Anne, Queen, 320, 321, 339. Arlington, Lord, 64. Arran, James, Earl of, 231. Aubrey, William, 319, 335.
Baltimore, Lord, 167, 186, 198,
205, 310. Banks, John, 343.
Barclay, Robert, visits Germany with Penn, 125, et seq.; his death, 252; his "Apology," 252; his friendship for Penn, 253.
Baxter, Richard, 110. Beaven, Thomas, 283. Berkeley, Lord, 116. Bishops, The Seven, 239. Brent, 220.
Brouncker, Viscount, 41. Buckingham, Duke of, 213. Burnet, Bishop, 216, 230. Burroughs, Edward, 26. Byllinge, Edward, 116-118.
Callowhill, Hannah, see Hannah Penn.
Callowhill, Thomas, 332, 348. Carolina, 119.
Carteret, Sir George, 116. Charles I., 341.
Charles II., his court, 38; his feeling towards Quakers, 104, 121; his death, 206.
with severity by his parents,
Evans, General, 325, 328-331.
Fagg, Sir John, 158. Faldo, John, 110.
Falkenstein, Countess of, 130,
Farmer, Anthony, 235.
Fenwick, John, 116-118. Fletcher, Colonel, 270. Ford, 331-333.
Fox, George, 19; his principles, 21-23; his converts, 26; at Oxford, 33; in London, 38; meets Penn at Bristol, 102; sent to Worcester gaol, 103; refuses to accept a pardon, 104; efforts for his release, 105; liberated, 106; visits Germany with Penn, 125, et seq.; ground allotted to him at Philadelphia, 189; his death, 252,254; Penn's sketch of him, 278.
Fox, Margaret, 105, 195, 201, 254.
Fuller, William, 255, 260, 280. Furly, Benjamin, 125.
Gaunt, Elizabeth, 216. Godfrey, Sir Edmondbury, 151. Goodwin, Dr. Thomas, 15. Goreing, Captain, 159.
Gratton, John, 281.
Hannan, Ephraim, 183. Harley, 322.
Hartsfielder, Jurian, 183.
Hasbert, Dr., 135. Henry, Philip, 7.
Hewling, Hannah, 222. Hicks, Thomas, 108. Hornes, Countess of, 123. Hough, Dr., 235-238. Howe, John, at Utrecht, 232.
James II., his accession, 206; partiality for Penn, 207, 223; his unpopularity, 209, 214; policy, 229; quarrel with Magdalen College, 233-238; his Declaration of Indulgence, and resistance of seven bishops, 239; his flight, 247; efforts for his restoration, 271.
Jeffreys, Judge, 215. Jenkyns, Secretary, 166. Jennings, Governor, 303.
Keith, George, visits Germany with Penn, 125; change in his opinions, 267; disowned by Quakers, 286. Kidder, Dr., 283. Kiffin, William, 222–224.
Labadie, J. de, 134.
Lambert, Lady, 66. Lloyd, Thomas, 200. Locke, John, 15, 208; his scheme
for colonising Carolina, 119, 183; his confidence in Penn, 262.
Loe, Thomas, 33, 43, 45, 54, 91, 343. Logan, James, 294, 301, 313, 326-332, 335, 358.
Lomboll, William, 357. Lower, Thomas, 270. Lowther, 260.
Macaulay, Lord, 218-222, 238. Mackintosh, Sir James, 217, 218. Malane, Joanna Eleonora de, 129. Markham, William, 171, 184, 266, 298. Maryland, 186.
Masters, William, 318. Mastricht, Dr., 130, 131. Moll, John, 183.
Monk, Duke of Albemarle, 64. Monmouth, Duke of, his re- bellion, 214.
More, Henry, 28, 110. Morley, 15, 33.
Mysticism, 18-30.
Naylor, James, 26-28. New Jersey, 116, 120,122,163,349. Norris, Isaac, 304, 336, 345.
Ormond, Duke of, 42. Orrery, Earl of, 49. Owen, Dr. John, 14, 15.
Parker, Bishop of Oxford, 235. Pastorius, Francis Daniel, 297. Pearson, 184.
Pelham, Sir John, 158. Penn, George, 11-12. Penn, Giles, I.
Penn, Gulielma, see Gulielma Pennington.
Penn, Hannah, second wife of
Penn, 285, 294, 351, 354, 358; her character, 302, 304. Penn, Letitia, 285, 286, 294, 318, 335.
