The Pilgrim's Progress
THE SIXTH STAGE
Now I saw that they went on to the ascent that was a little way off,
cast up to be a prospect for pilgrims. That was the place from whence
Christian had the first sight of Faithful his brother. Wherefore, here
they sat down and rested. They also here did eat and drink, and make
merry, for that they had gotten deliverance from this so dangerous an
enemy. As they sat thus and did eat, Christiana asked the guide, if he
had caught no hurt in the battle? Then said Mr. Great-Heart, No, save
a little on my flesh; yet that also shall be so far from being to my
detriment, that it is at present a proof of my love to my master and
you, and shall be a means, by grace, to increase my reward at last.
CHR. But were you not afraid, good sir, when you saw him come with his
club?
GREAT. It is my duty, said he, to mistrust my own ability, that I may
have reliance on Him who is stronger than all.
CHR. But what did you think when he fetched you down to the ground at
the first blow?
GREAT. Why, I thought, quoth he, that so my Master himself was served,
and yet he it was that conquered at last. 2 Cor. 4:10,11; Rom. 8:37.
MATT. When you all have thought what you please, I think God has been
wonderfully good unto us, both in bringing us out of this valley, and in
delivering us out of the hand of this enemy. For my part, I see no
reason why we should distrust our God any more, since he has now, and in
such a place as this, given us such testimony of his love. Then they
got up, and went forward.
Now a little before them stood an oak; and under it, when they came to
it, they found an old pilgrim fast asleep. They knew that he was a
pilgrim by his clothes, and his staff, and his girdle.
So the guide, Mr. Great-Heart, awaked him; and the old gentleman, as he
lifted up his eyes, cried out, What's the matter? Who are you; and what
is your business here?
GREAT. Come, man, be not so hot; here are none but friends. Yet the old
man gets up, and stands upon his guard, and will know of them what they
are. Then said the guide, My name is Great-Heart: I am the guide of
these pilgrims that are going to the Celestial country.
HON. Then said Mr. Honest, I cry you mercy: I feared that you had been
of the company of those that some time ago did rob Little-Faith of his
money; but, now I look better about me, I perceive you are honester
people.
GREAT. Why, what would or could you have done to have helped yourself,
if indeed we had been of that company?
HON. Done! Why, I would have fought as long as breath had been in me:
and had I so done, I am sure you could never have given me the worst
on't; for a Christian can never be overcome, unless he shall yield of
himself.
GREAT. Well said, father Honest, quoth the guide; for by this I know
thou art a cock of the right kind, for thou hast said the truth.
HON. And by this also I know that thou knowest what true pilgrimage is;
for all others do think that we are the soonest overcome of any.
GREAT. Well, now we are so happily met, pray let me crave your name, and
the name of the place you came from.
HON. My name I cannot tell you, but I came from the town of Stupidity:
it lieth about four degrees beyond the city of Destruction.
GREAT. Oh, Are you that countryman? Then I deem I have half a guess of
you: your name is Old Honesty, is it not?
HON. So the old gentleman blushed, and said, Not honesty in the
abstract, but Honest is my name; and I wish that my nature may agree to
what I am called. But, sir, said the old gentleman, how could you guess
that I am such a man, since I came from such a place?
GREAT. I had heard of you before, by my Master; for he knows all things
that are done on the earth. But I have often wondered that any should
come from your place; for your town is worse than is the city of
Destruction itself.
HON. Yes, we lie more off from the sun, and so are more cold and
senseless. But were a man in a mountain of ice, yet if the Sun of
righteousness will arise upon him, his frozen heart shall feel a thaw;
and thus it has been with me.
GREAT. I believe it, father Honest, I believe it; for I know the thing
is true.
Then the old gentleman saluted all the pilgrims with a holy kiss of
charity, and asked them their names, and how they had fared since they
set out on their pilgrimage.
CHR. Then said Christiana, My name I suppose you have heard of; good
Christian was my husband, and these four are his children. But can you
think how the old gentleman was taken, when she told him who she was?
He skipped, he smiled, he blessed them with a thousand good wishes,
saying,
HON. I have heard much of your husband, and of his travels and wars
which he underwent in his days. Be it spoken to your comfort, the name
of your husband rings all over these parts of the world: his faith, his
courage, his enduring, and his sincerity under all, had made his name
famous. Then he turned him to the boys, and asked them of their names,
which they told him. Then said he unto them, Matthew, be thou like
Matthew the publican, not in vice, but in virtue.
MATT. 10:3. Samuel,
said he, be thou like Samuel the prophet, a man of faith and prayer.
