church History of England'", by "Clerophilus Alethes" (12mo, 1741);
"Advice to the Author of 'The Church History of England'", manuscript at Stonyhurst.
Joseph Gillow enumerates a few other writings by Constable.