The Pilgrim's Progress - An Allegory
- Paper cover
- 304 pages
- 0.34 lbs
Item #1-6437
One man's search for eternal life
I am come from the City of Destruction, and am going to Mount Zion...
My name is now Christian, but my name at the first was Graceless.
John Bunyan's classic The Pilgrim's Progress is an unforgettable allegory of the Christian life. Making his way to the Celestial City, the pilgrim Christian traverses the hill Difficulty, the Valley of the Shadow of Death, and Vanity Fair and encounters characters such as Christiana, Hopeful, Mr. Worldly Wiseman, Mercy, and the Giant Despair who lives in Doubting Castle.
Although written from a prison cell more than three hundred years ago, Bunyan's timeless and perceptive tale of Christian's pilgrimage to eternal life is still surprisingly relevant to our own.
This copy of The Pilgrim's Progress restores the text, as nearly as possible, to the last edition Bunyan revised before his death in 1688.
- Preface
- Memoir of John Bunyan
Part One
- The Author's Apology for His Book
- The Pilgrim's Progress in the Similitude of a Dream
Part Two
- The Author's Way of Sending Forth His Second Part of the Pilgrim
- The Pilgrim's Progress in the Similitude of a Dream - The Second Part