The exaggeration of the severity of
Bunyan’s imprisonment long current, now that
the facts are better known, has led, by a very intelligible
reaction, to an undue depreciation of it. Mr.
Froude thinks that his incarceration was “intended
to be little more than nominal,” and was really
meant in kindness by the authorities who “respected
his character,” as the best means of preventing
him from getting himself into greater trouble by “repeating
an offence that would compel them to adopt harsh measures
which they were earnestly trying to avoid.”
If convicted again he must be transported, and “they
were unwilling to drive him out of the country.”
It is, however, to be feared that it was no such kind
consideration for the tinker-preacher which kept the
prison doors closed on Bunyan. To the justices
he was simply an obstinate law-breaker, who must be
kept in prison as long as he refused compliance with
the Act. If he rotted in gaol, as so many of
his fellow sufferers for conscience’ sake did
in those unhappy times, it was no concern of theirs.
He and his stubbornness would be alone to blame.
It is certainly true that during a
portion of his captivity, Bunyan, in Dr. Brown’s
words, “had an amount of liberty which in the
case of a prisoner nowadays would be simply impossible.”
But the mistake has been made of extending to the
whole period an indulgence which belonged only to
a part, and that a very limited part of it. When
we are told that Bunyan was treated as a prisoner
at large, and like one “on parole,” free
to come and go as he pleased, even as far as London,
we must remember that Bunyan’s own words expressly
restrict this indulgence to the six months between
the Autumn Assizes of 1661 and the Spring Assizes of
1662. “Between these two assizes,”
he says, “I had by my jailer some liberty granted
me more than at the first.” This liberty
was certainly of the largest kind consistent with
his character of a prisoner. The church books
show that he was occasionally present at their meetings,
and was employed on the business of the congregation.
Nay, even his preaching, which was the cause of his
imprisonment, was not forbidden. “I followed,”
he says, writing of this period, “my wonted course
of preaching, taking all occasions that were put into
my hand to visit the people of God.” But
this indulgence was very brief and was brought sharply
to an end. It was plainly irregular, and depended
on the connivance of his jailer. We cannot be
surprised that when it came to the magistrates’
ears “my enemies,” Bunyan rather
unworthily calls them they were seriously
displeased. Confounding Bunyan with the Fifth
Monarchy men and other turbulent sectaries, they imagined
that his visits to London had a political object,
“to plot, and raise division, and make insurrections,”
which, he honestly adds, “God knows was a slander.”
The jailer was all but “cast out of his place,”
and threatened with an indictment for breach of trust,
while his own liberty was so seriously “straitened”
that he was prohibited even “to look out at the
door.” The last time Bunyan’s name
appears as present at a church meeting is October
28, 1661, nor do we see it again till October 9, 1668,
only four years before his twelve years term of imprisonment
expired.
But though his imprisonment was not
so severe, nor his prison quite so narrow and wretched
as some word-painters have described them, during the
greater part of the time his condition was a dreary
and painful one, especially when spent, as it sometimes
was, “under cruel and oppressive jailers.”
The enforced separation from his wife and children,
especially his tenderly loved blind daughter, Mary,
was a continually renewed anguish to his loving heart.
“The parting with them,” he writes, “hath
often been to me as pulling the flesh from the bones;
and that not only because I am somewhat too fond of
these great mercies, but also because I should often
have brought to my mind the many hardships, miseries,
and wants my poor family was like to meet with, should
I be taken from them; especially my poor blind child,
who lay nearer to my heart than all beside.
Poor child, thought I, thou must be beaten, thou must
beg, thou must suffer hunger, cold, nakedness, and
a thousand calamities, though I cannot now endure
the wind should blow on thee. O, the thoughts
of the hardships my blind one might go under would
break my heart to pieces.” He seemed to
himself like a man pulling down his house on his wife
and children’s head, and yet he felt, “I
must do it; O, I must do it.” He was also,
he tells us, at one time, being but “a young
prisoner,” greatly troubled by the thoughts
that “for aught he could tell,” his “imprisonment
might end at the gallows,” not so much that he
dreaded death as that he was apprehensive that when
it came to the point, even if he made “a scrabbling
shift to clamber up the ladder,” he might play
the coward and so do discredit to the cause of religion.