Psa. 99:6. Joseph, said he, be thou like Joseph in Potiphar's house,
chaste, and one that flees from temptation. Gen. 39. And James, be
thou like James the just, and like James the brother of our Lord. Acts
1:13. Then they told him of Mercy, and how she had left her town and
her kindred to come along with Christiana and with her sons. At that
the old honest man said, Mercy is thy name: by mercy shalt thou be
sustained and carried through all those difficulties that shall assault
thee in thy way, till thou shalt come thither where thou shalt look the
Fountain of mercy in the face with comfort. All this while the guide,
Mr. Great-Heart, was very well pleased, and smiled upon his companions.
Now, as they walked along together, the guide asked the old gentleman if
he did not know one Mr. Fearing, that came on pilgrimage out of his
parts.
HON. Yes, very well, said he. He was a man that had the root of the
matter in him; but he was one of the most troublesome pilgrims that ever
I met with in all my days.
GREAT. I perceive you knew him, for you have given a very right
character of him.
HON. Knew him! I was a great companion of his; I was with him most an
end; when he first began to think upon what would come upon us
hereafter, I was with him.
GREAT. I was his guide from my Master's house to the gates of the
Celestial City.
HON. Then you knew him to be a troublesome one.
GREAT. I did so; but I could very well bear it; for men of my calling
are oftentimes intrusted with the conduct of such as he was.
HON. Well then, pray let us hear a little of him, and how he managed
himself under your conduct.
GREAT. Why, he was always afraid that he should come short of whither he
had a desire to go. Every thing frightened him that he heard any body
speak of, if it had but the least appearance of opposition in it. I
heard that he lay roaring at the Slough of Despond for above a month
together; nor durst he, for all he saw several go over before him,
venture, though they many of them offered to lend him their hands. He
would not go back again, neither. The Celestial City-he said he should
die if he came not to it; and yet he was dejected at every difficulty,
and stumbled at every straw that any body cast in his way. Well, after
he had lain at the Slough of Despond a great while, as I have told you,
one sunshiny morning, I do not know how, he ventured, and so got over;
but when he was over, he would scarce believe it. He had, I think, a
Slough of Despond in his mind, a slough that he carried every where with
him, or else he could never have been as he was. So he came up to the
gate, you know what I mean, that stands at the head of this way, and
there also he stood a good while before he would venture to knock. When
the gate was opened, he would give back, and give place to others, and
say that he was not worthy. For, all he got before some to the gate,
yet many of them went in before him. There the poor man would stand
shaking and shrinking; I dare say it would have pitied one's heart to
have seen him. Nor would he go back again. At last he took the hammer
that hanged on the gate, in his hand, and gave a small rap or two; then
one opened to him, but he shrunk back as before. He that opened stepped
out after him, and said, Thou trembling one, what wantest thou? With
that he fell down to the ground. He that spoke to him wondered to see
him so faint, so he said to him, Peace be to thee; up, for I have set
open the door to thee; come in, for thou art blessed. With that he got
up, and went in trembling; and when he was in, he was ashamed to show
his face. Well, after he had been entertained there a while, as you
know how the manner is, he was bid go on his way, and also told the way
he should take. So he went on till he came out to our house; but as he
behaved himself at the gate, so he did at my Master the Interpreter's
door. He lay there about in the cold a good while, before he would
adventure to call; yet he would not go back: and the nights were long
and cold then. Nay, he had a note of necessity in his bosom to my
master to receive him, and grant him the comfort of his house, and also
to allow him a stout and valiant conductor, because he was himself so
chicken-hearted a man; and yet for all that he was afraid to call at the
door. So he lay up and down thereabouts, till, poor man, he was almost
starved; yea, so great was his dejection, that though he saw several
others for knocking get in, yet he was afraid to venture. At last, I
think I looked out of the window, and perceiving a man to be up and down
about the door, I went out to him, and asked what he was: but, poor man,
the water stood in his eyes; so I perceived what he wanted. I went
therefore in, and told it in the house, and we showed the thing to our
Lord: so he sent me out again, to entreat him to come in; but I dare
say, I had hard work to do it. At last he came in; and I will say that
for my Lord, he carried it wonderful lovingly to him. There were but a
few good bits at the table, but some of it was laid upon his trencher.
Then he presented the note; and my Lord looked thereon, and said his
desire should be granted. So when he had been there a good while, he
seemed to get some heart, and to be a little more comfortable. For my
Master, you must know, is one of very tender bowels, especially to them
that are afraid; wherefore he carried it so towards him as might tend
most to his encouragement. Well, when he had had a sight of the things
of the place, and was ready to take his journey to go to the city, my
Lord, as he did to Christian before, gave him a bottle of spirits, and
some comfortable things to eat. Thus we set forward, and I went before
him; but the man was but of few words, only he would sigh aloud.
