We have, in this concluding chapter,
to take a review of Bunyan’s merits as a writer,
with especial reference to the works on which his fame
mainly rests, and, above all, to that which has given
him his chief title to be included in a series of
Great Writers, “The Pilgrim’s Progress.”
Bunyan, as we have seen, was a very copious author.
His works, as collected by the late industrious Mr.
Offor, fill three bulky quarto volumes, each of nearly
eight hundred double-columned pages in small type.
And this copiousness of production is combined with
a general excellence in the matter produced.
While few of his books approach the high standard
of “The Pilgrim’s Progress” or “Holy
War,” none, it may be truly said, sink very
far below that standard. It may indeed be affirmed
that it was impossible for Bunyan to write badly.
His genius was a native genius. As soon as
he began to write at all, he wrote well. Without
any training, is he says, in the school of Aristotle
or Plato, or any study of the great masters of literature,
at one bound he leapt to a high level of thought and
composition. His earliest book, “Some Gospel
Truths Opened,” “thrown off,” writes
Dr. Brown, “at a heat,” displays the same
ease of style and directness of speech and absence
of stilted phraseology which he maintained to the
end. The great charm which pervades all Bunyan’s
writings is their naturalness. You never feel
that he is writing for effect, still less to perform
an uncongenial piece of task-work. He writes
because he had something to say which was worth saying,
a message to deliver on which the highest interests
of others were at stake, which demanded nothing more
than a straightforward earnestness and plainness of
speech, such as coming from the heart might best reach
the hearts of others. He wrote as he spoke, because
a necessity was laid upon him which he dared not evade.
As he says in a passage quoted in a former chapter,
he might have stepped into a much higher style, and
have employed more literary ornament. But to
attempt this would be, to one of his intense earnestness,
to degrade his calling. He dared not do it.
Like the great Apostle, “his speech and preaching
was not with enticing words of man’s wisdom,
but in demonstration of the Spirit and in power.”
God had not played with him, and he dared not play
with others. His errand was much too serious,
and their need and danger too urgent to waste time
in tricking out his words with human skill. And
it is just this which, with all their rudeness, their
occasional bad grammar, and homely colloquialisms,
gives to Bunyan’s writings a power of riveting
the attention and stirring the affections which few
writers have attained to. The pent-up fire glows
in every line, and kindles the hearts of his readers.
“Beautiful images, vivid expressions, forcible
arguments all aglow with passion, tender pleadings,
solemn warnings, make those who read him all eye,
all ear, all soul.” This native vigour
is attributable, in no small degree, to the manner
in which for the most part Bunyan’s works came
into being. He did not set himself to compose
theological treatises upon stated subjects, but after
he had preached with satisfaction to himself and acceptance
with his audience, he usually wrote out the substance
of his discourse from memory, with the enlargements
and additions it might seem to require. And thus
his religious works have all the glow and fervour
of the unwritten utterances of a practised orator,
united with the orderliness and precision of a theologian,
and are no less admirable for the excellence of their
arrangement than for their evangelical spirit and scriptural
doctrine. Originally meant to be heard, they
lose somewhat by being read. But few can read
them without being delighted with the opulence of his
imagination and impressed with the solemn earnestness
of his convictions. Like the subject of the portrait
described by him in the House of the Interpreter,
he stands “like one who pleads with men, the
law of truth written upon his lips, the world behind
his back, and a crown of gold above his head.”
These characteristics, which distinguish
Bunyan as a writer from most of his Puritan contemporaries,
are most conspicuous in the works by which he is chiefly
known, “The Pilgrim’s Progress,”
the “Holy War,” the “Grace Abounding,”
and we may add, though from the repulsiveness of the
subject the book is now scarcely read at all, the
“Life and Death of Mr. Badman.”
One great charm of these works, especially
of “The Pilgrim’s Progress,” lies
in the pure Saxon English in which they are written,
which render them models of the English speech, plain
but never vulgar, homely but never coarse, and still
less unclean, full of imagery but never obscure, always
intelligible, always forcible, going straight to the
point in the fewest and simplest words; “powerful
and picturesque,” writes Hallam, “from
concise simplicity.” Bunyan’s style
is recommended by Lord Macaulay as an invaluable study
to every person who wishes to gain a wide command
over his mother tongue. Its vocabulary is the
vocabulary of the common people. “There
is not,” he truly says, “in ’The
Pilgrim’s Progress’ a single expression,
if we except a few technical terms of theology, that
would puzzle the rudest peasant.” We may,
look through whole pages, and not find a word of more
than two syllables. Nor is the source of this
pellucid clearness and imaginative power far to seek.