“I was ashamed to die with a pale face and
tottering knees for such a cause as this.”
The belief that his imprisonment might be terminated
by death on the scaffold, however groundless, evidently
weighed long on his mind. The closing sentences
of his third prison book, “Christian Behaviour,”
published in 1663, the second year of his durance,
clearly point to such an expectation. “Thus
have I in few words written to you before I die, .
. . not knowing the shortness of my life, nor the
hindrances that hereafter I may have of serving my
God and you.” The ladder of his apprehensions
was, as Mr. Froude has said, “an imaginary ladder,”
but it was very real to Bunyan. “Oft I
was as if I was on the ladder with a rope about my
neck.” The thought of it, as his autobiography
shows, caused him some of his deepest searchings of
heart, and noblest ventures of faith. He was
content to suffer by the hangman’s hand if thus
he might have an opportunity of addressing the crowd
that he thought would come to see him die. “And
if it must be so, if God will but convert one soul
by my very last words, I shall not count my life thrown
away or lost.” And even when hours of
darkness came over his soul, and he was tempted to
question the reality of his Christian profession, and
to doubt whether God would give him comfort at the
hour of death, he stayed himself up with such bold
words as these. “I was bound, but He was
free. Yea, ’twas my duty to stand to His
word whether He would ever look on me or no, or save
me at the last. If God doth not come in, thought
I, I will leap off the ladder even blindfold into
Eternity, sink or swim, come heaven, come hell.
Lord Jesus, if Thou wilt catch me, do. If not,
I will venture for Thy name.”
Bunyan being precluded by his imprisonment
from carrying on his brazier’s craft for the
support of his wife and family, and his active spirit
craving occupation, he got himself taught how to make
“long tagged laces,” “many hundred
gross” of which, we are told by one who first
formed his acquaintance in prison, he made during his
captivity, for “his own and his family’s
necessities.” “While his hands were
thus busied,” writes Lord Macaulay, “he
had often employment for his mind and for his lips.”
“Though a prisoner he was a preacher still.”
As with St. Paul in his Roman chains, “the
word of God was not bound.” The prisoners
for conscience’ sake, who like him, from time
to time, were cooped up in Bedford gaol, including
several of his brother ministers and some of his old
friends among the leading members of his own little
church, furnished a numerous and sympathetic congregation.
At one time a body of some sixty, who had met for
worship at night in a neighbouring wood, were marched
off to gaol, with their minister at their head.
But while all about him was in confusion, his spirit
maintained its even calm, and he could at once speak
the words of strength and comfort that were needed.
In the midst of the hurry which so many “newcomers
occasioned,” writes the friend to whom we are
indebted for the details of his prison life, “I
have heard Mr. Bunyan both preach and pray with that
mighty spirit of faith and plerophory of Divine assistance
that has made me stand and wonder.” These
sermons addressed to his fellow prisoners supplied,
in many cases, the first outlines of the books which,
in rapid succession, flowed from his pen during the
earlier years of his imprisonment, relieving the otherwise
insupportable tedium of his close confinement.
Bunyan himself tells us that this was the case with
regard to his “Holy City,” the first idea
of which was borne in upon his mind when addressing
“his brethren in the prison chamber,” nor
can we doubt that the case was the same with other
works of his. To these we shall hereafter return.
Nor was it his fellow prisoners only who profited by
his counsels. In his “Life and Death of
Mr. Badman,” he gives us a story of a woman who
came to him when he was in prison, to confess how she
had robbed her master, and to ask his help.
Hers was probably a representative case. The
time spared from his handicraft, and not employed in
religious counsel and exhortation, was given to study
and composition. For this his confinement secured
him the leisure which otherwise he would have looked
for in vain. The few books he possessed he studied
indefatigably. His library was, at least at one
period, a very limited one, “the least
and the best library,” writes a friend who visited
him in prison, “that I ever saw, consisting
only of two books the Bible, and Foxe’s
’Book of Martyrs.’” “But
with these two books,” writes Mr. Froude, “he
had no cause to complain of intellectual destitution.”