When we were come to where the three fellows were hanged, he said that
he doubted that that would be his end also. Only he seemed glad when he
saw the cross and the sepulchre. There I confess he desired to stay a
little to look; and he seemed for a while after to be a little cheery.
When he came to the Hill Difficulty, he made no stick at that, nor did
he much fear the lions: for you must know, that his troubles were not
about such things as these; his fear was about his acceptance at last.
I got him in at the house Beautiful, I think, before he was willing.
Also, when he was in, I brought him acquainted with the damsels of the
place; but he was ashamed to make himself much in company. He desired
much to be alone; yet he always loved good talk, and often would get
behind the screen to hear it. He also loved much to see ancient things,
and to be pondering them in his mind. He told me afterward, that he
loved to be in those two houses from which he came last, to wit, at the
gate, and that of the Interpreter, but that he durst not be so bold as
to ask.
When we went also from the house Beautiful, down the hill, into the
Valley of Humiliation, he went down as well as ever I saw a man in my
life; for he cared not how mean he was, so he might be happy at last.
Yea, I think there was a kind of sympathy betwixt that Valley and him;
for I never saw him better in all his pilgrimage than he was in that
Valley.
Here he would lie down, embrace the ground, and kiss the very flowers
that grew in this valley. Lam. 3:27-29. He would now be up every
morning by break of day, tracing and walking to and fro in the valley.
But when he was come to the entrance of the Valley of the Shadow of
Death, I thought I should have lost my man: not for that he had any
inclination to go back; that he always abhorred; but he was ready to die
for fear. Oh, the hobgoblins will have me! the hobgoblins will have
me! cried he; and I could not beat him out of it. He made such a
noise, and such an outcry here, that had they but heard him, it was
enough to encourage them to come and fall upon us.
But this I took very great notice of, that this valley was as quiet when
we went through it, as ever I knew it before or since. I suppose those
enemies here had now a special check from our Lord, and a command not to
meddle until Mr. Fearing had passed over it.
It would be too tedious to tell you of all; we will therefore only
mention a passage or two more. When he was come to Vanity Fair, I
thought he would have fought with all the men in the fair. I feared
there we should have been both knocked on the head, so hot was he
against their fooleries. Upon the Enchanted Ground he was very wakeful.
But when he was come at the river where was no bridge, there again he
was in a heavy case. Now, now, he said, he should be drowned forever,
and so never see that face with comfort that he had come so many miles
to behold.
And here also I took notice of what was very remarkable: the water of
that river was lower at this time than ever I saw it in all my life; so
he went over at last, not much above wetshod. When he was going up to
the gate, I began to take leave of him, and to wish him a good reception
above. So he said, I shall, I shall. Then parted we asunder, and I saw
him no more.
HON. Then it seems he was well at last?
GREAT. Yes, yes, I never had doubt about him. He was a man of a choice
spirit, only he was always kept very low, and that made his life so
burdensome to himself, and so troublesome to others. Psa. 88. He was,
above many, tender of sin: he was so afraid of doing injuries to others,
that he often would deny himself of that which was lawful, because he
would not offend. Rom. 14:21; 1 Cor. 8:13.
HON. But what should be the reason that such a good man should be all
his days so much in the dark?
GREAT. There are two sorts of reasons for it. One is, the wise God will
have it so: some must pipe, and some must weep.
MATT. 11:16. Now Mr.
Fearing was one that played upon the bass. He and his fellows sound the
sackbut, whose notes are more doleful than the notes of other music are:
though indeed, some say, the bass is the ground of music. And for my
part, I care not at all for that profession which begins not in
heaviness of mind. The first string that the musician usually touches
is the bass, when he intends to put all in tune. God also plays upon
this string first, when he sets the soul in tune for himself. Only
there was the imperfection of Mr. Fearing; he could play upon no other
music but this till towards his latter end.
[I make bold to talk thus metaphorically for the ripening of the wits of
young readers, and because, in the book of Revelation, the saved are
compared to a company of musicians, that play upon their trumpets and
harps, and sing their songs before the throne.Rev. 5:8; 14:2,3.]
HON. He was a very zealous man, as one may see by the relation you have
given of him. Difficulties, lions, or Vanity Fair, he feared not at
all; it was only sin, death, and hell, that were to him a terror,
because he had some doubts about his interest in that celestial country.
GREAT. You say right; those were the things that were his troublers; and
they, as you have well observed, arose from the weakness of his mind thereabout, not
from weakness of spirit as to the practical part of a pilgrim's life. I
dare believe that, as the proverb is, he could have bit a firebrand, had
it stood in his way; but the things with which he was oppressed, no man
ever yet could shake off with ease.