Penn, Springett, 276, 285. Penn, William, Admiral, early life, 1; made Admiral, 8; his troubles, 9, 11, 12; visits Ireland, 13; knighted, 14; displeased with his son, 37, 50-54; sails to meet the Dutch, 41; in Ireland, 44; a royal favourite, favourite, 64; im- peached, 65; reconciled to his son, 67; his death, 73-75. Penn, William, his birth, 2; youth, 3-9; at Oxford, 14; his conversion, 34, 43-47; hears Loe preach, 34; leaves college, 36; sent to France, 38; at Saumur, 39; in Italy, 40; a student at Lincoln's Inn, 41; in Ireland, 42-47, 66; taken prisoner, 48; liber- ated, 50; displeasure of his father, 50-54; becomes a minister, 54; his publications, 55, 57, 59, 61-63, 76, 112-115, 150, 152, 154, 160, 213, 263- 265, 272-275, 277, 282, 286, 323, 341; controversy with Vincent, 56; accused of heresy, 58; taken to the Tower, 59; released, 64; re- conciled to his father, 67; again arrested, 68; extra- ordinary trial, 68-72; liber- ated, 73; discussion with Baptist ministers, 75, 109;
again arrested, 78; sent to Newgate, 80; his intimacy with Isaac Pennington, 88, 91; meets Guli Pennington, 98; engaged, 98, 100; married, 101; settles at Rickmans- worth, ib.; meets Fox at Bristol, 102; attempts to pro- cure release of Fox from prison, 104; his letters to Fox, 105, 106, 109; address to Friends abroad, 107; his de- bate with Faldo, 110; with Baxter, 111; his sympathy with sufferers in Scotland, 115; settles a dispute con- nected with America, 116; trustee for New Jersey, 118; his scheme for governing the colony, 119; removes to Worminghurst, 122; visits Germany, 123, 125–143 ; letter to the Princess Palatine, 123; his home at Worminghurst, 143; visits Bristol, 146; sup- ports Quakers' petition, 147- 150; his style of writing, 154; takes part in electioneering contest, 155; his friendship for Algernon Sidney, 156; property left him by his father, 162; attempts to get a grant of land in America, 163; his petition, 165; charter signed, 169; his farsightedness and disinterestedness, 172; bene- volence, 173; activity, 175; letter to Sidney, 177; death of his mother, 179; voyage to
America, 183; holds a court at Chester, ib.; visits New York, 184; visits Maryland, 187; first arrival at Phila- delphia, ib.; his house, 189; his treaty with the Indians, 190; letters, 192; account of Philadelphia, 196-198; return to England, 200; letter to Margaret Fox, 203; charges against him, 204; his parti- ality to James II., 207, 216; accused of being a Papist and Jesuit, 209, 245, 270; removes to Kensington, 208; procures liberation of Quakers from gaol, ib.; private conferences with the king, ib.; his corres- pondence with Tillotson, 211- 213; accused of bargaining for the ransom of Taunton maids 217-222; letters, 224-229; visits Prince of Orange at the Hague, 229; his policy, 230; meets Burnet, ib.; his efforts on behalf of Sir Robert Stuart, 231; in Holland, 232; goes to Germany, ib.; returns home, 233; takes part in quarrel between the king and Mag- dalen College, 233-238; his position with regard to king's Declaration of Indulgence, 239-243; unpopularity, 245; accusations against him, ib; summoned to appear before the Council, 247; gratitude to James, 248; examined by Privy Council, 250; appre-
hended and imprisoned, 251; loss of his friends Barclay and Fox, 252-255; his affairs in America, 256-258, 265; in retirement, 259; accused of taking part in Jacobite conspiracy, 260; vindicates his character, 262; goes to America, ib.; deprived of the government of Phila- delphia, 269; blamed by his friends, 270; establishes his innocence before the Council,
272; set at liberty, 275; death of his wife, 276; rein- stated in the governorship of Pennsylvania, 279; travels in service of religion, 280, 283, 289, 340; his second marriage, 285; death of his son, ib.; interview with Peter the Great, 287; removes to Bristol, 288; visits Ireland, 289; revisits America, 292, 294; birth of a son, 297; calls meetings of the Assembly, 298, 308, 314, 337; laws passed, 300, 307, 338; removes to a new house, 300; averse to slavery, 305, 306; his intercourse with Indians, 308, 311-313; preaches, 309; visits East Jersey, 310; returns to Eng- land with his family, 318, 320; presents Queen Anne with an address from the Quakers, 322; tidings from America, 324-326; troubles occasioned by his son, 328-
331; deceived by his steward Ford, 331; imprisoned, 332; liberated, 334; other troubles, 335; his address to "old Friends,"336; his government, 338; removals, 339; intimacy with Whitelocke, 341; other friendships, 343; his intended resignation of proprietorship of Pennsylvania, 345-349; ill health, 347-349, 351; death, 354.
Penn, William, son of the
Governor, 285, 288; visits America, 328; his conduct, 329; returns home, 330. Penne, George, 218-222. Pennington, Gulielma, or Guli, 94; her character, 96, 100; en- gaged to Penn, 98; her mar- riage, 101; her letters to Margaret Fox, 195, 201; ill- ness, 270; death, 276. Pennington, Isaac, his spiritual life, 89; his imprisonment, 91, 101; intimacy with Penn, 91; liberation from prison, IOI; publication of his works, 160.
Pennington, Mary, her marriage, 91; her first husband, 94; her death, 194. Pennsylvania, 170, 176, 265, 294, 296, 338, 345-351. Pepys, Samuel, extracts from his diary, 41, 59, 65, 179. Peter the Great, 287. Philadelphia, founding of, 182, et seq.; the great law passed
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