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Pilgrim's Progress, by John Bunyan, [1678], at sacred-texts.com




Section I.


The Author's Way Of Sending Forth His Second Part Of The Pilgrim


Go now my little Book, to every place
Where my first Pilgrim has but shewn his Face:
Call at their door; If any say, Who's there?
Then answer thou, Christiana is here.
If they bid thee Come in, then enter thou,
With all thy Boys; and then, as thou know'st how,
Tell who they are, also from whence they came;
Perhaps they'll know them by their looks, or name.
But if they should not, ask them yet again
If formerly they did not entertain
One Christian a Pilgrim? If they say
They did, and was delighted in his Way;
Then let them know that those related were
Unto him, yea, his Wife and Children are.


Tell them that they have left their House and Home,
Are turned Pilgrims, seek a World to come;
That they have met with Hardships in the way:
That they do meet with Troubles night and day;
That they have trod on Serpents, fought with Devils,
Have also overcame a many evils.
Yea, tell them also of the next, who have
Of love to Pilgrimage been stout and brave
Defenders of that Way, and how they still
Refuse this World, to do their Father's will.


Go tell them also of those dainty things,
That Pilgrimage unto the Pilgrim brings.
Let them acquainted be too, how they are
Beloved of their King, under his care;
What goodly Mansions for them he provides,
Tho' they meet with rough Winds and swelling Tides,
How brave a Calm they will enjoy at last,
Who to their Lord, and by his ways hold fast.
Perhaps with heart and hand they will embrace
Thee, as they did my Firstling, and will grace
Thee, and thy fellows, with such cheer and fare,
As shew will they of Pilgrims lovers are.


I Objection


But how if they will not believe of me
That I am truly thine, 'cause some there be
That counterfeit the Pilgrim and his name,
Seek by disguise to seem the very same,
And by that means have wrought themselves into
The hands and houses of I know not who?


Answer


'Tis true, some have of late, to counterfeit
My Pilgrim, to their own my Title set;
Yea others half my Name and Title too
Have stitched to their Book, to make them do;
But yet they by their Features do declare
Themselves not mine to be, whose ere they are.


If such thou meetst with, then thine only way
Before them all is to say out thy say,
In thine own native language, which no man
Now useth, nor with ease dissemble can.
If after all they still of you shall doubt,
Thinking that you like Gipsies go about
In naughty wise the Country to defile,
Or that you seek good people to beguile
With things unwarrantable; send for me,
And I will testifie you Pilgrims be;
Yea, I will testifie that only you
My Pilgrims are; and that alone will do.


2 Objection


But yet perhaps I may inquire for him,
Of those that wish him damned life and limb.
What shall I do, when I at such a door
For Pilgrims ask, and they shall rage the more?


Answer


Fright not thyself my Book, for such Bugbears
Are nothing else but ground for groundless fears:
My Pilgrim's Book has travell'd sea and land,
Yet could I never come to understand
That it was slighted, or turn'd out of door
By any Kingdom, were they rich or poor.


In France and Flanders, where men kill each other,
My Pilgrim is esteem'd a Friend, a Brother.


In Holland too 'tis said, as I am told,
My Pilgrim is with some worth more than Gold.


Highlanders and Wild Irish can agree
My Pilgrim should familiar with them be.


'Tis in New England under such advance,
Receives there so much loving contenance,
As to be trimm'd, new cloth'd, and deck't with Gems,
That it may shew its features and its limbs,
Yet more, so comely doth my pilgrim walk,
That of him thousands daily sing and talk.


If you draw nearer home, it will appear
My Pilgrim knows no ground of shame or fear;
City and Country will him entertain
With Welcome Pilgrim; yea, they can't refrain
From smiling, if my Pilgrim be but by,
Or shews his head in any Company.


Brave Galants do my Pilgrim hug and love,
Esteem it much, yea, value it above
Things of a greater bulk: yea, with delight,
Say my Lark's leg is better than a Kite.


Young Ladies, and young Gentle-women too,
Do no small kindness to my Pilgrim shew;
Their Cabinets, their Bosoms, and their Hearts
My Pilgrim has, 'cause he to them imparts
His pretty riddles in such wholesome strains,
As yield them profit double to their pains
Of reading. Yea, I think I may be bold
To say some prize him far above their Gold.


The very Children that do walk the street,
If they do but my holy Pilgrim meet,
Salute him will, will wish him well, and say,
He is the only Stripling of the Day.


They that have never seen him, yet admire
What they have heard of him, and much desire
To have his company, and hear him tell
Those Pilgrim stories which he knows so well.


Yea, some who did not love him at the first,
But call'd him Fool and Noddy, say they must
Now they have seen and heard him, him commend;
And to those whom they love they do him send.