Bunyan was essentially a man of one book, and that
book the very best, not only for its spiritual teaching
but for the purity of its style, the English Bible.
“In no book,” writes Mr. J. R. Green,
“do we see more clearly than in ‘The Pilgrim’s
Progress’ the new imaginative force which had
been given to the common life of Englishmen by their
study of the Bible. Bunyan’s English is
the simplest and homeliest English that has ever been
used by any great English writer, but it is the English
of the Bible. His images are the images of prophet
and evangelist. So completely had the Bible
become Bunyan’s life that one feels its phrases
as the natural expression of his thoughts. He
had lived in the Bible till its words became his own.”
All who have undertaken to take an
estimate of Bunyan’s literary genius call special
attention to the richness of his imaginative power.
Few writers indeed have possessed this power in so
high a degree. In nothing, perhaps, is its vividness
more displayed than in the reality of its impersonations.
The dramatis persons are not shadowy abstractions,
moving far above us in a mystical world, or lay figures
ticketed with certain names, but solid men and women
of our own flesh and blood, living in our own everyday
world, and of like passions with ourselves. Many
of them we know familiarly; there is hardly one we
should be surprised to meet any day. This lifelike
power of characterization belongs in the highest degree
to “The Pilgrim’s Progress.”
It is hardly inferior in “The Holy War,”
though with some exceptions the people of “Mansoul”
have failed to engrave themselves on the popular memory
as the characters of the earlier allegory have done.
The secret of this graphic power, which gives “The
Pilgrim’s Progress” its universal popularity,
is that Bunyan describes men and women of his own
day, such as he had known and seen them. They
are not fancy pictures, but literal portraits.
Though the features may be exaggerated, and the colours
laid on with an unsparing brush, the outlines of his
bold personifications are truthfully drawn from his
own experience. He had had to do with every one
of them. He could have given a personal name
to most of them, and we could do the same to many.
We are not unacquainted with Mr Byends of the town
of Fair Speech, who “always has the luck to
jump in his judgment with the way of the times, and
to get thereby,” who is zealous for Religion
“when he goes in his silver slippers,”
and “loves to walk with him in the streets when
the sun shines and the people applaud him.”
All his kindred and surroundings are only too familiar
to us his wife, that very virtuous woman
my Lady Feigning’s daughter, my Lord Fair-speech,
my Lord Time-server, Mr. Facingbothways, Mr. Anything,
and the Parson of the Parish, his mother’s own
brother by the father’s side, Mr. Twotongues.
Nor is his schoolmaster, one Mr. Gripeman, of the market
town of Lovegain, in the county of Coveting, a stranger
to us. Obstinate, with his dogged determination
and stubborn common-sense, and Pliable with his shallow
impressionableness, are among our acquaintances.
We have, before now, come across “the brisk
lad Ignorance from the town of Conceit,” and
have made acquaintance with Mercy’s would-be
suitor, Mr. Brisk, “a man of some breeding and
that pretended to religion, but who stuck very close
to the world.” The man Temporary who lived
in a town two miles off from Honesty, and next door
to Mr. Turnback; Formalist and Hypocrisy, who were
“from the land of Vainglory, and were going for
praise to Mount Sion”; Simple, Sloth, and Presumption,
“fast asleep by the roadside with fetters on
their heels,” and their companions, Shortwind,
Noheart, Lingerafterlust, and Sleepyhead, we know
them all. “The young woman whose name
was Dull” taxes our patience every day.
Where is the town which does not contain Mrs. Timorous
and her coterie of gossips, Mrs. Bats-eyes, Mrs. Inconsiderate,
Mrs. Lightmind, and Mrs. Knownothing, “all as
merry as the maids,” with that pretty fellow
Mr. Lechery at the house of Madam Wanton, that “admirably
well-bred gentlewoman”? Where shall we
find more lifelike portraits than those of Madam Bubble,
a “tall, comely dame, somewhat of a swarthy
complexion, speaking very smoothly with a smile at
the end of each sentence, wearing a great purse by
her side, with her hand often in it, fingering her
money as if that was her chief delight;” of
poor Feeblemind of the town of Uncertain, with his
“whitely look, the cast in his eye, and his
trembling speech;” of Littlefaith, as “white
as a clout,” neither able to fight nor fly when
the thieves from Dead Man’s Lane were on him;
of Ready-to-halt, at first coming along on his crutches,
and then when Giant Despair had been slain and Doubting
Castle demolished, taking Despondency’s daughter
Much-afraid by the hand and dancing with her in the
road? “True, he could not dance without
one crutch in his hand, but I promise you he footed
it well. Also the girl was to be commanded,
for she answered the musick handsomely.”
