Mr. Green has observed that Bunyan
“found compensation for the narrow bounds of
his prison in the wonderful activity of his pen.
Tracts, controversial treatises, poems, meditations,
his ‘Grace Abounding,’ and his ‘Holy
War,’ followed each other in quick succession.”
Bunyan’s literary fertility in the earlier
half of his imprisonment was indeed amazing.
Even if, as seems almost certain, we have been hitherto
in error in assigning the First Part of “The
Pilgrim’s Progress” to this period, while
the “Holy War” certainly belongs to a later,
the works which had their birth in Bedford Gaol during
the first six years of his confinement, are of themselves
sufficient to make the reputation of any ordinary
writer. As has been already remarked, for some
unexplained cause, Bunyan’s gifts as an author
were much more sparingly called into exercise during
the second half of his captivity. Only two works
appear to have been written between 1666 and his release
in 1672.
Mr. Green has spoken of “poems”
as among the products of Bunyan’s pen during
this period. The compositions in verse belonging
to this epoch, of which there are several, hardly
deserve to be dignified with so high a title.
At no part of his life had Bunyan much title to be
called a poet. He did not aspire beyond the rank
of a versifier, who clothed his thoughts in rhyme
or metre instead of the more congenial prose, partly
for the pleasure of the exercise, partly because he
knew by experience that the lessons he wished to inculcate
were more likely to be remembered in that form.
Mr. Froude, who takes a higher estimate of Bunyan’s
verse than is commonly held, remarks that though it
is the fashion to apply the epithet of “doggerel”
to it, the “sincere and rational meaning”
which pervades his compositions renders such an epithet
improper. “His ear for rhythm,”
he continues, “though less true than in his prose,
is seldom wholly at fault, and whether in prose or
verse, he had the superlative merit that he could
never write nonsense.” Bunyan’s earliest
prison work, entitled “Profitable Meditations,”
was in verse, and neither this nor his later metrical
ventures before his release his “Four
Last Things,” his “Ebal and Gerizim,”
and his “Prison Meditations” can be said to show much poetical
power. At best he is a mere rhymester, to whom rhyme and metre, even when
self-chosen, were as uncongenial accoutrements as Sauls armour was to David.
The first-named book, which is entitled a Conference between Christ and a
Sinner, in the form of a poetical dialogue, according to Dr. Brown has small
literary merit of any sort. The others do not deserve much higher
commendation. There is an individuality about the Prison Meditations
which imparts to it a personal interest, which is entirely wanting in the other
two works, which may be characterized as metrical sermons, couched in verse of
the Sternhold and Hopkins type. A specimen or two will suffice. The
Four Last Things thus opens:
“These lines I at this time
present
To all that will them heed,
Wherein I show to what intent
God saith, ‘Convert with speed.’
For these four things come on apace,
Which we should know full well,
Both death and judgment, and, in
place
Next to them, heaven and hell.”
The following lines are from Ebal and Gerizim":
“Thou art like one that hangeth
by a thread
Over the mouth of hell, as one half
dead;
And oh, how soon this thread may
broken be,
Or cut by death, is yet unknown
to thee.
But sure it is if all the weight
of sin,
And all that Satan too hath doing
been
Or yet can do, can break this crazy
thread,
’Twill not be long before
among the dead
Thou tumble do, as linked fast in
chains,
With them to wait in fear for future
pains.”
The poetical effusion entitled “Prison
Meditations” does not in any way rise above
the prosaic level of its predecessors. But it
can be read with less weariness from the picture it
presents of Bunyan’s prison life, and of the
courageous faith which sustained him. Some unnamed
friend, it would appear, fearing he might flinch,
had written him a letter counselling him to keep “his
head above the flood.” Bunyan replied in
seventy stanzas in ballad measure, thanking his correspondent
for his good advice, of which he confesses he stood
in need, and which he takes it kindly of him to send,
even though his feet stand upon Mount Zion, and the
gaol is to him like a hill from which he could see
beyond this world, and take his fill of the blessedness
of that which remains for the Christian. Though
in bonds his mind is free, and can wander where it
will.
“For though men keep my outward
man
Within their locks and bars,
Yet by the faith of Christ, I can
Mount higher than the stars.”
Meanwhile his captivity is sweetened by the thought of what
it was that brought him there:
“I here am very much refreshed
To think, when I was out,
I preached life, and peace, and
rest,
To sinners round about.
