We cannot doubt that one in whom loyalty
was so deep and fixed a principle as Bunyan, would
welcome with sincere thankfulness the termination
of the miserable interval of anarchy which followed
the death of the Protector and the abdication of his
indolent and feeble son, by the restoration of monarchy
in the person of Charles the Second. Even if
some forebodings might have arisen that with the restoration
of the old monarchy the old persecuting laws might
be revived, which made it criminal for a man to think
for himself in the matters which most nearly concerned
his eternal interests, and to worship in the way which
he found most helpful to his spiritual life, they
would have been silenced by the promise, contained
in Charles’s “Declaration from Breda,”
of liberty to tender consciences, and the assurance
that no one should be disquieted for differences of
opinion in religion, so long as such differences did
not endanger the peace and well-being of the realm.
If this declaration meant anything, it meant a breadth
of toleration larger and more liberal than had been
ever granted by Cromwell. Any fears of the renewal
of persecution must be groundless.
But if such dreams of religious liberty
were entertained they were speedily and rudely dispelled,
and Bunyan was one of the first to feel the shock
of the awakening. The promise was coupled with
a reference to the “mature deliberation of Parliament.”
With such a promise Charles’s easy conscience
was relieved of all responsibility. Whatever
he might promise, the nation, and Parliament which
was its mouthpiece, might set his promise aside.
And if he knew anything of the temper of the people
he was returning to govern, he must have felt assured
that any scheme of comprehension was certain to be
rejected by them. As Mr. Froude has said, “before
toleration is possible, men must have learnt to tolerate
toleration,” and this was a lesson the English
nation was very far from having learnt; at no time,
perhaps, were they further from it. Puritanism
had had its day, and had made itself generally detested.
Deeply enshrined as it was in many earnest and devout
hearts, such as Bunyan’s, it was necessarily
the religion not of the many, but of the few; it was
the religion not of the common herd, but of a spiritual
aristocracy. Its stern condemnation of all mirth
and pastime, as things in their nature sinful, of
which we have so many evidences in Bunyan’s own
writings; its repression of all that makes life brighter
and more joyous, and the sour sanctimoniousness which
frowned upon innocent relaxation, had rendered its
yoke unbearable to ordinary human nature, and men took
the earliest opportunity of throwing the yoke off
and trampling it under foot. They hailed with
rude and boisterous rejoicings the restoration of the
Monarchy which they felt, with a true instinct, involved
the restoration of the old Church of England, the
church of their fathers and of the older among themselves,
with its larger indulgence for the instincts of humanity,
its wider comprehensiveness, and its more dignified
and decorous ritual.
The reaction from Puritanism pervaded
all ranks. In no class, however, was its influence
more powerful than among the country gentry.
Most of them had been severe sufferers both in purse
and person during the Protectorate. Fines and
séquestrations had fallen heavily upon them, and
they were eager to retaliate on their oppressors.
Their turn had come; can we wonder that they were
eager to use it? As Mr. J. R. Green has said:
“The Puritan, the Presbyterian, the Commonwealthsman,
all were at their feet. . . Their whole policy
appeared to be dictated by a passionate spirit of
reaction. . . The oppressors of the parson had
been the oppressors of the squire. The sequestrator
who had driven the one from his parsonage had driven
the other from his manor-house. Both had been
branded with the same charge of malignity. Both
had suffered together, and the new Parliament was
resolved that both should triumph together.”
The feeling thus eloquently expressed
goes far to explain the harshness which Bunyan experienced
at the hands of the administrators of justice at the
crisis of his life at which we have now arrived.