CHR. Then said Christiana, This relation of Mr. Fearing has done me
good; I thought nobody had been like me. But I see there was some
semblance betwixt this good man and me: only we differed in two things.
His troubles were so great that they broke out; but mine I kept within.
His also lay so hard upon him, they made him that he could not knock at
the houses provided for entertainment; but my trouble was always such as
made me knock the louder.
MER. If I might also speak my heart, I must say that something of him
has also dwelt in me. For I have ever been more afraid of the lake, and
the loss of a place in paradise, than I have been of the loss other
things. O, thought I, may I have the happiness to have a habitation
there! 'Tis enough, though I part with all the world to win it.
MATT. Then said Matthew, Fear was one thing that made me think that I
was far from having that within me which accompanies salvation. But if
it was so with such a good man as he, why may it not also go well with
me?
JAMES. No fears no grace, said James. Though there is not always grace
where there is the fear of hell, yet, to be sure, there is no grace
where there is no fear of God.
GREAT. Well said, James; thou hast hit the mark. For the fear of God is
the beginning of wisdom; and to be sure, they that want the beginning
have neither middle nor end. But we will here conclude our discourse of
Mr. Fearing, after we have sent after him this farewell.
"Well, Master Fearing, thou didst fear
Thy God, and wast afraid
Of doing any thing, while here,
That would have thee betrayed.
And didst thou fear the lake and pit?
Would others do so too!
For, as for them that want thy wit,
They do themselves undo."
Now I saw that they still went on in their talk. For after Mr. Great-
Heart had made an end with Mr. Fearing, Mr. Honest began to tell them
of another, but his name was Mr. Self-will. He pretended himself to be
a pilgrim, said Mr. Honest; but I persuade myself he never came in at
the gate that stands at the head of the way.
GREAT. Had you ever any talk with him about it?
HON. Yes, more than once or twice; but he would always be like himself,
self-willed. He neither cared for man, nor argument, nor yet example;
what his mind prompted him to, that he would do, and nothing else could
he be got to do.
GREAT. Pray, what principles did he hold? for I suppose you can tell.
HON. He held that a man might follow the vices as well as the virtues of
pilgrims; and that if he did both, he should be certainly saved.
GREAT. How? If he had said, it is possible for the best to be guilty of
the vices, as well as to partake of the virtues of pilgrims, he could
not much have been blamed; for indeed we are exempted from no vice
absolutely, but on condition that we watch and strive. But this, I
perceive, is not the thing; but if I understand you right, your meaning
is, that he was of opinion that it was allowable so to be.
HON. Aye, aye, so I mean, and so he believed and practised.
GREAT. But what grounds had he for his so saying?
HON. Why, he said he had the Scripture for his warrant.
GREAT. Prithee, Mr. Honest, present us with a few particulars.
HON. So I will. He said, to have to do with other men's wives had been
practised by David, God's beloved; and therefore he could do it. He
said, to have more women than one was a thing that Solomon practised,
and therefore he could do it. He said, that Sarah and the godly
midwives of Egypt lied, and so did save Rahab, and therefore he could do
it. He said, that the disciples went at the bidding of their Master,
and took away the owner's ass, and therefore he could do so too. He
said, that Jacob got the inheritance of his father in a way of guile and
dissimulation, and therefore he could do so too.
GREAT. High base indeed! And are you sure he was of this opinion?
HON. I heard him plead for it, bring Scripture for it, bring arguments
for it, etc.
GREAT. An opinion that is not fit to be with any allowance in the world!
HON. You must understand me rightly: he did not say that any man might
do this; but that they who had the virtues of those that did such
things, might also do the same.
GREAT. But what more false than such a conclusion? For this is as much
as to say, that because good men heretofore have sinned of infirmity,
therefore he had allowance to do it of a presumptuous mind; or that if,
because a child, by the blast of the wind, or for that it stumbled at a
stone, fell down and defiled itself in the mire, therefore he might
wilfully lie down and wallow like a boar therein. Who could have
thought that any one could so far have been blinded by the power of
lust? But what is written must be true: they "stumble at the word,
being disobedient; whereunto also they were appointed." 1 Peter, 2:8.
His supposing that such may have the godly men's virtues, who addict
themselves to their vices, is also a delusion as strong as the other.
To eat up the sin of God's people, Hos. 4:8, as a dog licks up filth,
is no sign that one is possessed with their virtues. Nor can I believe
that one who is of this opinion, can at present have faith or love in
him. But I know you have made strong objections against him; prithee
what can he say for himself?