My business then was souls to save
By preaching grace and faith,
Of which the comfort now I have
And have it shall till death.
That was the work I was about
When hands on me they laid.
’Twas this for which they
plucked me out
And vilely to me said,
’You heretic, deceiver, come,
To prison you must go,
You preach abroad, and keep not
home,
You are the Church’s foe.’
Wherefore to prison they me sent,
Where to this day I lie,
And can with very much content
For my profession die.
The prison very sweet to me
Hath been since I came here,
And so would also hanging be
If God would there appear.
To them that here for evil lie
The place is comfortless;
But not to me, because that I
Lie here for righteousness.
The truth and I were both here cast
Together, and we do
Lie arm in arm, and so hold fast
Each other, this is true.
Who now dare say we throw away
Our goods or liberty,
When God’s most holy Word
doth say
We gain thus much thereby?”
It will be seen that though Bunyans verses are certainly not
high-class poetry, they are very far removed from doggerel. Nothing indeed
that Bunyan ever wrote, however rugged the rhymes and limping the metre, can be
so stigmatized. The rude scribblings on the margins of the copy of the
Book of Martyrs, which bears Bunyans signature on the title-pages, though
regarded by Southey as undoubtedly his, certainly came from a later and must
less instructed pen. And as he advanced in his literary career, his claim
to the title of a poet, though never of the highest, was much strengthened.
The verses which diversify the narrative in the Second Part of The Pilgrims
Progress are decidedly superior to those in the First Part, and some are of
high excellence. Who is ignorant of the charming little song of the
Shepherd Boy in the Valley of Humiliation, in very mean clothes, but with a
very fresh and well-favoured countenance, and wearing more of the herb called
Heartsease in his bosom than he that is clad in silk and velvet?
“He that is down need fear
no fall;
He that is low, no pride;
He that is humble, ever shall
Have God to be his guide.
I am content with what I have,
Little be it or much,
And, Lord, contentment still I crave,
Because Thou savest such.
Fulness to such a burden is
That go on Pilgrimage,
Here little, and hereafter Bliss
Is best from age to age.”
Bunyan reaches a still higher flight
in Valiant-for-Truth’s song, later on, the Shakesperian
ring of which recalls Amiens’ in “As You
Like It,”
“Under the greenwood tree,
Who loves to lie with me. . .
Come hither, come hither,”
and has led some to question whether
it can be Bunyan’s own. The resemblance,
as Mr. Froude remarks, is “too near to be accidental.”
“Perhaps he may have heard the lines, and the
rhymes may have clung to him without his knowing whence
they came.”
“Who would true Valour see,
Let him come hither,
One here will constant be,
Come wind, come weather.
There’s no discouragement
Shall make him once relent
His first avowed intent
To be a Pilgrim.
Who so beset him round
With dismal stories,
Do but themselves confound
His strength the more is.
No lion can him fright,
He’ll with a giant fight,
But he will have a right
To be a Pilgrim.
Hobgoblin nor foul fiend
Can daunt his spirit,
He knows he at the end
Shall life inherit.
Then fancies fly away
He’ll fear not what men say,
He’ll labour night and day
To be a Pilgrim.”
All readers of “The Pilgrim’s
Progress” and “The Holy War” are
familiar with the long metrical compositions giving
the history of these works by which they are prefaced
and the latter work is closed. No more characteristic
examples of Bunyan’s muse can be found.
They show his excellent command of his native tongue
in racy vernacular, homely but never vulgar, and his
power of expressing his meaning “with sharp defined
outlines and without the waste of a word.”
Take this account of his perplexity, when the First Part of
his Pilgrims Progress was finished, whether it should be given to the world
or no, and the characteristic decision with which he settled the question for
himself:
“Well, when I had then put
mine ends together,
I show’d them others that
I might see whether
They would condemn them, or them
justify;
And some said Let them live; some,
Let them die.
Some said, John, print it; others
said, Not so;
Some said it might do good; others
said No.
Now was I in a strait, and did not
see
Which was the best thing to be done
by me;
At last I thought since you are
thus divided
I print it will; and so the case
decided;”
or the lines in which he introduces the Second Part of the
Pilgrim to the readers of the former part:
“Go now, my little Book, to
every place
Where my first Pilgrim hath but
shown his face:
Call at their door: If any
say, ‘Who’s there?’
Then answer that Christiana is here.