In Bunyan’s pictures there is never a superfluous
detail. Every stroke tells, and helps to the
completeness of the portraiture.
The same reality characterizes the
descriptive part of “The Pilgrim’s Progress.”
As his characters are such as he must meet with every
day in his native town, so also the scenery and surroundings
of his allegory are part of his own everyday life,
and reproduce what he had been brought up amidst in
his native county, or had noticed in his tinker’s
wanderings. “Born and bred,” writes
Kingsley, “in the monotonous Midland, he had
no natural images beyond the pastures and brooks,
the town and country houses, he saw about him.”
The Slough of Despond, with its treacherous quagmire
in the midst of the plain, into which a wayfarer might
heedlessly fall, with its stepping-stones half drowned
in mire; Byepathmeadow, promising so fair, with its
stile and footpath on the other side of the fence;
the pleasant river fringed with meadows, green all
the year long and overshadowed with trees; the thicket
all overgrown with briars and thorns, where one tumbled
over a bush, another stuck fast in the dirt, some
lost their shoes in the mire, and others were fastened
from behind with the brambles; the high wall by the
roadside over which the fruit trees shot their boughs
and tempted the boys with their unripe plums; the
arbour with its settle tempting the footsore traveller
to drowsiness; the refreshing spring at the bottom
of Hill Difficulty; all are evidently drawn from his
own experience. Bunyan, in his long tramps,
had seen them all. He had known what it was to
be in danger of falling into a pit and being dashed
to pieces with Vain Confidence, of being drowned in
the flooded meadows with Christian and Hopeful; of
sinking in deep water when swimming over a river,
going down and rising up half dead, and needing all
his companion’s strength and skill to keep his
head above the stream. Vanity Fair is evidently
drawn from the life. The great yearly fair of
Stourbridge, close to Cambridge, which Bunyan had
probably often visited in his tinker days, with its
streets of booths filled with “wares of all
kinds from all countries,” its “shows,
jugglings, cheats games, plays, fools, apes, knaves,
and rogues, and that of every kind,” its “great
one of the fair,” its court of justice and power
of judgment, furnished him with the materials for his
picture. Scenes like these he draws with sharp
defined outlines. When he had to describe what
he only knew by hearsay, his pictures are shadowy and
cold. Never having been very far from home, he
had had no experience of the higher types of beauty
and grandeur in nature, and his pen moves in fetters
when he attempts to describe them. When his pilgrims
come to the Hill Difficulty and the Delectable Mountains,
the difference is at once seen. All his nobler
imagery is drawn from Scripture. As Hallam has
remarked, “There is scarcely a circumstance or
metaphor in the Old Testament which does not find
a place bodily and literally in ’The Pilgrim’s
Progress,’ and this has made his imagination
appear more creative than it really is.”
It would but weary the reader to follow
the details of a narrative which is so universally
known. Who needs to be told that in the pilgrimage
here described is represented in allegorical dress
the course of a human soul convinced of sin, struggling
onwards to salvation through the trials and temptations
that beset its path to its eternal home? The
book is so completely wrought into the mind and memory,
that most of us can at once recall the incidents which
chequer the pilgrim’s way, and realize their
meaning; the Slough of Despond, in which the man convinced
of his guilt and fleeing from the wrath to come, in
his agonizing self-consciousness is in danger of being
swallowed up in despair; the Wicket Gate, by which
he enters on the strait and narrow way of holiness;
the Interpréter’s House, with his visions
and acted parables; the Wayside Cross, at the sight
of which the burden of guilt falls from the pilgrim’s
back, and he is clothed with change of raiment; the
Hill Difficulty, which stands right in his way, and
which he must surmount, not circumvent; the lions
which he has to pass, not knowing that they are chained;
the Palace Beautiful, where he is admitted to the
communion of the faithful, and sits down to meat with
them; the Valley of Humiliation, the scene of his
desperate but victorious encounter with Apollyon; the
Valley of the Shadow of Death, with its evil sights
and doleful sounds, where one of the wicked ones whispers
into his ear thoughts of blasphemy which he cannot
distinguish from the suggestions of his own mind; the
cave at the valley’s mouth, in which, Giant
Pagan having been dead this many a day, his brother,
Giant Pope, now sits alone, grinning at pilgrims as
they pass by, and biting his nails because he cannot
get at them; Vanity Fair, the picture of the world,
as St. John describes it, hating the light that puts
to shame its own self-chosen darkness, and putting
it out if it can, where the Pilgrim’s fellow,