HON. Why, he says, to do this by way of opinion, seems abundantly more
honest than to do it, and yet hold contrary to it in opinion.
GREAT. A very wicked answer. For though to let loose the bridle to
lusts, while our opinions are against such things, is bad; yet, to sin,
and plead a toleration so to do, is worse: the one stumbles beholders
accidentally, the other leads them into the snare.
HON. There are many of this man's mind, that have not this man's mouth;
and that makes going on pilgrimage of so little esteem as it is.
GREAT. You have said the truth, and it is to be lamented: but he that
feareth the King of paradise, shall come out of them all.
CHR. There are strange opinions in the world. I know one that said, it
was time enough to repent when we come to die.
GREAT. Such are not overwise; that man would have been loth, might he
have had a week to run twenty miles in his life, to defer his journey to
the last hour of that week.
HON. You say right; and yet the generality of them who count themselves
pilgrims, do indeed do thus. I am, as you see, an old man, and have
been a traveller in this road many a day; and I have taken notice of
many things.
I have seen some that have set out as if they would drive all the world
before them, who yet have, in a few days, died as they in the
wilderness, and so never got sight of the promised land. I have seen
some that have promised nothing at first setting out to be pilgrims, and
who one would have thought could not have lived a day, that have yet
proved very good pilgrims. I have seen some who have run hastily
forward, that again have, after a little time, run just as fast back
again. I have seen some who have spoken very well of a pilgrim's life
at first, that after a while have spoken as much against it. I have
heard some, when they first set out for paradise, say positively, there
is such a place, who, when they have been almost there, have come back
again, and said there is none. I have heard some vaunt what they would
do in case they should be opposed, that have, even at a false alarm,
fled faith, the pilgrim's way, and all.
Now, as they were thus on their way, there came one running to meet
them, and said, Gentlemen, and you of the weaker sort, if you love life,
shift for yourselves, for the robbers are before you.
GREAT. Then said Mr. Great-Heart, They be the three that set upon
Little-Faith heretofore. Well, said he, we are ready for them: so they
went on their way. Now they looked at every turning when they should
have met with the villains; but whether they heard of Mr. Great-Heart,
or whether they had some other game, they came not up to the pilgrims.
Christiana then wished for an inn to refresh herself and her children,
because they were weary. Then said Mr. Honest, There is one a little
before us, where a very honorable disciple, one Gaius, dwells. Rom.
16:23. So they all concluded to turn in thither; and the rather,
because the old gentleman gave him so good a report. When they came to
the door they went in, not knocking, for folks use not to knock at the
door of an inn. Then they called for the master of the house, and he
came to them. So they asked if they might lie there that night.
GAIUS. Yes, gentlemen, if you be true men; for my house is for none but
pilgrims. Then were Christiana, Mercy, and the boys the more glad, for
that the innkeeper was a lover of pilgrims. So they called for rooms,
and he showed them one for Christiana and her children and Mercy, and
another for Mr. Great-Heart and the old gentleman.
GREAT. Then said Mr. Great-Heart, good Gaius, what hast thou for
supper? for these pilgrims have come far to-day, and are weary.
GAIUS. It is late, said Gaius, so we cannot conveniently go out to seek
food; but such as we have you shall be welcome to, if that will content.
GREAT. We will be content with what thou hast in the house; for as much
as I have proved thee, thou art never destitute of that which is
convenient.
Then he went down and spake to the cook, whose name was, Taste-that-
which-is-good, to get ready supper for so many pilgrims. This done, he
comes up again, saying, Come, my good friends, you are welcome to me,
and I am glad that I have a house to entertain you in; and while supper
is making ready, if you please, let us entertain one another with some
good discourse: so they all said, Content.
GAIUS. Then said Gaius, Whose wife is this aged matron? and whose
daughter is this young damsel?
GREAT. This woman is the wife of one Christian, a pilgrim of former
times; and these are his four children. The maid is one of her
acquaintance, one that she hath persuaded to come with her on
pilgrimage. The boys take all after their father, and covet to tread in
his steps; yea, if they do but see any place where the old pilgrim hath
lain, or any print of his foot, it ministereth joy to their hearts, and
they covet to lie or tread in the same.
GAIUS. Then said Gaius, Is this Christian's wife, and are these
Christian's children? I knew your husband's father, yea, also his
father's father. Many have been good of this stock; their ancestors
dwelt first at Antioch. Acts 11:26. Christian's progenitors (I suppose
you have heard your husband talk of them) were very worthy men. They
have, above any that I know, showed themselves men of great virtue and
courage for the Lord of the pilgrims, his ways, and them that loved him.