Wherefore my Second Part, thou need'st not be
Afraid to shew thy Head; none can hurt thee,
That wish but well to him that went before,
'Cause thou com'st after with a second store
Of things as good, as rich, as profitable,
For Young, for Old, for Stagg'ring, and for Stable.


3 Objection


But some there be that say he laughs too loud;
And some do say his Head is in a Cloud.
Some say his Words and Stories are so dark,
They know not how by them to find his mark.


Answer


One may (I think) say, Both his laughs and cries
May well be guess'd at by his watery eyes.
Some things are of that nature as to make
One's Fancie chuckle, while his Heart doth ake,
When Jacob saw his Rachel with the sheep,
He did at the same time both kiss and weep.


Whereas some say, A Cloud is in his Head,
That doth but shew how Wisdom's covered
With its own mantles, and to stir the mind
To a search after what it fain would find:
Things that seem to be hid in words obscure,
Do but the Godly mind the more allure;
To study what those sayings should contain
That speak to us in such a Cloudy strain.


I also know a dark Similitude
Will on the Fancie more itself intrude,
And will stick faster in the Heart and Head,
Than things from Similies not borrowed.


Wherefore my Book, let no discouragement
Hinder thy travels. Behold, thou art sent
To Friends, not foes: to Friends that will give place
To thee, thy Pilgrims and thy words embrace.


Besides, what my first Pilgrim left conceal'd,
Thou my brave Second Pilgrim hast reveal'd;
What Christian left lock't up, and went his way,
Sweet Christiana opens with her Key.


4 Objection


But some love not the method of your first,
Romance they count it, throw't away as dust.
If I should meet with such, what should I say?
Must I slight them as they slight me, or nay?


Answer


My Christiana, if with such thou meet,
By all means in all loving wise them greet;
Render them not reviling for revile;
But if they frown, I prithee on them smile;
Perhaps 'tis Nature, or some ill report,
Has made them thus despise, or thus retort.


Some love no Cheese, some love no Fish, and some
Love not their Friends, nor their own House or Home;
Some start at Pig, slight Chicken, love not Fowl,
More than they love a Cuckow or an Owl;
Leave such, my Christiana, to their choice,
And seek those who to find thee will rejoice;
By no means strive, but in all humble wise
Present thee to them in thy Pilgrim's guise.


Go then my little Book, and shew to all
That entertain, and bid thee welcome shall,
What thou shalt keep close, shut up from the rest,
And wish what thou shalt shew them may be blest
To them for good, may make them chuse to be
Pilgrims better by far than thee or me.


Go then, I say, tell all men who thou art,
Say, I am Christiana, and my part
Is now, with my four Sons, to tell you what
It is for men to take a Pilgrim's lot:


Go also tell them who and what they be,
That now do go on Pilgrimage with thee;
Say, Here's my Neighbor Mercy, she is one
That has long time with me a Pilgrim gone.
Come see her in her Virgin Face, and learn
'Twixt Idle ones and Pilgrims to discern.
Yea, let young Damsels learn of her to prize
The World which is to come, in any wise.
When little tripping Maidens follow God,
And leave old doting Sinners to his Rod;
'Tis like those days wherein the young ones cried
Hosanah, to whom old ones did deride.


Next tell them of old Honest, who you found
With his white hairs treading the Pilgrim's ground.
Yea, tell them how plain-hearted this man was,
How after his good Lord he bare his Cross;
Perhaps with some grey Head this may prevail
With Christ to fall in Love, and Sin bewail.


Tell them also how Master Fearing went
On Pilgrimage, and how the time he spent
In Solitariness, with Fears and Cries,
And how at last he won the joyful Prize.
He was a good man, though much down in Spirit,
He is a good man, and doth Life inherit.


Tell them of Master Feeble-mind also,
Who not before, but still behind would go;
Shew them also how he had like been slain,
And how one Great-heart did his life regain.
This man was true of Heart, tho' weak in Grace,
One might true Godliness read in his Face.
Then tell them of Master Ready-to-halt,
A man with Crutches, but much without fault;
Tell them how Master Feeble-mind and he
Did love, and in opinions much agree.
And let all know, tho' weakness was their chance,
Yet sometimes one could sing, the other dance.


Forget not Master Valiant-for-the-truth,
That Man of courage, though a very Youth.
Tell every one his Spirit was so stout,
No man could ever make him face about,
And how Great-heart and he could not forbear,
But put-down Doubting Castle, slay Despair.