Faithful, seals his testimony with his death, and
the Pilgrim himself barely escapes; the “delicate
plain” called Ease, and the little hill, Lucre,
where Demas stood “gentlemanlike,” to invite
the passersby to come and dig in his silver mine; Byepath
Meadow, into which the Pilgrim and his newly-found
companion stray, and are made prisoners by Giant Despair
and shut up in the dungeons of Doubting Castle, and
break out of prison by the help of the Key of Promise;
the Delectable Mountains in Immanuel’s Land,
with their friendly shepherds and the cheering prospect
of the far-off heavenly city; the Enchanted Land,
with its temptations to spiritual drowsiness at the
very end of the journey; the Land of Beulah, the ante-chamber
of the city to which they were bound; and, last stage
of all, the deep dark river, without a bridge, which
had to be crossed before the city was entered; the
entrance into its heavenly gates, the pilgrim’s
joyous reception with all the bells in the city ringing
again for joy; the Dreamer’s glimpse of its
glories through the opened portals is not
every stage of the journey, every scene of the pilgrimage,
indelibly printed on our memories, for our warning,
our instruction, our encouragement in the race we,
as much as they, have each one to run? Have
we not all, again and again, shared the Dreamer’s
feelings “After that they shut up
the Gates; which, when I had seen, I wished myself
among them,” and prayed, God helping us, that
our “dangerous journey” ever
the most dangerous when we see its dangers the least might
end in our “safe arrival at the desired country”?
“The Pilgrim’s Progress”
exhibits Bunyan in the character by which he would
have most desired to be remembered, as one of the most
influential of Christian preachers. Hallam,
however, claims for him another distinction which
would have greatly startled and probably shocked him,
as the father of our English novelists. As an
allegorist Bunyan had many predecessors, not a few
of whom, dating from early times, had taken the natural
allegory of the pilgrimage of human life as the basis
of their works. But as a novelist he had no
one to show him the way. Bunyan was the first
to break ground in a field which has since then been
so overabundantly worked that the soil has almost
lost its productiveness; while few novels written
purely with the object of entertainment have ever
proved so universally entertaining. Intensely
religious as it is in purpose, “The Pilgrim’s
Progress” may be safely styled the first English
novel. “The claim to be the father of English
romance,” writes Dr. Allon, “which has
been sometimes preferred for Defoe, really pertains
to Bunyan. Defoe may claim the parentage of
a species, but Bunyan is the creator of the genus.”
As the parent of fictitious biography it is that
Bunyan has charmed the world. On its vivid interest
as a story, its universal interest and lasting vitality
rest. “Other allegorises,” writes
Lord Macaulay, “have shown great ingenuity, but
no other allegorist has ever been able to touch the
heart, and to make its abstractions objects of terror,
of pity, and of love.” Whatever its deficiencies,
literary and religious, may be; if we find incongruities
in the narrative, and are not insensible to some grave
theological deficiencies; if we are unable without
qualification to accept Coleridge’s dictum that
it is “incomparably the best ’Summa
Theologiae Evangelicae’ ever produced by
a writer not miraculously inspired;” even if,
with Hallam, we consider its “excellencies great
indeed, but not of the highest order,” and deem
it “a little over-praised,” the fact of
its universal popularity with readers of all classes
and of all orders of intellect remains, and gives
this book a unique distinction. “I have,”
says Dr. Arnold, when reading it after a long interval,
“always been struck by its piety. I am
now struck equally or even more by its profound wisdom.
It seems to be a complete reflexion of Scripture.”
And to turn to a critic of very different character,
Dean Swift: “I have been better entertained
and more improved,” writes that cynical pessimist,
“by a few pages of this book than by a long
discourse on the will and intellect.”
The favourite of our childhood, as “the most
perfect and complex of fairy tales, so human and intelligible,”
read, as Hallam says, “at an age when the spiritual
meaning is either little perceived or little regarded,”
the “Pilgrim’s Progress” becomes
the chosen companion of our later years, perused with
ever fresh appreciation of its teaching, and enjoyment
of its native genius; “the interpreter of life
to all who are perplexed with its problems, and the
practical guide and solace of all who need counsel
and sympathy.”
The secret of this universal acceptableness
of “The Pilgrim’s Progress” lies
in the breadth of its religious sympathies. Rigid
Puritan as Bunyan was, no book is more completely
free from sectarian narrowness. Its reach is
as wide as Christianity itself, and it takes hold of
every human heart because it is so intensely human.