I have heard of many of your husband's relations that have stood all
trials for the sake of the truth. Stephen, that was one of the first of
the family from whence your husband sprang, was knocked on the head with
stones. Acts 7:59, 60. James, another of this generation, was slain
with the edge of the sword. Acts 12:2. To say nothing of Paul and
Peter, men anciently of the family from whence your husband came, there
was Ignatius, who was cast to the lions; Romanus, whose flesh was cut by
pieces from his bones; and Polycarp, that played the man in the fire.
There was he that was hanged up in a basket in the sun for the wasps to
eat; and he whom they put into a sack, and cast him into the sea to be
drowned. It would be impossible utterly to count up all of that family
who have suffered injuries and death for the love of a pilgrim's life.
Nor can I but be glad to see that thy husband has left behind him four
such boys as these. I hope they will bear up their father's name, and
tread in their father's steps, and come to their father's end.
GREAT. Indeed, sir, they are likely lads: they seem to choose heartily
their father's ways.
GAIUS. That is it that I said. Wherefore Christian's family is like
still to spread abroad upon the face of the ground, and yet to be
numerous upon the face of the earth; let Christiana look out some
damsels for her sons, to whom they may be betrothed, etc., that the name
of their father, and the house of his progenitors, may never be
forgotten in the world.
HON. 'Tis pity his family should fall and be extinct.
GAIUS. Fall it cannot, but be diminished it may; but let Christiana take
my advice, and that is the way to uphold it. And, Christiana, said this
innkeeper, I am glad to see thee and thy friend Mercy together here, a
lovely couple. And if I may advise, take Mercy into a nearer relation
to thee: if she will, let her be given to Matthew thy eldest son. It is
the way to preserve a posterity in the earth. So this match was
concluded, and in process of time they were married: but more of that
hereafter.
Gaius also proceeded, and said, I will now speak on the behalf of women,
to take away their reproach. For as death and the curse came into the
world by a woman, Gen. 3, so also did life and health: God sent forth
his Son, made of a woman. Gal. 4:4. Yea, to show how much they that
came after did abhor the act of the mother, this sex in the Old
Testament coveted children, if happily this or that woman might be the
mother of the Saviour of the world. I will say again, that when the
Saviour was come, women rejoiced in him, before either man or angel.
Luke 1:42-46. I read not that ever any man did give unto Christ so much
as one groat; but the women followed him, and ministered to him of their
substance. Luke 8:2,3. 'Twas a woman that washed his feet with tears,
Luke 7:37-50, and a woman that anointed his body at the burial. John
11:2; 12:3. They were women who wept when he was going to the cross,
Luke 23:27, and women that followed him from the cross,
MATT. 27:55,56;
Luke 23:55, and sat over against his sepulchre when he was buried.
MATT. 27:61. They were women that were first with him at his
resurrection-morn, Luke 24:1, and women that brought tidings first to
his disciples that he was risen from the dead. Luke 24:22,23. Women
therefore are highly favored, and show by these things that they are
sharers with us in the grace of life.
Now the cook sent up to signify that supper was almost ready, and sent
one to lay the cloth, and the trenchers, and to set the salt and bread
in order.
Then said Matthew, The sight of this cloth, and of this forerunner of
the supper, begetteth in me a greater appetite for my food than I had
before.
GAIUS. So let all ministering doctrines to thee in this life beget in
thee a greater desire to sit at the supper of the great King in his
kingdom; for all preaching, books, and ordinances here, are but as the
laying of the trenchers, and the setting of salt upon the board, when
compared with the feast which our Lord will make for us when we come to
his house.
So supper came up. And first a heave-shoulder and a wave-breast were
set on the table before them; to show that they must begin their meal
with prayer and praise to God. The heave-shoulder David lifted up his
heart to God with; and with the wave-breast, where his heart lay, he
used to lean upon his harp when he played. Lev. 7: 32-34; 10:14,15;
Psalm 25:1; Heb. 13:15. These two dishes were very fresh and good, and
they all ate heartily thereof.
The next they brought up was a bottle of wine, as red as blood. Deut.
32:14 ; Judges 9:13; John 15:5. So Gaius said to them, Drink freely;
this is the true juice of the vine, that makes glad the heart of God and
man. So they drank and were merry.
The next was a dish of milk well crumbed; Gaius said, Let the boys have
that, that they may grow thereby. 1 Pet. 2:1,2.
Then they brought up in course a dish of butter and honey. Then said
Gaius, Eat freely of this, for this is good to cheer up and strengthen
your judgments and understandings. This was our Lord's dish when he was
a child: "Butter and honey shall he eat, that he may know to refuse the
evil, and choose the good." Isa. 7:15.
