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CONTENTS

OF

THE

INTRODUCTION.

PART THE FIRST.

The parentage, birth and education of William Penn, with the time
and manner of his embracing the religion of the people called
Quakers, &c.

In the account of the religious fyftem and manners of the Quakers,

are comprehended:

1. The time, motive and manner of their first rife, and becoming

a religious fociety.

2. Their first and chief principle, &c.

3. Their worship and ministry, with fome of their chief and particular

doctrines.

Their other tenets, doctrines, practices and customs, more pecu-

liar to them than to other people, are ranged under the following

heads, viz.

1. Their juflice, veracity and true Chriflian fortitude.

2. Their temperance and moderation.

3. Their charity and loving one another.

4. Under the firft of thefe heads are comprised:

Their difufe of flattering titles, and their not refpecting perfons, &c.

Their ufing the plain and true fpeech of thou and thee, to a fingle

perfon, &c.

Their difufe of the common falutations, &c.

Their non-obfervance of holy-days, faft-days, &c.

Their manner of naming the months, and days of the week, &c.

Their refufing to pay tithes, prief wages, &c.

Their ftrictly paying the government taxes, dues, &c.

Their not fuffering the Negro or flave-trade among them.

Their refusing to fwear on any occafion.

Their fortitude, in valiantly suffering for their teftimony.

6. Under the third head are represented:

Their loving one another, and refraining from law-fuits, among them-
felves.

Their loving enemies, and not fighting, but fuffering, &c.

Their charity to the poor :-With fome conclufions on divers of these
things, from R. Barclay.

7. Their marriages, births, burials and difcipline, from W. Penn; con-
cluded with fome further hints of the temper, and general dispo-
fition of mind, and of the practice of this people, in early time,
from W. Penn, and W. Edmundson.

Further account of the life of William Penn, continued till about the
time of the grant and fettlement of Pennsylvania.

PART THE SECOND.

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A general and comprehenfive view of the rife, princi-
ples, religious fyftem and practice, or manners, of
the people called QUAKERS, who first fettled
the province, under his government.

tory, &c.

THE wifdom of former ages, when tranfmitted, office and in writing, to pofterity, is an ineftimable treasure; ufe of hif but the actions of illuftrious and virtuous perfons, in the fame manner exhibited, is still more beneficial: by the former our judgments are rightly informed, and our minds brought into a proper way of thinking; by the latter we are animated to an imitation; and while the excellency of noble examples is displayed before our understandings, our minds are infpired with a love of virtue. This appears to be the office of hiftory; by which every fucceeding age may avail itself of the wifdom, and, even, of the folly, of the preceding, and become wifer and happier by a proper application. The ough

W. Penn

of wisdom

tude.

this medium when we view the conduct of those great men of antiquity, who have benefited mankind, in their moft effential interefts, they appear frequently to have been actuated by motives, the most difinterested, and attended with a fatisfaction more than human!-Adverfity, which refines men, and renders them more fit to benefit the human race, is a frequent concomitant of worthy minds; and apparent fuccefs doth not always immediately attend noble and just designs:-When a Socrates is put to death, wifdom and truth feem to fuffer; and when an Aristides is exiled, justice appears to be in difgrace. But virtue is its own reward, and depends not on the fluctuating opinions of mortals, nor on the breath of popular applaufe; which is often on the fide of error, and entirely oppofite to the real interefts of its votaries.

An example of true wisdom and fortitude, is an example no lefs confpicuous in the venerable founder of the and forti province of Pennsylvania, the truly great and worthy William Penn, than in many of the celebrated fages and legiflators of former ages; who, in oppofition to the vulgar notions of the times in which they lived, have feemingly fuffered in their own particulars, in order to benefit mankind: this will appear in the following sketch of his life, both with refpect to his religion in joining with the people called Quakers, and likewise in fettling the province itself. In both of which his engagement for the happiness of men was not unattended with a large fhare of that difficulty and oppofition, to which the moft excellent undertakings are generally expofed: but minds of fuch exalted virtue are actuated by motives above mortality, and indisputably are influenced by fomething divine; without which, as Cicero fays, “ there never was a really good and great man.

*

His

*«Gredendum eft neminem virorum bonorum talem fuiffe, nifi adjuvants Deo; nemo unquam fuit vir magnus fine afflatu aliquo divino.'

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ral Penn.

His father, Sir William Penn, was of eminent of his facharacter; and ferved both under the parliament, ther admiand king Charles the fecond, in several of the highest maritime offices.* He was born in Bristol, anno 1621; and married Margaret, daughter of John Fafper, of Rotterdam in Holland, merchant; by Biographia

whom he had his fon William Penn. He was him- Britannica. self the son of captain Giles Penn, several years His defcent conful for the English, in the Mediterranean; and of the Penns of Penns-lodge, in the county of Wilts; and thofe Penns of Penn, in the county of Bucks; and by his mother, from the Gilberts, in the county of Somerset, originally from Yorkshire.

He was addicted from his youth to maritime af- His offices. fairs, and made captain at twenty-one years of age; rear admiral of Ireland, at twenty-three; vice admiral of Ireland, at twenty-five; admiral to the Straits, at twenty-nine; vice admiral of England, at thirty-one; and general in the firft Dutch war, at thirty-two. Whence returning, anno 1655, he was a parliament man for the town of Weymouth; in 1660, he was made commiffioner of the admiralty and navy, governor of the town and fort of Kingsail; vice admiral of Munster, and a member of that provincial council; and anno 1664, he was chofen great captain commander under the Duke of York, in that fignal, and moft evidently fuccefful fight with the Dutch Fleet.

Thus he took leave of the fea, but continued His death. ftill in his other employments, till 1669; at which time, through bodily infirmities, contracted by the

care

* W. Penn, in his printed works, fays further refpecting his father, Admiral Penn;—" He was engaged both under the parliament and king; but not as an actor in the domeftic troubles; his compafs always fteering him to eye a national conc、 ́n, and not inteftine wars. His fervice, therefore, being wholly foreign, he may be truly faid to ferve his country, rather than either of thefe interefts, fo far as they were distinct from tach other."-Again," In the attack on Hifpaniola, his employ was only as general of the fleet; from which the miscarriage did not arise; it was owing to the land forces, over which he had no command.

PENN's Works.

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