No apology is needed for presenting Mr. Froude’s
eloquent panegyric: “The Pilgrim, though
in Puritan dress, is a genuine man. His experience
is so truly human experience that Christians of every
persuasion can identify themselves with him; and even
those who regard Christianity itself as but a natural
outgrowth of the conscience and intellect, and yet
desire to live nobly and make the best of themselves,
can recognize familiar footprints in every step of
Christian’s journey. Thus ‘The Pilgrim’s
Progress’ is a book which when once read can
never be forgotten. We too, every one of us,
are pilgrims on the same road; and images and illustrations
come back to us from so faithful an itinerary, as
we encounter similar trials, and learn for ourselves
the accuracy with which Bunyan has described them.
Time cannot impair its interest, or intellectual progress
make it cease to be true to experience.”
Dr. Brown’s appreciative words may be added:
“With deepest pathos it enters into the stern
battle so real to all of us, into those heart-experiences
which make up, for all, the discipline of life.
It is this especially which has given to it the mighty
hold which it has always had upon the toiling poor,
and made it the one book above all books well-thumbed
and torn to tatters among them. And it is this
which makes it one of the first books translated by
the missionary who seeks to give true thoughts of
God and life to heathen men.”
The Second Part of “The Pilgrim’s
Progress” partakes of the character of almost
all continuations. It is, in Mr. Froude’s
words, “only a feeble reverberation of the first
part, which has given it a popularity it would have
hardly attained by its own merits. Christiana
and her children are tolerated for the pilgrim’s
sake to whom they belong.” Bunyan seems
not to have been insensible of this himself, when
in his metrical preface he thus introduces his new
work:
“Go now my little book to
every place
Where my first Pilgrim has but shown
his face.
Call at their door; if any say ‘Who’s
there?’
Then answer thus, ‘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 although the Second Part must
be pronounced inferior, on the whole, to the first,
it is a work of striking individuality and graphic
power, such as Bunyan alone could have written.
Everywhere we find strokes of his peculiar genius,
and though in a smaller measure than the first, it
has added not a few portraits to Bunyan’s spiritual
picture gallery we should be sorry to miss, and supplied
us with racy sayings which stick to the memory.
The sweet maid Mercy affords a lovely picture of gentle
feminine piety, well contrasted with the more vigorous
but still thoroughly womanly character of Christiana.
Great-Heart is too much of an abstraction: a
preacher in the uncongenial disguise of a knightly
champion of distressed females and the slayer of giants.
But the other new characters have generally a vivid
personality. Who can forget Old Honesty, the
dull good man with no mental gifts but of dogged sincerity,
who though coming from the Town of Stupidity, four
degrees beyond the City of Destruction, was “known
for a cock of the right kind,” because he said
the truth and stuck to it; or his companion, Mr. Fearing,
that most troublesome of pilgrims, stumbling at every
straw, lying roaring at the Slough of Despond above
a month together, standing shaking and shrinking at
the Wicket Gate, but making no stick at the Lions,
and at last getting over the river not much above
wetshod; or Mr. Valiant for Truth, the native of Darkland,
standing with his sword drawn and his face all bloody
from his three hours’ fight with Wildhead, Inconsiderate,
and Pragmatick; Mr. Standfast, blushing to be found
on his knees in the Enchanted Ground, one who loved
to hear his Lord spoken of, and coveted to set his
foot wherever he saw the print of his shoe; Mr. Feeblemind,
the sickly, melancholy pilgrim, at whose door death
did usually knock once a day, betaking himself to
a pilgrim’s life because he was never well at
home, resolved to run when he could, and go when he
could not run, and creep when he could not go, an
enemy to laughter and to gay attire, bringing up the
rear of the company with Mr. Readytohalt hobbling along
on his crutches; Giant Despair’s prisoners,
Mr. Despondency, whom he had all but starved to death and
Mistress Much-afraid his daughter, who went through
the river singing, though none could understand what
she said? Each of these characters has a distinct
individuality which lifts them from shadowy abstractions
into living men and women. But with all its
excellencies, and they are many, the general inferiority
of the history of Christiana and her children’s
pilgrimage to that of her husband’s must be
acknowledged. The story is less skilfully constructed;
the interest is sometimes allowed to flag; the dialogues
that interrupt the narrative are in places dry and
wearisome too much of sermons in disguise.