Then they brought them up a dish of apples, and they were very good-
tasted fruit. Then said Matthew, May we eat apples, since it was such
by and with which the serpent beguiled our first mother?
Then said Gaius,
"Apples were they with which we were beguil'd,
Yet sin, not apples, hath our souls defil'd:
Apples forbid, if ate, corrupt the blood;
To eat such, when commanded, does us good:
Drink of his flagons then, thou church, his dove,
And eat his apples, who art sick of love."
Then said Matthew, I made the scruple, because I a while since was sick
with the eating of fruit.
GAIUS. Forbidden fruit will make you sick; but not what our Lord has
tolerated.
While they were thus talking, they were presented with another dish, and
it was a dish of nuts. Song 6:11. Then said some at the table, Nuts
spoil tender teeth, especially the teeth of children: which when Gaius
heard, he said,
"Hard texts are nuts, (I will not call them cheaters,)
Whose shells do keep the kernel from the eaters:
Open the shells, and you shall have the meat;
They here are brought for you to crack and eat."
Then were they very merry, and sat at the table a long time, talking of
many things. Then said the old gentleman, My good landlord, while we
are cracking your nuts, if you please, do you open this riddle:
"A man there was, though some did count him mad,
The more he cast away, the more he had."
Then they all gave good heed, wondering what good Gaius would say; so he
sat still a while, and then thus replied:
"He who bestows his goods upon the poor,
Shall have as much again, and ten times more."
Then said Joseph, I dare say, sir, I did not think you could have found
it out.
Oh, said Gaius, I have been trained up in this way a great while:
nothing teaches like experience. I have learned of my Lord to be kind,
and have found by experience that I have gained thereby. There is that
scattereth, and yet increaseth; and there is that withholdeth more than
is meet, but it tendeth to poverty: There is that maketh himself rich,
yet hath nothing; there is that maketh himself poor, yet hath great
riches. Prov. 11:24; 13:7.
Then Samuel whispered to Christiana, his mother, and said, Mother, this
is a very good man's house: let us stay here a good while, and let my
brother Matthew be married here to Mercy, before we go any further. The
which Gaius the host overhearing, said, With a very good will, my child.
So they stayed there more than a month, and Mercy was given to Matthew
to wife.
While they stayed here, Mercy, as her custom was, would be making coats
and garments to give to the poor, by which she brought a very good
report upon the pilgrims.
But to return again to our story: After supper the lads desired a bed,
for they were weary with travelling: Then Gaius called to show them
their chamber; but said Mercy, I will have them to bed. So she had them
to bed, and they slept well: but the rest sat up all night; for Gaius
and they were such suitable company, that they could not tell how to
part. After much talk of their Lord, themselves, and their journey, old
Mr. Honest, he that put forth the riddle to Gaius, began to nod. Then
said Great-Heart, What, sir, you begin to be drowsy; come, rub up, now
here is a riddle for you. Then said Mr. Honest, Let us hear it. Then
replied Mr. Great-heart,
"He that would kill, must first be overcome:
Who live abroad would, first must die at home."
Ha, said Mr. Honest, it is a hard one; hard to expound, and harder to
practise. But come, landlord, said he, I will, if you please, leave my
part to you: do you expound it, and I will hear what you say.
No, said Gaius, it was put to you, and it is expected you should answer
it. Then said the old gentleman,
"He first by grace must conquered be,
That sin would mortify;
Who that he lives would convince me,
Unto himself must die."
It is right, said Gaius; good doctrine and experience teach this. For,
first, until grace displays itself, and overcomes the soul with its
glory, it is altogether without heart to oppose sin. Besides, if sin is
Satan's cords, by which the soul lies bound, how should it make
resistance before it is loosed from that infirmity? Secondly, Nor will
any one that knows either reason or grace, believe that such a man can
be a living monument of grace that is a slave to his own corruptions.
And now it comes into my mind, I will tell you a story worth the
hearing. There were two men that went on pilgrimage; the one began when
he was young, the other when he was old. The young man had strong
corruptions to grapple with; the old man's were weak with the decays of
nature. The young man trod his steps as even as did the old one, and
was every way as light as he. Who now, or which of them, had their
graces shining clearest, since both seemed to be alike?
HON. The young man's, doubtless. For that which makes head against the
greatest opposition, gives best demonstration that it is strongest;
especially when it also holdeth pace with that which meets not with half
so much, as to be sure old age does not. Besides, I have observed that
old men have blessed themselves with this mistake; namely, taking the
decays of nature for a gracious conquest over corruptions, and so have
been apt to beguile themselves. Indeed, old men that are gracious are
best able to give advice to them that are young, because they have seen
most of the emptiness of things: but yet, for an old and a young man to
set out both together, the young one has the advantage of the fairest
discovery of a work of grace within him, though the old man's
corruptions are naturally the weakest. Thus they sat talking till break
of day.
