Page:Encyclopædia Britannica, Ninth Edition, v. 18.djvu/514

 492 X P E X when they get the chance) to ^xcite the wrath of their murderers, and this only brings upon them greater destruc tion, so that the interest of nearly all the numerous accounts of these &quot;rookeries&quot; is spoilt by the disgusting details of the brutal havoc perpetrated upon them. The SpheniscidsR have been divided into at least eight genera, but three, or at most four, seem to be all that are needed, and three can be well distinguished, as pointed out by Dr Cones in the Philadelphia Proceedings for 1872 (pp. 170-212), by anatomical as well as by external characters. They are (1) Aptenodytes, easily recognized by its long and thin bill, slightly decurved, from which Pyc/oscelis, as Prof. Watson has shewn, is hardly distinguishable ; (2) Eudi/jitcs, in which the bill is much shorter and somewhat broad ; and (3) Spheniscm, in which the shortish bill is compressed and the maxilla ends in a conspicuous hook. Aptenodytes contains the largest species, among them those known as the &quot;Emperor &quot; and &quot;King &quot; Penguins, A. patagonica and A. longirostris. 1 Three others belong also to this genus, if Pygoscelis be not recognized, but they seem not to require any particular remark. Eudyptes, containing the crested Penguins, known to sailors as &quot;Rock-hoppers&quot; or &quot;Maca ronis,&quot; would appear to have five species, and Spheniscus four, among which S. mendiculus, which occurs in the Galapagos, and therefore has the most northerly range of the whole group, alone needs notice here. The generic and specific distribution of the Penguins is the subject of an excellent essay by Prof. Alphonse Milne -Edwards in the Annales des Sciences Naturelles for 1880 (vol. ix. art. 9, pp. 23-81), of which there is a German translation in the Mittheilungen of the Ornithological Union of Vienna for 1883 (pp. 179-186, 210-222, 238-241). (A. N.) PEXN, WILLIAM (1644-1718), the Quaker, was the son of Admiral William Penn and Margaret Jasper, a Dutch lady, and was born at Tower Hill, London, on 14th October 1644. During his father s absence at sea he lived at Wansteacl in Essex, and went to school at Chigwell close by, in which places he was brought under strong Puritan influences. Like many children of sensitive temperament, he had times of spiritual excitement ; when about twelve he was &quot;suddenly surprised with an inward comfort, and, as he thought, an external glory in the room, which gave rise to religious emotions, during which he had the strongest conviction of the being of a God, and that the soul of man was capable of enjoying communication with Him. He believed also that the seal of divinity had been put upon him at this moment, or that he had been awakened or called upon to a holy life.&quot; It would indeed have been unnatural if a mind so disposed had not, when the time came, seized with avidity upon the distinctive doctrine of the Friends, that of the &quot; inward light.&quot; Upon the death of Cromwell, Penn s father, who, like Monk, was purely an adventurer, and had served the Pro tector because there was no other career open, and who, according to Clarendon, had previously offered to bring over the fleet to Charles, remained with his family on the Irish estates which Cromwell had given him, of the value of 300 a year. On the deposition of Richard Cromwell he at once declared for the king and went to the court at Holland, where he was received into favour and knighted ; and at the elections for the Convention Parliament he was returned for Weymouth. During these events young Penn studied under a private tutor on Tower Hill until, in October 1660, he was entered as a gentleman commoner at Christ Church. He appears in the same year to have contributed to the Threnodia, a collection of elegies on the death of the young duke of Gloucester. 1 An example, presumably of the former species, weighing 78 lt&amp;gt;, was, according to Dr M Connick (Voyages of Discovery, i. p. 259), obtained by the &quot;Terror&quot; in January 1842. The rigour with which the Anglican statutes Avere revived, and the Puritan heads of colleges supplanted, roused the spirit of resistance at Oxford to the uttermost. With this spirit Penn, who was on familiar terms with John Owen, and who had already fallen under the influ ence of Thomas Loe the Quaker, then at Oxford, actively sympathized. He and others refused to attend chapel and church service, and were fined in consequence. So far did the young enthusiasts proceed in the expression of their hatred to the Anglican regulations that it is said they fell upon the students who were clothed in surplices and violently tore the hated vestments from them. How far his leaving the university resulted from this cannot be clearly ascertained. Anthony Wood has nothing regarding the cause of his leaving, but says that he stayed at Oxford for two years, and that he was noted for proficiency in manly sports. There is no doubt that in January 1662 his father was anxious to remove him to Cambridge, and consulted Pepys on the subject ; and in later years he speaks of being &quot;banished&quot; the college, and of being whipped, beaten, and turned out of doors on his return to his father, in the anger of the latter at his avowed Quakerism. A reconciliation, however, was effected ; and Penn was sent to France to forget this folly. The plan was for a time successful. Penn appears to have entered more or less into the gaieties of the court of Louis XIV., and while there to have become acquainted with Robert Spencer, afterwards earl of Sunderland, and with Dorothy, sister to Algernon Sidney. What, however, is more certain is that he somewhat later placed himself under the tuition of Moses Amyraut, the celebrated president of the Protestant college of Saumur, and at that time the exponent of liberal Calvinism, from whom he gained the patristic knowledge which is so prominent in his controversial writings, and whose example, doubtless, stimulated the tolerant views he already entertained. He afterwards travelled in Italy, returning to England in August 1664, with &quot; a great deal, if not too much, of the vanity of the French garb and affected manner of speech and gait.&quot; - Until the outbreak of the plague Penn was a student of Lincoln s Inn. For a few days also he served on the staff of his father now great captain commander and was by him sent back in April 1665 to Charles with despatches. It will be observed that his letters to his father even at this time are couched in quaintly devout phraseology. Return ing after the naval victory off Lowestoft in June, Admiral Penn found that, probably from the effect upon his mind of the awful visitation of the plague, his son had again become settled in seriousness and Quakerism. To bring him once more to views of life not inconsistent with court preferment, the admiral sent him in February 1666 with introductions to Ormonde s pure but brilliant court in Ireland, and to manage his estate in Cork round Shannan- garry Castle, his title to which was disputed. Penn appears also later in the year to have been &quot; clerk of the cheque at Kinsale, of the castle and fort of which his father had the command. When the mutiny broke out in Carrick- fergus Penn volunteered for service, and acted under Arran so as to gain considerable reputation. The result was that in May 1666 Ormonde offered him his father s company of foot, but, for some unexplained reason, the admiral demurred to this arrangement. It was at this time that the well-known portrait was painted of the great Quaker in a suit of armour; and, strangely enough, it was at this time, too, that the conversion, begun when he was a boy, accord ing to Penn s own account, by Thomas Loe in Ireland, was completed at the same place by the same agency. 3 On 3d September 1667 Penn attended a meeting of - Pepys, 30th August 1664. 3 Webb, The Penns and Penninfjtons, 1867, p. 174.