Those before whom he was successively arraigned belonged
to this very class, which, having suffered most severely
during the Puritan usurpation, was least likely to
show consideration to a leading teacher of the Puritan
body. Nor were reasons wanting to justify their
severity. The circumstances of the times were
critical. The public mind was still in an excitable
state, agitated by the wild schemes of political and
religious enthusiasts plotting to destroy the whole
existing framework both of Church and State, and set
up their own chimerical fabric. We cannot be
surprised that, as Southey has said, after all the
nation had suffered from fanatical zeal, “The
government, rendered suspicious by the constant sense
of danger, was led as much by fear as by resentment
to seventies which are explained by the necessities
of self-defence,” and which the nervous apprehensions
of the nation not only condoned, but incited.
Already Churchmen in Wales had been taking the law
into their own hands, and manifesting their orthodoxy
by harrying Quakers and Nonconformists. In the
May and June of this year, we hear of sectaries being
taken from their beds and haled to prison, and brought
manacled to the Quarter Sessions and committed to
loathsome dungeons. Matters had advanced since
then. The Church had returned in its full power
and privileges together with the monarchy, and everything
went back into its old groove. Every Act passed
for the disestablishment and disendowment of the Church
was declared a dead letter. Those of the ejected
incumbents who remained alive entered again into their
parsonages, and occupied their pulpits as of old;
the surviving bishops returned to their sees; and the
whole existing statute law regarding the Church revived
from its suspended animation. No new enactment
was required to punish Nonconformists and to silence
their ministers; though, to the disgrace of the nation
and its parliament, many new ones were subsequently
passed, with ever-increasing disabilities. The
various Acts of Elizabeth supplied all that was needed.
Under these Acts all who refused to attend public
worship in their parish churches were subject to fines;
while those who resorted to conventicles were to be
imprisoned till they made their submissions; if at
the end of three months they refused to submit they
were to be banished the realm, and if they returned
from banishment, without permission of the Crown,
they were liable to execution as felons. This
long-disused sword was now drawn from its rusty sheath
to strike terror into the hearts of Nonconformists.
It did not prove very effectual. All the true-hearted
men preferred to suffer rather than yield in so sacred
a cause. Bunyan was one of the earliest of these,
as he proved one of the staunchest.
Early in October, 1660, the country
magistrates meeting in Bedford issued an order for
the public reading of the Liturgy of the Church of
England. Such an order Bunyan would not regard
as concerning him. Anyhow he would not give
obeying it a thought. One of the things we least
like in Bunyan is the feeling he exhibits towards
the Book of Common Prayer. To him it was an
accursed thing, the badge and token of a persecuting
party, a relic of popery which he exhorted his adherents
to “take heed that they touched not” if
they would be “steadfast in the faith of Jesus
Christ.” Nothing could be further from
his thoughts than to give any heed to the magistrates’
order to go to church and pray “after the form
of men’s inventions.”
The time for testing Bunyan’s
resolution was now near at hand. Within six
months of the king’s landing, within little more
than a month of the issue of the magistrate’s
order for the use of the Common Prayer Book, his sturdy
determination to yield obedience to no authority in
spiritual matters but that of his own conscience was
put to the proof. Bunyan may safely be regarded
as at that time the most conspicuous of the Nonconformists
of the neighbourhood. He had now preached for
five or six years with ever-growing popularity.
No name was so rife in men’s mouths as his.
At him, therefore, as the representative of his brother
sectaries, the first blow was levelled. It is
no cause of surprise that in the measures taken against
him he recognized the direct agency of Satan to stop
the course of the truth: “That old enemy
of man’s salvation,” he says, “took
his opportunity to inflame the hearts of his vassals
against me, insomuch that at the last I was laid out
for the warrant of a justice.” The circumstances
were these, on November 12, 1660, Bunyan had engaged
to go to the little hamlet of Lower Samsell near Harlington,
to hold a religious service. His purpose becoming
known, a neighbouring magistrate, Mr. Francis Wingate,
of Harlington House, was instructed to issue a warrant
for his apprehension under the Act of Elizabeth.
The meeting being represented to him as one of seditious
persons bringing arms, with a view to the disturbance
of the public peace, he ordered that a strong watch
should be kept about the house, “as if,”
Bunyan says, “we did intend to do some fearful
business to the destruction of the country.”