Now, when the family were up, Christiana bid her son James that he
should read a chapter; so he read 53d of Isaiah. When he had done, Mr.
Honest asked why it was said that the Saviour was to come "out of a dry
ground;" and also, that "he had no form nor comeliness in him."
GREAT. Then said Mr. Great-Heart, To the first I answer, because the
church of the Jews, of which Christ came, had then lost almost all the
sap and spirit of religion. To the second I say, the words are spoken
in the person of unbelievers, who, because they want the eye that can
see into our Prince's heart, therefore they judge of him by the meanness
of his outside; just like those who, not knowing that precious stones
are covered over with a homely crust, when they have found one, because
they know not what they have found, cast it away again, as men do a
common stone.
Well, said Gaius, now you are here, and since, as I know, Mr. Great-
Heart is good at his weapons, if you please, after we have refreshed
ourselves, we will walk into the fields, to see if we can do any good.
About a mile from hence there is one Slay-good, a giant, that doth much
annoy the King's highway in these parts; and I know whereabout his haunt
is. He is master of a number of thieves: 't would be well if we could
clear these parts of him. So they consented and went: Mr. Great-Heart
with his sword, helmet, and shield; and the rest with spears and staves.
When they came to the place where he was, they found him with one Feeble
-mind in his hand, whom his servants had brought unto him, having taken
him in the way. Now the giant was rifling him, with a purpose after
that to pick his bones; for he was of the nature of flesheaters.
Well, so soon as he saw Mr. Great-Heart and his friends at the mouth of
his cave, with their weapons, he demanded what they wanted.
GREAT. We want thee; for we are come to revenge the quarrels of the many
that thou hast slain of the pilgrims, when thou hast dragged them out of
the King's highway: wherefore come out of thy cave. So he armed himself
and came out, and to battle they went, and fought for above an hour, and
then stood still to take wind.
SLAY. Then said the giant, Why are you here on my ground?
GREAT. To revenge the blood of pilgrims, as I told thee before. So they
went to it again, and the giant made Mr. Great-Heart give back; but he
came up again, and in the greatness of his mind he let fly with such
stoutness at the giant's head and sides, that he made him let his weapon
fall out of his hand. So he smote him, and slew him, and cut off his
head, and brought it away to the inn. He also took Feeble-mind the
pilgrim, and brought him with him to his lodgings. When they were come
home, they showed his head to the family, and set it up, as they had
done others before, for a terror to those that should attempt to do as
he hereafter.
Then they asked Mr. Feeble-Mind how he fell into his hands.
FEEBLE. Then said the poor man, I am a sickly man, as you see: and
because death did usually once a day knock at my door, I thought I
should never be well at home; so I betook myself to a pilgrim's life,
and have traveled hither from the town of Uncertain, where I and my
father were born. I am a man of no strength at all of body, nor yet of
mind, but would, if I could, though I can but crawl, spend my life in
the pilgrim's way. When I came at the gate that is at the head of the
way, the Lord of that place did entertain me freely; neither objected he
against my weakly looks, nor against my feeble mind; but gave me such
things as were necessary for my journey, and bid me hope to the end.
When I came to the house of the Interpreter, I received much kindness
there: and because the hill of Difficulty was judged too hard for me, I
was carried up that by one of his servants. Indeed, I have found much
relief from pilgrims, though none were willing to go so softly as I am
forced to do: yet still as they came on, they bid me be of good cheer,
and said, that it was the will of their Lord that comfort should be
given to the feeble-minded, 1 Thess. 5:14; and so went on their own
pace. When I was come to Assault-lane, then this giant met with me, and
bid me prepare for an encounter. But, alas, feeble one that I was, I
had more need of a cordial; so he came up and took me. I conceited he
would not kill me. Also when he had got me into his den, since I went
not with him willingly, I believed I should come out alive again; for I
have heard, that not any pilgrim that is taken captive by violent hands,
if he keeps heart whole towards his Master, is, by the laws of
providence, to die by the hand of the enemy. Robbed I looked to be, and
robbed to be sure I am; but I have, as you see, escaped with life, for
the which I thank my King as the author, and you as the means. Other
brunts I also look for; but this I have resolved on, to wit, to run when
I can, to go when I cannot run, and to creep when I cannot go. As to
the main, I thank him that loved me, I am fixed; my way is before me, my
mind is beyond the river that has no bridge, though I am,