PEN— PENGERSICK entrenchments here, one of which, on the summit of the park, has three ramparts. Pendarves (2 m. S.E. of Camborne) is a settlement that sprang into existence through the enterprise of the late E. W. W. Pendarves ; it consists of a granite mansion with collection of pictures and minerals, a new church on the site of an old one, schools and dwelling-houses, all erected in the middle of the nineteenth century. In the park is the Pendarves Quoit, a cromlech. Pendcoi (7 m. N.W. of Penzance) was the birthplace of the antiquary. Dr. Borlase (1696); the house is now a farm. The same name applies to the cove, with its blend of granite and slate, and to the village. The church is a model of lona Cathedral, being designed as such by the Rev. R. Aitken, the revivalist, who became first incumbent of his own church. The granite was both wrought and given free. Pendeen Vau is one of the singular caverned passages or fogous rather common in Cornwall. Pendcnnis. (See Falmouth.) Pengersick (5 m. E. of Marazion) is the picturesque remains of a castle built in the reign of Henry VIII. by a fugitive from justice named Millaton. Strangely enough, a number of ancient myths have clustered around the memory of this Millaton — ^just as popular fancy endowed a modern land-steward with all the folklore of Tregeagle. Millaton appears to have committed a murder in London, and 205