Bunyan’s mode of composition, though certainly
exceedingly rapid, thoughts succeeding one
another with a quickness akin to inspiration, was
anything but careless. The “limae
labor” with him was unsparing. It
was, he tells us, “first with doing, and then
with undoing, and after that with doing again,”
that his books were brought to completion, and became
what they are, a mine of Evangelical Calvinism of
the richest ore, entirely free from the narrow dogmatism
and harsh predestinarianism of the great Genevan divine;
books which for clearness of thought, lucidity of
arrangement, felicity of language, rich even if sometimes
homely force of illustration, and earnestness of piety
have never been surpassed.
Bunyan’s prison life when the
first bitterness of it was past, and habit had done
away with its strangeness, was a quiet and it would
seem, not an unhappy one. A manly self-respect
bore him up and forbade his dwelling on the darker
features of his position, or thinking or speaking harshly
of the authors of his durance. “He was,”
writes one who saw him at this time, “mild and
affable in conversation; not given to loquacity or
to much discourse unless some urgent occasion required.
It was observed he never spoke of himself or his
parents, but seemed low in his own eyes. He
was never heard to reproach or revile, whatever injury
he received, but rather rebuked those who did so.
He managed all things with such exactness as if he
had made it his study not to give offence.”
According to his earliest biographer,
Charles Doe, in 1666, the year of the Fire of London,
after Bunyan had lain six years in Bedford gaol, “by
the intercession of some interest or power that took
pity on his sufferings,” he enjoyed a short
interval of liberty. Who these friends and sympathisers
were is not mentioned, and it would be vain to conjecture.
This period of freedom, however, was very short.
He at once resumed his old work of preaching, against
which the laws had become even more stringent during
his imprisonment, and was apprehended at a meeting
just as he was about to preach a sermon. He had
given out his text, “Dost thou believe on the
Son of God?” (John i, and was standing
with his open Bible in his hand, when the constable
came in to take him. Bunyan fixed his eyes on
the man, who turned pale, let go his hold, and drew
back, while Bunyan exclaimed, “See how this man
trembles at the word of God!” This is all we
know of his second arrest, and even this little is
somewhat doubtful. The time, the place, the circumstances,
are as provokingly vague as much else of Bunyan’s
life. The fact, however, is certain. Bunyan
returned to Bedford gaol, where he spent another six
years, until the issuing of the “Declaration
of Indulgence” early in 1672 opened the long-closed
doors, and he walked out a free man, and with what
he valued far more than personal liberty, freedom to
deliver Christ’s message as he understood it
himself, none making him afraid, and to declare to
his brother sinners what their Saviour had done for
them, and what he expected them to do that they might
obtain the salvation He died to win.
From some unknown cause, perhaps the
depressing effect of protracted confinement, during
this second six years Bunyan’s pen was far less
prolific than during the former period. Only
two of his books are dated in these years. The
last of these, “A Defence of the Doctrine of
Justification by Faith,” a reply to a work of
Edward Fowler, afterwards Bishop of Gloucester, the
rector of Northill, was written in hot haste immediately
before his release, and issued from the press contemporaneously
with it, the prospect of liberty apparently breathing
new life into his wearied soul. When once Bunyan
became a free man again, his pen recovered its former
copiousness of production, and the works by which
he has been immortalized, “The Pilgrim’s
Progress” which has been erroneously
ascribed to Bunyan’s twelve years’ imprisonment and
its sequel, “The Holy War,” and the “Life
and Death of Mr. Badman,” and a host of more
strictly theological works, followed one another in
rapid succession.
Bunyan’s second term of imprisonment
was certainly less severe than that which preceded
it. At its commencement we learn that, like Joseph
in Egypt, he found favour in his jailer’s eyes,
who “took such pity of his rigorous suffering,
that he put all care and trust into his hands.”
Towards the close of his imprisonment its rigour was
still further relaxed. The Bedford church book
begins its record again in 1688, after an interval
of ominous silence of five years, when the persecution
was at the hottest. In its earliest entries
we find Bunyan’s name, which occurs repeatedly
up to the date of his final release in 1672.