If they bid thee come in, then enter
thou
With all thy boys. And then,
as thou knowest 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 were delighted in
his way:
Then let them know that these related
are
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
on the way,
That they do meet with troubles
night and day.”
How racy, even if the lines are a
little halting, is the defence of the genuineness
of his Pilgrim in “The Advertisement to the Reader”
at the end of “The Holy War.”
“Some say the Pilgrim’s
Progress is not mine,
Insinuating as if I would shine
In name or fame by the worth of
another,
Like some made rich by robbing of
their brother;
Or that so fond I am of being sire
I’ll father bastards; or if
need require,
I’ll tell a lie or print to
get applause.
I scorn it. John such dirt-heap
never was
Since God converted him. . .
Witness my name, if anagram’d
to thee
The letters make Nu hony in a
B.
IOHN Bunyan.”
How full of life and vigour his sketch of the beleaguerment
and deliverance of Mansoul, as a picture of his own spiritual experience, in
the introductory verses to The Holy War"!
“For my part I, myself, was
in the town,
Both when ’twas set up, and
when pulling down;
I saw Diabolus in possession,
And Mansoul also under his oppression.
Yes, I was there when she crowned
him for lord,
And to him did submit with one accord.
When Mansoul trampled upon things
divine,
And wallowed in filth as doth a
swine,
When she betook herself unto her
arms,
Fought her Emmanuel, despised his
charms:
Then I was there, and did rejoice
to see
Diabolus and Mansoul so agree.
I saw the prince’s armed men
come down
By troops, by thousands, to besiege
the town,
I saw the captains, heard the trumpets
sound,
And how his forces covered all the
ground,
Yea, how they set themselves in
battle array,
I shall remember to my dying day.”
Bunyan’s other essays in the
domain of poetry need not detain us long. The
most considerable of these at least in bulk if it be really his, is a version of
some portions of the Old and New Testaments: the life of Joseph, the Book
of Ruth, the history of Samson, the Book of Jonah, the Sermon on the Mount, and
the General Epistle of St. James. The attempt to do the English Bible into
verse has been often made and never successfully: in the nature of things
success in such a task is impossible, nor can this attempt be regarded as
happier than that of others. Mr. Froude indeed, who undoubtingly accepts
their genuineness, is of a different opinion. He styles the Book of Ruth
and the History of Joseph beautiful idylls, of such high excellence that,
if we found them in the collected works of a poet laureate, we should consider
that a difficult task had been accomplished successfully. It would seem
almost doubtful whether Mr. Froude can have read the compositions that he
commends so largely, and so much beyond their merit. The following
specimen, taken haphazard, will show how thoroughly Bunyan or the rhymester,
whoever he may be, has overcome what Mr. Froude regards as an almost insuperable
difficulty, and has managed to spoil completely the faultless prose of the
English translation":
“Ruth replied,
Intreat me not to leave thee or
return;
For where thou goest I’ll
go, where thou sojourn
I’ll sojourn also and
what people’s thine,
And who thy God, the same shall
both be mine.
Where thou shalt die, there will
I die likewise,
And I’ll be buried where thy
body lies.
The Lord do so to me and more if
I
Do leave thee or forsake thee till
I die.”
The more we read of these poems, not
given to the world till twelve years after Bunyan’s
death, and that by a publisher who was “a repeated
offender against the laws of honest dealing,”
the more we are inclined to agree with Dr. Brown,
that the internal evidence of their style renders
their genuineness at the least questionable.
In the dull prosaic level of these compositions there
is certainly no trace of the “force and power”
always present in Bunyan’s rudest rhymes, still
less of the “dash of genius” and the “sparkle
of soul” which occasionally discover the hand
of a master.
Of the authenticity of Bunyan’s
“Divine Emblems,” originally published
three years after his death under the title of “Country
Rhymes for Children,” there is no question.
The internal evidence confirms the external.
The book is thoroughly in Bunyan’s vein, and
in its homely naturalness of imagery recalls the similitudes
of the “Interpréter’s House, especially those expounded
to Christiana and her boys. As in that house of imagery things of the
most common sort, the sweeping of a room, the burning of a fire, the drinking of
a chicken, a robin with a spider in his mouth, are made the vehicle of religious
teaching; so in this Book for Boys and Girls, a mole burrowing in the ground,
a swallow soaring in the air, the cuckoo which can do nothing but utter two
notes, a flaming and a blinking candle, or a pound of candles falling to the
ground, a boy chasing a butterfly, the cackling of a hen when she has laid her
egg, all, to his imaginative mind, set forth some spiritual truth or enforce
some wholesome moral lesson. How racy, though homely, are these lines on a
Frog!