There is also a want of keeping between the two parts
of the allegory. The Wicket Gate of the First
Part has become a considerable building with a summer parlour in the Second; the shepherds’ tents on
the Delectable Mountains have risen into a palace,
with a dining-room, and a looking-glass, and a store
of jewels; while Vanity Fair has lost its former bad
character, and has become a respectable country town,
where Christiana and her family, seeming altogether
to forget their pilgrimage, settled down comfortably,
enjoy the society of the good people of the place,
and the sons marry and have children. These
same children also cause the reader no little perplexity,
when he finds them in the course of the supposed journey
transformed from sweet babes who are terrified with
the Mastiffs barking at the Wicket Gate, who
catch at the boughs for the unripe plums and cry at
having to climb the hill; whose faces are stroked
by the Interpreter; who are catechised and called “good
boys” by Prudence; who sup on bread crumbled
into basins of milk, and are put to bed by Mercy into
strong young men, able to go out and fight with a
giant, and lend a hand to the pulling down of Doubting
Castle, and becoming husbands and fathers. We
cannot but feel the want of vraisemblance which
brings the whole company of pilgrims to the banks
of the dark river at one time, and sends them over
in succession, following one another rapidly through
the Golden Gate of the City. The four boys with
their wives and children, it is true, stay behind awhile,
but there is an evident incongruity in their doing
so when the allegory has brought them all to what
stands for the close of their earthly pilgrimage.
Bunyan’s mistake was in gratifying his inventive
genius and making his band of pilgrims so large.
He could get them together and make them travel in
company without any sacrifice of dramatic truth, which,
however, he was forced to disregard when the time came
for their dismissal. The exquisite pathos of
the description of the passage of the river by Christian
and Hopeful blinds us to what may be almost termed
the impossibility of two persons passing through the
final struggle together, and dying at the same moment,
but this charm is wanting in the prosaic picture of
the company of fellow-travellers coming down to the
water’s edge, and waiting till the postman blows
his horn and bids them cross. Much as the Second
Part contains of what is admirable, and what no one
but Bunyan could have written, we feel after reading
it that, in Mr. Froude’s words, the rough simplicity
is gone, and has been replaced by a tone of sentiment
which is almost mawkish. “Giants, dragons,
and angelic champions carry us into a spurious fairyland
where the knight-errant is a preacher in disguise.
Fair ladies and love-matches, however decorously
chastened, suit ill with the sternness of the mortal
conflict between the soul and sin.” With
the acknowledged shortcomings of the Second Part of
“The Pilgrim’s Progress,” we may
be well content that Bunyan never carried out the
idea hinted at in the closing words of his allegory:
“Shall it be my lot to go that way again, I may
give those that desire it an account of what I am
here silent about; in the meantime I bid my reader Adieu.”
Bunyan’s second great allegorical
work, “The Holy War,” need not detain
us long. Being an attempt, and in the nature
of things an unsuccessful attempt, to clothe what
writers on divinity call “the plan of salvation”
in a figurative dress, the narrative, with all its
vividness of description in parts, its clearly drawn
characters with their picturesque nomenclature, and
the stirring vicissitudes of the drama, is necessarily
wanting in the personal interest which attaches to
an individual man, like Christian, and those who are
linked with or follow his career. In fact, the
tremendous realities of the spiritual history of the
human race are entirely unfit for allegorical treatment
as a whole. Sin, its origin, its consequences,
its remedy, and the apparent failure of that remedy
though administered by Almighty hands, must remain
a mystery for all time. The attempts made by
Bunyan, and by one of much higher intellectual power
and greater poetic gifts than Bunyan John
Milton to bring that mystery within the grasp of the finite intellect, only
render it more perplexing. The proverbial line tells us that
“Fools rush in where angels
fear to tread.”
Bunyan and Milton were as far as possible
from being “fools”; but when both these
great writers, on the one hand, carry us up into the
Council Chamber of Heaven and introduce us to the
Persons of the ever-blessed Trinity, debating, consulting,
planning, and resolving, like a sovereign and his
ministers when a revolted province has to be brought
back to its allegiance; and, on the other hand, take
us down to the infernal regions, and makes us privy
to the plots and counterplots of the rebel leaders
and hearers of their speeches, we cannot but feel
that, in spite of the magnificent diction and poetic
imagination of the one, and the homely picturesque
genius of the other, the grand themes treated of are
degraded if not vulgarized, without our being in any
way helped to unravel their essential mysteries.
In point of individual personal interest, “The
Holy War” contrasts badly with “The Pilgrim’s
Progress.” The narrative moves in a more
shadowy region. We may admire the workmanship;
but the same undefined sense of unreality pursues
us through Milton’s noble epic, the outcome
of a divinely-fired genius, and Bunyan’s humble
narrative, drawing its scenes and circumstances, and
to some extent its dramatis personae, from
the writer’s own surroundings in the town and
corporation of Bedford, and his brief but stirring
experience as a soldier in the great Parliamentary
War. The catastrophe also is eminently unsatisfactory.