Not one of these notices gives the slightest allusion
of his being a prisoner. He is deputed with
others to visit and remonstrate with backsliding brethren,
and fulfil other commissions on behalf of the congregation,
as if he were in the full enjoyment of his liberty.
This was in the two years’ interval between
the expiration of the Conventicle Act, March 2, 1667-8,
and the passing of the new Act, styled by Marvell,
“the quintessence of arbitrary malice,”
April 11, 1670. After a few months of hot persecution,
when a disgraceful system of espionage was set on foot
and the vilest wretches drove a lucrative trade as
spies on “meetingers,” the severity greatly
lessened. Charles ii. was already meditating
the issuing of a Declaration of Indulgence, and signified
his disapprobation of the “forceable courses”
in which, “the sad experience of twelve years”
showed, there was “very little fruit.”
One of the first and most notable consequences of
this change of policy was Bunyan’s release.
Mr. Offor’s patient researches
in the State Paper Office have proved that the Quakers,
than whom no class of sectaries had suffered more severely
from the persecuting edicts of the Crown, were mainly
instrumental in throwing open the prison doors to
those who, like Bunyan, were in bonds for the sake
of their religion. Gratitude to John Groves,
the Quaker mate of Tattersall’s fishing boat,
in which Charles had escaped to France after the battle
of Worcester, had something, and the untiring advocacy
of George Whitehead, the Quaker, had still more, to
do with this act of royal clemency. We can readily
believe that the good-natured Charles was not sorry
to have an opportunity of evidencing his sense of former
services rendered at a time of his greatest extremity.
But the main cause lay much deeper, and is connected
with what Lord Macaulay justly styles “one of
the worst acts of one of the worst governments that
England has ever seen” that of the
Cabal. Our national honour was at its lowest
ebb. Charles had just concluded the profligate
Treaty of Dover, by which, in return for the “protection”
he sought from the French king, he declared himself
a Roman Catholic at heart, and bound himself to take
the first opportunity of “changing the present
state of religion in England for a better,”
and restoring the authority of the Pope. The
announcement of his conversion Charles found it convenient
to postpone. Nor could the other part of his
engagement be safely carried into effect at once.
It called for secret and cautious preparation.
But to pave the way for it, by an unconstitutional
exercise of his prerogative he issued a Declaration
of Indulgence which suspended all penal laws against
“whatever sort of Nonconformists or Recusants.”
The latter were evidently the real object of the
indulgence; the former class were only introduced
the better to cloke his infamous design. Toleration,
however, was thus at last secured, and the long-oppressed
Nonconformists hastened to profit by it. “Ministers
returned,” writes Mr. J. R. Green, “after
years of banishment, to their homes and their flocks.
Chapels were re-opened. The gaols were emptied.
Men were set free to worship God after their own
fashion. John Bunyan left the prison which had
for twelve years been his home.” More
than three thousand licenses to preach were at once
issued. One of the earliest of these, dated May
9, 1672, four months before his formal pardon under
the Great Seal, was granted to Bunyan, who in the
preceding January had been chosen their minister by
the little congregation at Bedford, and “giving
himself up to serve Christ and His Church in that
charge, had received of the elders the right hand
of fellowship.” The place licensed for
the exercise of Bunyan’s ministry was a barn
standing in an orchard, once forming part of the Castle
Moat, which one of the congregation, Josias Roughead,
acting for the members of his church, had purchased.
The license bears date May 9, 1672. This primitive
place of worship, in which Bunyan preached regularly
till his death, was pulled down in 1707, when a “three-ridged
meeting-house” was erected in its place.
This in its turn gave way, in 1849, to the existing
more seemly chapel, to which the present Duke of Bedford,
in 1876, presented a pair of noble bronze doors bearing
scenes, in high relief, from “The Pilgrim’s
Progress,” the work of Mr. Frederick Thrupp.
In the vestry are preserved Bunyan’s chair,
and other relics of the man who has made the name
of Bedford famous to the whole civilized world.