“The Frog by nature is but
damp and cold,
Her mouth is large, her belly much
will hold,
She sits somewhat ascending, loves
to be
Croaking in gardens, though unpleasantly.
The hypocrite is like unto this
Frog,
As like as is the puppy to the dog.
He is of nature cold, his mouth
is wide
To prate, and at true goodness to
deride.
And though this world is that which
he doth love,
He mounts his head as if he lived
above.
And though he seeks in churches
for to croak,
He neither seeketh Jesus nor His
yoke.”
There is some real poetry in those on the Cuckoo, though we
may be inclined to resent his harsh treatment of our universal favourite:
“Thou booby says’t thou
nothing but Cuckoo?
The robin and the wren can that
outdo.
They to us play thorough their little
throats
Not one, but sundry pretty tuneful
notes.
But thou hast fellows, some like
thee can do
Little but suck our eggs, and sing
Cuckoo.
Thy notes do not first welcome in
our spring,
Nor dost thou its first tokens to
us bring.
Birds less than thee by far like
prophets do
Tell us ’tis coming, though
not by Cuckoo,
Nor dost thou summer bear away with
thee
Though thou a yawling bawling Cuckoo
be.
When thou dost cease among us to
appear,
Then doth our harvest bravely crown
our year.
But thou hast fellows, some like
thee can do
Little but suck our eggs, and sing
Cuckoo.
Since Cuckoos forward not our early
spring
Nor help with notes to bring our
harvest in,
And since while here, she only makes
a noise
So pleasing unto none as girls and
boys,
The Formalist we may compare her
to,
For he doth suck our eggs and sing
Cuckoo.”
A perusal of this little volume with
its roughness and quaintness, sometimes grating on
the ear but full of strong thought and picturesque
images, cannot fail to raise Bunyan’s pretensions
as a poet. His muse, it is true, as Alexander
Smith has said, is a homely one. She is “clad
in russet, wears shoes and stockings, has a country
accent, and walks along the level Bedfordshire roads.”
But if the lines are unpolished, “they have
pith and sinew, like the talk of a shrewd peasant,”
with the “strong thought and the knack of the
skilled workman who can drive by a single blow the
nail home to the head.”
During his imprisonment Bunyan’s
pen was much more fertile in prose than in poetry.
Besides his world-famous “Grace Abounding,”
he produced during the first six years of his gaol
life a treatise on prayer, entitled “Praying
in the Spirit;” a book on “Christian Behaviour,”
setting forth with uncompromising plainness the relative
duties of husbands and wives, parents and children,
masters and servants, by which those who profess a
true faith are bound to show forth its reality and
power; the “Holy City,” an exposition of
the vision in the closing chapters of the Book of
Revelation, brilliant with picturesque description
and rich in suggestive thought, which, he tells us,
had its origin in a sermon preached by him to his
brethren in bonds in their prison chamber; and a work
on the “Resurrection of the Dead and Eternal
Judgment.” On these works we may not linger.
There is not one of them which is not marked by vigour
of thought, clearness of language, accuracy of arrangement,
and deep spiritual experience. Nor is there one
which does not here and there exhibit specimens of
Bunyan’s picturesque imaginative power, and
his command of forcible and racy language. Each
will reward perusal. His work on “Prayer”
is couched in the most exalted strain, and is evidently
the production of one who by long and agonizing experience
had learnt the true nature of prayer, as a pouring
out of the soul to God, and a wrestling with Him until
the blessing, delayed not denied, is granted.
It is, however, unhappily deformed by much ignorant
reviling of the Book of Common Prayer. He denounces
it as “taken out of the papistical mass-book,
the scraps and fragments of some popes, some friars,
and I know not what;” and ridicules the order
of service it propounds to the worshippers.
“They have the matter and the manner of their
prayer at their fingers’ ends; they set such
a prayer for such a day, and that twenty years before
it comes: one for Christmas, another for Easter,
and six days after that. They have also bounded
how many syllables must be said in every one of them
at their public exercises. For each saint’s
day also they have them ready for the generations yet
unborn to say. They can tell you also when you
shall kneel, when you shall stand, when you should
abide in your seats, when you should go up into the
chancel, and what you should do when you come there.