When Christian and Hopeful enter the Golden Gates
we feel that the story has come to its proper end,
which we have been looking for all along. But
the conclusion of “The Holy War” is too
much like the closing chapter of “Rasselas” “a
conclusion in which nothing is concluded.”
After all the endless vicissitudes of the conflict,
and the final and glorious victory of Emmanuel and
his forces, and the execution of the ringleaders of
the mutiny, the issue still remains doubtful.
The town of Mansoul is left open to fresh attacks.
Diabolus is still at large. Carnal Sense
breaks prison and continues to lurk in the town.
Unbelief, that “nimble Jack,” slips away,
and can never be laid hold of. These, therefore,
and some few others of the more subtle of the Diabolonians,
continue to make their home in Mansoul, and will do
so until Mansoul ceases to dwell in the kingdom of
Universe. It is true they turn chicken-hearted
after the other leaders of their party have been taken
and executed, and keep themselves quiet and close,
lurking in dens and holes lest they should be snapped
up by Emmanuel’s men. If Unbelief or any
of his crew venture to show themselves in the streets,
the whole town is up in arms against them; the very
children raise a hue and cry against them and seek
to stone them. But all in vain. Mansoul,
it is true, enjoys some good degree of peace and quiet.
Her Prince takes up his residence in her borders.
Her captains and soldiers do their duties.
She minds her trade with the heavenly land afar off;
also she is busy in her manufacture. But with
the remnants of the Diabolonians still within her
walls, ready to show their heads on the least relaxation
of strict watchfulness, keeping up constant communication
with Diabolus and the other lords of the pit,
and prepared to open the gates to them when opportunity
offers, this peace can not be lasting. The old
battle will have to be fought over again, only to
end in the same undecisive result. And so it
must be to the end. If untrue to art, Bunyan
is true to fact. Whether we regard Mansoul as
the soul of a single individual or as the whole human
race, no final victory can be looked for so long as
it abides in “the country of Universe.”
The flesh will lust against the spirit, the regenerated
man will be in danger of being brought into captivity
to the law of sin and death unless he keeps up his
watchfulness and maintains the struggle to the end.
And it is here, that, for purposes
of art, not for purposes of truth, the real failing
of “The Holy War” lies. The drama
of Mansoul is incomplete, and whether individually
or collectively, must remain incomplete till man puts
on a new nature, and the victory, once for all gained
on Calvary, is consummated, in the fulness of time,
at the restitution of all things. There is no
uncertainty what the end will be. Evil must be
put down, and good must triumph at last. But
the end is not yet, and it seems as far off as ever.
The army of Doubters, under their several captains,
Election Doubters, Vocation Doubters, Salvation Doubters,
Grace Doubters, with their general the great Lord
Incredulity at their head, reinforced by many fresh
regiments under novel standards, unknown and unthought
of in Bunyan’s days, taking the place of those
whose power is past, is ever making new attacks upon
poor Mansoul, and terrifying feeble souls with their
threatenings. Whichever way we look there is
much to puzzle, much to grieve over, much that to
our present limited view is entirely inexplicable.
But the mind that accepts the loving will and wisdom
of God as the law of the Universe, can rest in the
calm assurance that all, however mysteriously, is
fulfilling His eternal designs, and that though He
seems to permit “His work to be spoilt, His power
defied, and even His victories when won made useless,”
it is but seeming, that the triumph of
evil is but temporary, and that these apparent failures
and contradictions, are slowly but surely working
out and helping forward
“The one unseen divine event
To which the whole creation moves.”
“The mysteries and contradictions
which the Christian revelation leaves unsolved are
made tolerable by Hope.” To adopt Bunyan’s
figurative language in the closing paragraph of his
allegory, the day is certainly coming when the famous
town of Mansoul shall be taken down and transported
“every stick and stone” to Emmanuel’s
land, and there set up for the Father’s habitation
in such strength and glory as it never saw before.
No Diabolonian shall be able to creep into its streets,
burrow in its walls, or be seen in its borders.
No evil tidings shall trouble its inhabitants, nor
sound of Diabolian drum be heard there. Sorrow
and grief shall be ended, and life, always sweet,
always new, shall last longer than they could even
desire it, even all the days of eternity. Meanwhile
let those who have such a glorious hope set before
them keep clean and white the liveries their Lord
has given them, and wash often in the open fountain.
Let them believe in His love, live upon His word;
watch, fight, and pray, and hold fast till He come.
