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Updated: June 1, 2025
And, honest frend, thou knowst and darest, I hope, Believe me I will see thee payd for all. Jay. Yes, my good Lady. Loe you, sir, you see Still how my care provides your good: you may Suppose the Governours humanity Takes care for you in this, too. Pike. Excellent Ladye I doe now beleive Virtue and weomen are growne frends againe. Enter Don John. Jo. What magicall Illusion's this? 'tis she!
Pennington's Quakerism, together with the sufferings which it brought upon him, had made him known to Penn. It was to him that Penn had written, three years before, to describe the death of Thomas Loe.
He felt that he could never afterwards doubt the existence of God nor question the possibility of the soul's access to Him. It was at Oxford that the boy's path crossed that of the Quaker for the second time. When, as a lad of sixteen, William Penn went up to the University, he found to his surprise that Oxford was the home of Thomas Loe.
Dorothy's one and only desire, of course, was to see John, but that desire for a time seemed impossible of accomplishment. Elizabeth, Cecil, Leicester, and Sir William St. Loe were in secret consultation many times during three or four days and nights.
Then he led him to the stone, where there was just room enough for two that loved each other, and they sat down together. The laird put his hand on his son's knee, as, when a boy, Cosmo used to put his on his father's. "Are ye the same, Cosmo?" he asked. "Are ye my ain bairn?" "Father," returned Cosmo, "gien it be possible, I loe ye mair nor ever.
"I recognize them by the light of their flambeaux. They are entering the gate at the dove-cote." A part of the queen's guard had been quartered in the village of Bakewell. Dorothy stood at the window for a moment and said: "The other guards are here under our window and are ready to march to Rutland. There is Lord Cecil, and Sir William St. Loe, and Malcolm, and there is my father.
While Loe was preaching and Penn was listening, Fox was writing to Josiah Cole, a Quaker who was then in America, asking him to confer with the chiefs of the Susquehanna Indians. This plan Loe revealed to his student congregation. It appealed to Penn. He had an instinctive appreciation of large ideas, and an imagination and confidence which made him eager to undertake their execution.
Wilmot W. W. glass-cutter, Temple. White William, carpenter, St. Paul. Wipperman Christopher, baker, St. St. Wilson William, Accomptant, St. Paul. Ware George, cordwainer, St. St. Michael. Woodland William, turner, St. St. Waters Benjamin, wine-hooper, St. Philip. Wood John, clerk, Newton St. Loe. Young George, cutler, St. Philip. Yearbury R. A. cordwainer, Frome.
He had not been long in residence, when he received, from the preaching of Thomas Loe, his first bias toward the doctrines of the Quakers; and in conjunction with some fellow-students he began to withdraw from attendance on the Established Church, and to hold private prayer-meetings.
Soon after his expulsion from Oxford, he was appointed Victualler of the Squadron lying off Kinsale, and was authorized to reside at, and manage, his father's Irish estate. It was whilst he was thus engaged that Thomas Loe re-visited Cork. Penn, of course, attended the meetings.
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