All which the apostles came short of, as not being
able to compose so profound a manner.”
This bitter satirical vein in treating of sacred things
is unworthy of its author, and degrading to his sense
of reverence. It has its excuse in the hard
measure he had received from those who were so unwisely
endeavouring to force the Prayer Book on a generation
which had largely forgotten it. In his mind,
the men and the book were identified, and the unchristian
behaviour of its advocates blinded his eyes to its
merits as a guide to devotion. Bunyan, when denouncing
forms in worship, forgot that the same apostle who
directs that in our public assemblies everything should
be done “to edification,” directs also
that everything should be done “decently and
in order.”
By far the most important of these
prison works “The Pilgrim’s
Progress,” belonging, as will be seen, to a later
period is the “Grace Abounding,”
in which with inimitable earnestness and simplicity
Bunyan gives the story of his early life and his religious
history. This book, if he had written no other,
would stamp Bunyan as one of the greatest masters
of the English language of his own or any other age.
In graphic delineation of the struggles of a conscience
convicted of sin towards a hardly won freedom and
peace, the alternations of light and darkness, of
hope and despair, which chequered its course, its morbid
self-torturing questionings of motive and action,
this work of the travelling tinker, as a spiritual
history, has never been surpassed. Its equal
can hardly be found, save perhaps in the “Confessions
of St. Augustine.” These, however, though
describing a like spiritual conflict, are couched in
a more cultured style, and rise to a higher metaphysical
region than Bunyan was capable of attaining to.
His level is a lower one, but on that level Bunyan
is without a rival. Never has the history of
a soul convinced of the reality of eternal perdition
in its most terrible form as the most certain of all
possible facts, and of its own imminent danger of
hopeless, irreversible doom seeing itself,
to employ his own image, hanging, as it were, over
the pit of hell by a thin line, which might snap any
moment been portrayed in more nervous and
awe-inspiring language. And its awfulness is
enhanced by its self-evident truth. Bunyan was
drawing no imaginary picture of what others might feel,
but simply telling in plain unadorned language what
he had felt. The experience was a very tremendous
reality to him. Like Dante, if he had not actually
been in hell, he had been on the very threshold of
it; he had in very deed traversed “the Valley
of the Shadow of Death,” had heard its “hideous
noises,” and seen “the Hobgoblins of the
Pit.” He “spake what he knew and
testified what he had seen.” Every sentence
breathes the most tremendous earnestness. His
words are the plainest, drawn from his own homely
vernacular. He says in his preface, which will
amply repay reading, as one of the most characteristic
specimens of his style, that he could have stepped
into a higher style, and adorned his narrative more
plentifully. But he dared not. “God
did not play in convincing him. The devil did
not play in tempting him. He himself did not
play when he sunk as into a bottomless pit, and the
pangs of hell caught hold on him. Nor could
he play in relating them. He must be plain and
simple and lay down the thing as it was. He
that liked it might receive it. He that did
not might produce a better.” The remembrance
of “his great sins, his great temptations, his
great fears of perishing for ever, recalled the remembrance
of his great help, his great support from heaven,
the great grace God extended to such a wretch as he
was.” Having thus enlarged on his own
experience, he calls on his spiritual children, for
whose use the work was originally composed and to whom
it is dedicated, “those whom God
had counted him worthy to beget to Faith by his ministry
in the Word” to survey their own religious
history, to “work diligently and leave no corner
unsearched.” He would have them “remember
their tears and prayers to God; how they sighed under
every hedge for mercy. Had they never a hill
Mizar (Psa. xli to remember? Had they forgotten
the close, the milkhouse, the stable, the barn, where
God visited their souls? Let them remember the
Word on which the Lord had caused them to hope.
If they had sinned against light, if they were tempted
to blaspheme, if they were down in despair, let them
remember that it had been so with him, their spiritual
father, and that out of them all the Lord had delivered
him.” This dedication ends thus: “My
dear children, the milk and honey is beyond this wilderness.
God be merciful to you, and grant you be not slothful
to go in to possess the land.”