One more work of Bunyan’s still
remains to be briefly noticed, as bearing the characteristic
stamp of his genius, “The Life and Death of Mr.
Badman.” The original idea of this book
was to furnish a contrast to “The Pilgrim’s
Progress.” As in that work he had described
the course of a man setting out on his course heavenwards,
struggling onwards through temptation, trials, and
difficulties, and entering at last through the golden
gates into the city of God, so in this later work his
purpose was to depict the career of a man whose face
from the first was turned in the opposite direction,
going on from bad to worse, ever becoming more and
more irretrievably evil, fitter and fitter for the
bottomless pit; his life full of sin and his death
without repentance; reaping the fruit of his sins
in hopeless sinfulness. That this was the original
purpose of the work, Bunyan tells us in his preface.
It came into his mind, he says, as in the former
book he had written concerning the progress of the
Pilgrim from this world to glory, so in this second
book to write of the life and death of the ungodly,
and of their travel from this world to hell.
The new work, however, as in almost every respect
it differs from the earlier one, so it is decidedly
inferior to it. It is totally unlike “The
Pilgrim’s Progress” both in form and execution.
The one is an allegory, the other a tale, describing
without imagery or metaphor, in the plainest language,
the career of a “vulgar, middle-class, unprincipled
scoundrel.” While “The Pilgrim’s
Progress” pursues the narrative form throughout,
only interrupted by dialogues between the leading
characters, “Mr. Badman’s career”
is presented to the world in a dialogue between a
certain Mr. Wiseman and Mr. Attentive. Mr. Wiseman
tells the story, and Mr. Attentive supplies appropriate
reflections on it. The narrative is needlessly
burdened with a succession of short sermons, in the
form of didactic discourses on lying, stealing, impurity,
and the other vices of which the hero of the story
was guilty, and which brought him to his miserable
end. The plainness of speech with which some
of these evil doings are enlarged upon, and Mr. Badman’s
indulgence in them described, makes portions of the
book very disagreeable, and indeed hardly profitable
reading. With omissions, however, the book well
deserves perusal, as a picture such as only Bunyan
or his rival in lifelike portraiture, Defoe, could
have drawn of vulgar English life in the latter part
of the seventeenth century, in a commonplace country
town such as Bedford. It is not at all a pleasant
picture. The life described, when not gross,
is sordid and foul, is mean and commonplace.
But as a description of English middle-class life at
the epoch of the Restoration and Revolution, it is
invaluable for those who wish to put themselves in
touch with that period. The anecdotes introduced
to illustrate Bunyan’s positions of God’s
judgment upon swearers and sinners, convicting him
of a credulity and a harshness of feeling one is sorry
to think him capable of, are very interesting for the
side-lights they throw upon the times and the people
who lived in them. It would take too long to
give a sketch of the story, even if a summary could
give any real estimate of its picturesque and vivid
power. It is certainly a remarkable, if an offensive
book. As with “Robinson Crusoe” and
Defoe’s other tales, we can hardly believe that
we have not a real history before us. We feel
that there is no reason why the events recorded should
not have happened. There are no surprises; no
unlooked-for catastrophes; no providential interpositions
to punish the sinner or rescue the good man.
Badman’s pious wife is made to pay the penalty
of allowing herself to be deceived by a tall, good-looking,
hypocritical scoundrel. He himself pursues his
evil way to the end, and “dies like a lamb, or
as men call it, like a Chrisom child sweetly and without
fear,” but the selfsame Mr. Badman still, not
only in name, but in condition; sinning onto the last,
and dying with a heart that cannot repent.
Mr. Froude’s summing up of this
book is so masterly that we make no apology for presenting
it to our readers. “Bunyan conceals nothing,
assumes nothing, and exaggerates nothing. He
makes his bad man sharp and shrewd. He allows
sharpness and shrewdness to bring him the reward which
such qualities in fact command. Badman is successful;
is powerful; he enjoys all the pleasures which money
can bring; his bad wife helps him to ruin, but otherwise
he is not unhappy, and he dies in peace. Bunyan
has made him a brute, because such men do become brutes.
It is the real punishment of brutal and selfish habits.
There the figure stands a picture of a
man in the rank of English life with which Bunyan was
most familiar; travelling along the primrose path
to the everlasting bonfire, as the way to Emmanuel’s
Land was through the Slough of Despond and the Valley
of the Shadow of Death. Pleasures are to be found
among the primroses, such pleasures as a brute can
be gratified by. Yet the reader feels that even
if there was no bonfire, he would still prefer to be
with Christian.”