The intention to arrest him oozed out, and on Bunyan’s
arrival the whisperings of his friends warned him of
his danger. He might have easily escaped if
he “had been minded to play the coward.”
Some advised it, especially the brother at whose house
the meeting was to take place. He, “living
by them,” knew “what spirit” the
magistrates “were of,” before whom Bunyan
would be taken if arrested, and the small hope there
would be of his avoiding being committed to gaol.
The man himself, as a “harbourer of a conventicle,”
would also run no small danger of the same fate, but
Bunyan generously acquits him of any selfish object
in his warning: “he was, I think, more afraid
of (for) me, than of (for) himself.” The
matter was clear enough to Bunyan. At the same
time it was not to be decided in a hurry. The
time fixed for the service not being yet come, Bunyan
went into the meadow by the house, and pacing up and
down thought the question well out. “If
he who had up to this time showed himself hearty and
courageous in his preaching, and had made it his business
to encourage others, were now to run and make an escape,
it would be of an ill savour in the country.
If he were now to flee because there was a warrant
out for him, would not the weak and newly-converted
brethren be afraid to stand when great words only were
spoken to them. God had, in His mercy, chosen
him to go on the forlorn hope; to be the first to
be opposed for the gospel; what a discouragement it
must be to the whole body if he were to fly.
No, he would never by any cowardliness of his give
occasion to the enemy to blaspheme the gospel.”
So back to the house he came with his mind made up.
He had come to hold the meeting, and hold the meeting
he would. He was not conscious of saying or
doing any evil. If he had to suffer it was the
Lord’s will, and he was prepared for it.
He had a full hour before him to escape if he had
been so minded, but he was resolved “not to go
away.” He calmly waited for the time fixed
for the brethren to assemble, and then, without hurry
or any show of alarm, he opened the meeting in the
usual manner, with prayer for God’s blessing.
He had given out his text, the brethren had just
opened their Bibles and Bunyan was beginning to preach,
when the arrival of the constable with the warrant
put an end to the exercise. Bunyan requested
to be allowed to say a few parting words of encouragement
to the terrified flock. This was granted, and
he comforted the little company with the reflection
that it was a mercy to suffer in so good a cause;
and that it was better to be the persecuted than the
persecutors; better to suffer as Christians than as
thieves or murderers. The constable and the
justice’s servant soon growing weary of listening
to Bunyan’s exhortations, interrupted him and
“would not be quiet till they had him away”
from the house.
The justice who had issued the warrant,
Mr. Wingate, not being at home that day, a friend
of Bunyan’s residing on the spot offered to house
him for the night, undertaking that he should be forthcoming
the next day. The following morning this friend
took him to the constable’s house, and they
then proceeded together to Mr. Wingate’s.
A few inquiries showed the magistrate that he had
entirely mistaken the character of the Samsell meeting
and its object. Instead of a gathering of “Fifth
Monarchy men,” or other turbulent fanatics as
he had supposed, for the disturbance of the public
peace, he learnt from the constable that they were
only a few peaceable, harmless people, met together
“to preach and hear the word,” without
any political meaning. Wingate was now at a nonplus,
and “could not well tell what to say.”
For the credit of his magisterial character, however,
he must do something to show that he had not made a
mistake in issuing the warrant. So he asked
Bunyan what business he had there, and why it was
not enough for him to follow his own calling instead
of breaking the law by preaching. Bunyan replied
that his only object in coming there was to exhort
his hearers for their souls’ sake to forsake
their sinful courses and close in with Christ, and
this he could do and follow his calling as well.
Wingate, now feeling himself in the wrong, lost his
temper, and declared angrily that he would “break
the neck of these unlawful meetings,” and that
Bunyan must find securities for his good behaviour
or go to gaol. There was no difficulty in obtaining
the security. Bail was at once forthcoming.