This remarkable book, as we learn
from the title-page, was “written by his own
hand in prison.” It was first published
by George Larkin in London, in 1666, the sixth year
of his imprisonment, the year of the Fire of London,
about the time that he experienced his first brief
release. As with “The Pilgrim’s
Progress,” the work grew in picturesque detail
and graphic power in the author’s hand after
its first appearance. The later editions supply
some of the most interesting personal facts contained
in the narrative, which were wanting when it first
issued from the press. His two escapes from drowning,
and from the supposed sting of an adder; his being
drawn as a soldier, and his providential deliverance
from death; the graphic account of his difficulty
in giving up bell-ringing at Elstow Church, and dancing
on Sundays on Elstow Green these and other
minor touches which give a life and colour to the story,
which we should be very sorry to lose, are later additions.
It is impossible to over-estimate the value of the
“Grace Abounding,” both for the facts of
Bunyan’s earlier life and for the spiritual experience
of which these facts were, in his eyes only the outward
framework. Beginning with his parentage and
boyhood, it carries us down to his marriage and life
in the wayside-cottage at Elstow, his introduction
to Mr. Gifford’s congregation at Bedford, his
joining that holy brotherhood, and his subsequent call
to the work of the ministry among them, and winds
up with an account of his apprehension, examinations,
and imprisonment in Bedford gaol. The work concludes
with a report of the conversation between his noble-hearted
wife and Sir Matthew Hale and the other judges at the
Midsummer assizes, narrated in a former chapter, “taken
down,” he says, “from her own mouth.”
The whole story is of such sustained interest that
our chief regret on finishing it is that it stops
where it does, and does not go on much further.
Its importance for our knowledge of Bunyan as a man,
as distinguished from an author, and of the circumstances
of his life, is seen by a comparison of our acquaintance
with his earlier and with his later years. When
he laid down his pen no one took it up, and beyond
two or three facts, and a few hazy anecdotes we know
little or nothing of all that happened between his
final release and his death.
The value of the “Grace Abounding,”
however, as a work of experimental religion may be
easily over-estimated. It is not many who can
study Bunyan’s minute history of the various
stages of his spiritual life with real profit.
To some temperaments, especially among the young,
the book is more likely to prove injurious than beneficial;
it is calculated rather to nourish morbid imaginations,
and a dangerous habit of introspection, than to foster
the quiet growth of the inner life. Bunyan’s
unhappy mode of dealing with the Bible as a collection
of texts, each of Divine authority and declaring a
definite meaning entirely irrespective of its context,
by which the words hide the Word, is also utterly
destructive of the true purpose of the Holy Scriptures
as a revelation of God’s loving and holy mind
and will. Few things are more touching than
the eagerness with which, in his intense self-torture,
Bunyan tried to evade the force of those “fearful
and terrible Scriptures” which appeared to seal
his condemnation, and to lay hold of the promises
to the penitent sinner. His tempest-tossed spirit
could only find rest by doing violence to the dogma,
then universally accepted and not quite extinct even
in our own days, that the authority of the Bible that
“Divine Library” collectively
taken, belongs to each and every sentence of the Bible
taken for and by itself, and that, in Coleridge’s
words, “detached sentences from books composed
at the distance of centuries, nay, sometimes at a
millénium from each other, under different dispensations
and for different objects,” are to be brought
together “into logical dependency.”
But “where the Spirit of the Lord is there
is liberty.” The divinely given life in
the soul of man snaps the bonds of humanly-constructed
logical systems. Only those, however, who have
known by experience the force of Bunyan’s spiritual
combat, can fully appreciate and profit by Bunyan’s
narrative. He tells us on the title-page that
it was written “for the support of the weak and
tempted people of God.” For such the “Grace
Abounding to the chief of sinners” will ever
prove most valuable. Those for whom it was intended
will find in it a message of comfort and
strength.
As has been said, Bunyan’s pen
was almost idle during the last six years of his imprisonment.
Only two of his works were produced in this period:
his “Confession of Faith,” and his “Defence
of the Doctrine of Justification by Faith.”
Both were written very near the end of his prison
life, and published in the same year, 1672, only a
week or two before his release. The object of
the former work was, as Dr. Brown tells us, “to
vindicate his teaching, and if possible, to secure
his liberty.” Writing as one “in
bonds for the Gospel,” his professed principles,
he asserts, are “faith, and holiness springing
therefrom, with an endeavour so far as in him lies
to be at peace with all men.” He is ready
to hold communion with all whose principles are the
same; with all whom he can reckon as children of God.
With these he will not quarrel about “things
that are circumstantial,” such as water baptism,
which he regards as something quite indifferent, men
being “neither the better for having it, nor
the worse for having it not.” “He
will receive them in the Lord as becometh saints.