Overlook not Master Despondancie,
Nor Much-afraid, his daughter, tho' they lie
Under such Mantles as may make them look
(With some) as if their God had them forsook.
They softly went, but sure, and at the end
Found that the Lord of Pilgrims was their Friend.
When thou hast told the world of all these things,
Then turn about, my Book, and touch these strings,
Which if but touched, will such Musick make,
They'll make a Cripple-dance, a Giant quake.


These Riddles that lie couch't within thy breast,
Freely propound, expound; and for the rest
Of thy mysterious lines, let them remain
For those whose nimble Fancies shall them gain.


Now may this little Book a blessing be
To those who love this little Book and me,
And may its Buyer have no cause to say,
His Money is but lost or thrown away;
Yea, may this Second Pilgrim yield that fruit,
As may with each good Pilgrim's Fancie suit;
And may it persuade some that go astray,
To turn their Feet and Heart to the right way:


Is the Hearty Prayer of the Author John Bunyan.


     Courteous Companions, some time since, to tell you my Dream that I had of
Christian the Pilgrim, and of his dangerous Journey toward the Coelestial
Country, was pleasant to me, and profitable to you. I told you then also what
I saw concerning his Wife and Children, and how unwilling they were to go with
him on Pilgrimage, insomuch that he was forced to go on his Progress without
them; for he durst not run the danger of that destruction which he feared
would come by staying with them in the City of Destruction. Wherefore as I
then shewed you, he left them and departed.


     Now it hath so happened, through the multiplicity of Business, that I
have been much hindred and kept back from my wonted Travels into those parts
whence he went, and so could not till now obtain an opportunity to make
further enquiry after whom he left behind, that I might give you an account of
them. But having had some concerns that way of late, I went down again
thitherward. Now having taken up my Lodgings in a Wood about a mile off the
place, as I slept I dreamed again.


     And as I was in my Dream, behold an aged Gentleman came by where I lay;
and because he was to go some part of the way that I was travelling, methought
I got up and went with him. So as we walked, and as Travellers usually do, I
was as if we fell into discourse, and our talk happened to be about Christian
and his Travels, for thus I began with the old man.


     Sir, said I, what Town is that there below, that lieth on the left hand
of our way.?


     Then said Mr Sagacity, (for that was his name) It is the City of
Destruction, a populous place, but possessed with a very ill-conditioned and
idle sort of People.


     I thought that was the City, quoth I, I went once myself through that
Town, and therefore know that this report you give of it is true.


     Sag. Too true, I wish I could speak truth in speaking better of them that
dwell therein.


     Well, Sir, quoth I, then I perceive you to be a well-meaning man; and
so one that takes pleasure to hear and tell of that which is good: pray did
you never hear what happened to a man some time ago in this Town (whose name
was Christian) that went on Pilgrimage up towards the higher Regions?


     Sag. Hear of him! Ay, and I also heard of the Molestations, Troubles,
Wars, Captivities, Cries, Groans, Frights, and Fears that he met with and had
in his Journey. Besides, I must tell you, all our Country rings of him; there
are but few houses that have heard of him and his doings but have sought after
and got the Records of his Pilgrimage; yea, I think I may say that his
hazardous Journey has got a many well-wishers to his ways; for though when
he was here, he was Fool in every man's mouth, yet now he is gone, he is
highly commended of all. For 'tis said he lives bravely where he is; yea, many
of them are resolved never to run his hazards, yet have their mouths water at
his gains.


     They may, quoth I, well think, if they think anything that is true, that
he liveth well where he is; for he now lives at and in the Fountain of Life,
and has what he has without labour and sorrow, for there is no grief mixed
therewith.


     Sag. Talk! the people talk strangely about him. Some say that he now
walks in White, that he has a Chain of Gold about his neck, that he has a
Crown of Gold, beset with Pearls, upon his head. Others say that the Shining
Ones that sometimes shewed themselves to him in his Journey, are become his
Companions, and that he is as familiar with them in the place where he is, as
here one Neighbor is with another. Besides, 'tis confidently affirmed
concerning him, that the King of the place where he is has bestowed upon him
already a very rich and pleasant dwelling at Court; and that he every day
eateth and drinketh, and walketh, and talketh with him; and receiveth of the
smiles and favours of him that is Judge of all there. Moreover, it is expected
of some, that his Prince, the Lord of that Country, will shortly come into
these parts, and will know the reason, if they can give any, why his Neighbors
set so little by him, and had him so much in derision when they perceived that
he would be a Pilgrim. For they say, that now he is so in the affections of
his Prince, and that his Sovereign is so much concerned with the indignities
that were cast upon Christian when he became a Pilgrim, that he will look upon
all as if done unto himself; and no marvel, for 'twas for the love that he had
to his Prince that he ventured as he did.



Next: Pilgrim's Progress: Part Two, Section II.