The real difficulty lay with Bunyan himself.
No bond was strong enough to keep him from preaching.
If his friends gave them, their bonds would be forfeited,
for he “would not leave speaking the word of
God.” Wingate told him that this being
so, he must be sent to gaol to be tried at the next
Quarter Sessions, and left the room to make out his
mittimus. While the committal was preparing,
one whom Bunyan bitterly styles “an old enemy
to the truth,” Dr. Lindall, Vicar of Harlington,
Wingate’s father-in-law, came in and began “taunting
at him with many reviling terms,” demanding what
right he had to preach and meddle with that for which
he had no warrant, charging him with making long prayers
to devour widows houses, and likening him to “one
Alexander the Coppersmith he had read of,” “aiming,
’tis like,” says Bunyan, “at me
because I was a tinker.” The mittimus was
now made out, and Bunyan in the constable’s
charge was on his way to Bedford, when he was met
by two of his friends, who begged the constable to
wait a little while that they might use their interest
with the magistrate to get Bunyan released.
After a somewhat lengthened interview with Wingate,
they returned with the message that if Bunyan would
wait on the magistrate and “say certain words”
to him, he might go free. To satisfy his friends,
Bunyan returned with them, though not with any expectation
that the engagement proposed to him would be such as
he could lawfully take. “If the words
were such as he could say with a good conscience he
would say them, or else he would not.”
After all this coming and going, by
the time Bunyan and his friends got back to Harlington
House, night had come on. As he entered the hall,
one, he tells us, came out of an inner room with a
lighted candle in his hand, whom Bunyan recognized
as one William Foster, a lawyer of Bedford, Wingate’s
brother-in-law, afterwards a fierce persecutor of the
Nonconformists of the district. With a simulated
affection, “as if he would have leapt on my
neck and kissed me,” which put Bunyan on his
guard, as he had ever known him for “a close
opposer of the ways of God,” he adopted the
tone of one who had Bunyan’s interest at heart,
and begged him as a friend to yield a little from
his stubbornness. His brother-in-law, he said,
was very loath to send him to gaol. All he had
to do was only to promise that he would not call people
together, and he should be set at liberty and might
go back to his home. Such meetings were plainly
unlawful and must be stopped. Bunyan had better
follow his calling and leave off preaching, especially
on week-days, which made other people neglect their
calling too. God commanded men to work six days
and serve Him on the seventh. It was vain for
Bunyan to reply that he never summoned people to hear
him, but that if they came he could not but use the
best of his skill and wisdom to counsel them for their
soul’s salvation; that he could preach and the
people could come to hear without neglecting their
callings, and that men were bound to look out for their
souls’ welfare on week-days as well as Sundays.
Neither could convince the other. Bunyan’s
stubbornness was not a little provoking to Foster,
and was equally disappointing to Wingate. They
both evidently wished to dismiss the case, and intentionally
provided a loophole for Bunyan’s escape.
The promise put into his mouth “that
he would not call the people together” was
purposely devised to meet his scrupulous conscience.
But even if he could keep the promise in the letter,
Bunyan knew that he was fully purposed to violate
its spirit. He was the last man to forfeit self-respect
by playing fast and loose with his conscience.
All evasion was foreign to his nature. The long
interview came to an end at last. Once again
Wingate and Foster endeavoured to break down Bunyan’s
resolution; but when they saw he was “at a point,
and would not be moved or persuaded,” the mittimus
was again put into the constable’s hands, and
he and his prisoner were started on the walk to Bedford
gaol. It was dark, as we have seen, when this
protracted interview began. It must have now
been deep in the night. Bunyan gives no hint
whether the walk was taken in the dark or in the daylight.
There was however no need for haste. Bedford
was thirteen miles away, and the constable would probably
wait till the morning to set out for the prison which
was to be Bunyan’s home for twelve long years,
to which he went carrying, he says, the “peace
of God along with me, and His comfort in my poor soul.”