If they will not have communion with him, the neglect
is theirs not his. But with the openly profane
and ungodly, though, poor people! they have been christened
and take the communion, he will have no communion.
It would be a strange community, he says, that consisted
of men and beasts. Men do not receive their
horse or their dog to their table; they put them in
a room by themselves.” As regards forms
and ceremonies, he “cannot allow his soul to
be governed in its approach to God by the superstitious
inventions of this world. He is content to stay
in prison even till the moss grows on his eyelids
rather than thus make of his conscience a continual
butchery and slaughter-shop by putting out his eyes
and committing himself to the blind to lead him.
Eleven years’ imprisonment was a weighty argument
to pause and pause again over the foundation of the
principles for which he had thus suffered. Those
principles he had asserted at his trial, and in the
tedious tract of time since then he had in cold blood
examined them by the Word of God and found them good;
nor could he dare to revolt from or deny them on pain
of eternal damnation.”
The second-named work, the “Defence
of the Doctrine of Justification by Faith,”
is entirely controversial. The Rev. Edward Fowler,
afterwards Bishop of Gloucester, then Rector of Northill,
had published in the early part of 1671, a book entitled
“The Design of Christianity.” A copy
having found its way into Bunyan’s hands, he
was so deeply stirred by what he deemed its subversion
of the true foundation of Evangelical religion that
he took up his pen and in the space of six weeks composed
a long and elaborate examination of the book, chapter
by chapter, and a confutation of its teaching.
Fowler’s doctrines as Bunyan understood them or
rather misunderstood them awoke the worst
side of his impetuous nature. His vituperation
of the author and his book is coarse and unmeasured.
He roundly charges Fowler with having “closely,
privily, and devilishly turned the grace of God into
a licentious doctrine, bespattering it with giving
liberty to lasciviousness;” and he calls him
“a pretended minister of the Word,” who,
in “his cursed blasphemous book vilely exposes
to public view the rottenness of his heart, in principle
diametrically opposite to the simplicity of the Gospel
of Christ, a glorious latitudinarian that can, as
to religion, turn and twist like an eel on the angle,
or rather like the weathercock that stands on the
steeple;” and describes him as “contradicting
the wholesome doctrine of the Church of England.”
He “knows him not by face much less his personal
practise.” He may have “kept himself
clear of the ignorant Sir Johns who had for a long
time, as a judgment of God, been made the mouth to
the people men of debauched lives who for
the love of filthy lucre and the pampering of their
idle carcases had made shipwreck of their former faith;”
but he does know that having been ejected as a Nonconformist
in 1662, he had afterwards gone over to the winning
side, and he fears that “such an unstable weathercock
spirit as he had manifested would stumble the work
and give advantage to the adversary to speak vilifyingly
of religion.” No excuse can be offered
for the coarse violence of Bunyan’s language
in this book; but it was too much the habit of the
time to load a theological opponent with vituperation,
to push his assertions to the furthest extreme, and
make the most unwarrantable deductions from them.
It must be acknowledged that Bunyan does not treat
Fowler and his doctrines with fairness, and that,
if the latter may be thought to depreciate unduly
the sacrifice of the Death of Christ as an expiation
for man’s guilt, and to lay too great a stress
on the moral faculties remaining in the soul after
the Fall, Bunyan errs still more widely on the other
side in asserting the absolute, irredeemable corruption
of human nature, leaving nothing for grace to work
upon, but demanding an absolutely fresh creation,
not a revivification of the Divine nature grievously
marred but not annihilated by Adam’s sin.
A reply to Bunyan’s severe strictures
was not slow to appear. The book bears the title,
characteristic of the tone and language of its contents,
of “Dirt wip’t off; or, a manifest
discovery of the Gross Ignorance, Erroneousness, and
most Unchristian and Wicked Spirit of one John Bunyan,
Lay-preacher in Bedford.” It professes
to be written by a friend of Fowler’s, but Fowler
was generally accredited with it. Its violent
tirades against one who, he says, had been “near
these twenty years or longer very infamous in the
Town and County of Bedford as a very Pestilent Schismatick,”
and whom he suggests the authorities have done wrong
in letting out of prison, and had better clap in gaol
again as “an impudent and malicious Firebrand,”
have long since been consigned to a merciful oblivion,
where we may safely leave them.