THE STRUGGLER
CONTAINING THE CHRONOLOGICAL ORDER IN WHICH MR.
BUNYAN’S BOOKS WERE PUBLISHED, AND THE
NUMBER OF EDITIONS THEY PASSED THROUGH
DURING HIS LIFE.
THIRTY REASONS WHY CHRISTIAN PEOPLE
SHOULD PROMOTE THEIR CIRCULATION, AND
THE STRUGGLER FOR THE PRESERVATION OF
THESE LABOURS.—PUBLISHED IN 1691.
BY CHARLES DOE, ONE OF MR. BUNYAN’S
PERSONAL FRIENDS.
A CATALOGUE-TABLE OF MR. BUNYAN’S BOOKS.
AND
THEIR SUCCESSION IN PUBLISHING, MOST
ACCORDING TO HIS OWN RECKONING.
Note.—Those that are in Italic letter are them that compose
the first folio: And the rest are intended, when time serves,
for a second folio.[1]
1. Gospel truths opened, 1656
2. A vindication of that [sm. 4to] 1657
3. Sighs from Hell (9 Impressions), [1650]
4. The 2 Covenants Law and Grace
5. I will pray with the Spirit, 1663
6. A map of salvation, &c., [A broadside]
7. The four last things (3 Impressions),
8. Mount Ebal and Gerizim,
9. Prison Meditations,
10. The Holy City, &c., 1665
11. The Resurrection, &c., 1665
12. Grace Abounding (6 Impressions), [1666]
13. Justification by Jesus Christ, [sm. 4to] 1671
14. Confession of Faith, &c., 1672
15. Difference in Judgment, &c., 1673
16. Peaceable principles, &c., 1674
17. Election and Reprobation, &c., [sm. 4to] [No date]
18. Light for them in Darkness,
19. Christian Behaviour (4 Impressions),
20. Instructions for the Ignorant, 1675
21. Saved by Grace,
22. The Strait-Gate, 1676
23. The Pilgrim’s Progress (12 Impressions), [1678]
24. The Fear of God, 1679
25. Come and Welcome to Jesus Christ (4 Impressions)
26. The Holy War (3 Impressions) 1682
27. The Barren Fig Tree,
28. The Greatness of the Soul, &c., [1683]
29. A case of Conscience of prayer, [sm. 4to] [1683]
30. Advice to Sufferers, 1684
31. The 2d pt. Pilgrim’s Progress (3 Impressions), [1684]
32. Life and Death of Mr. Badman,[2] [1680]
33. Holy Life the beauty of Christianity,
34. The Pharisee and Publican, 1685
35. A caution against Sin, [a sheet] [1684]
36. Meditations on 74 things,
37. The first-day Sabbath, 1685
38. The Jerusalem Sinner Saved, 1688
39. Jesus Christ an advocate, 1688
40. The House of God, 1688
41. The Water of Life, 1688
42. Solomon’s Temple Spiritualized, [1688]
43. The Excell. of a broken heart, [1689]
44. His last Sermon at London, 1688
Twelve Manuscripts part of the first folio 1692
45. Exposit. on 10 first chap. of Genesis,
46. Justification by Imputed Righteousness,
47. Paul’s departure and crown,
48. Of the Trinity and a Christian,
49. Of the Law and a Christian,
50. Israel’s Hope encouraged,
51. Desires of the righteous granted,
52. The unsearchable riches of Christ,
53. Christ Compleat Saviour in’s Interest,
54. Saint’s Knowledge of Christ’s love,
55. House of the Forest of Lebanon,
56. A description of Antichirst,
Four Manuscripts yet unprinted.
57. A Christian Dialogue.[3]
58. The Heavenly Footman.[4]
59. A Pocket Concordance.[3]
60. An Account of his Imprisonment.[5]
Here’s sixty pieces of his labours, and he was sixty years of
age.
He was born at Elstow, nigh Bedford, about 1628. And
about 1652 was, by irresistible grace, converted: and in
1660 he had preached five years, and then, for that, was
thrown into Bedford Gaol; and in 1671 was called to the
pastoral office at Bedford, being the 11th of his twelve years
and an half’s imprisonment; and died at London, Aug. 31,
1688.
[Where the date is in brackets it is supplied from original
copies in the Editor’s possession.]
REASONS WHY CHRISTIAN PEOPLE SHOULD PROMOTE BY
SUBSCRIPTIONS THE PRINTING IN FOLIO THE
LABOURS OF MR. JOHN BUNYAN, LATE MINISTER
OF THE GOSPEL, AND PASTOR OF THE
CONGREGATION AT BEDFORD.
I. He was a very able and excellent minister of the gospel;
viz., able to express himself, and had excellent matter
known to all Christians that have heard him preach.
II. He became thus able and excellent a minister by a great
degree of Gospel Grace bestowed upon his own soul, more
than probable for that very end; for that God wrought him
from a very great profane sinner, and an illiterate poor man,
to this profound understanding the true or genuine spiritual
meaning of the Scriptures, whereby he could
experimentally preach to souls with power, and affection,
and apostolical learning, the true nature of the gospel.
III. God’s bestowing such great grace, to turn so great a
sinner, to make such a great gospel labourer, and thrust him
into his harvest, argues there was great need, and therefore
without question his labours ought to be preserved.
IV. Our Bunyan being so graciously, by the Lord of the
harvest, thrust into labour, clearly shows to us, (and may by
this preservation to future ages), that God is not bound to
human means of learned education (though learning may be
useful in its place), but can, when he will, make a minister
of the gospel without man’s forecast of education, and in
spite of all the men in the world that would oppose it,
though it be above sixteen hundred years after the apostles.
V. Many thousands had the soul benefit and comfort of his
ministry to astonishment, as if an angel or an apostle had
touched their souls with a coal of holy fire from the altar.
VI. This excellent operation of the special grace of God in
him, and the gift of utterance when he preached,
confounded the wisdom of his adversaries that heard him,
or heard of him, he being, as it is commonly called,
unlearned, or had not school education.
VII. For all these reasons before-mentioned, of the
spirituality of his preaching, his labours in writing deserve
preservation by printing as much as any other famous
man’s that have writ since the apostles’ time.
VIII. Moreover he hath been a Christian sufferer for above
twelve years, by imprisonment, whereby he sealed to the
truth he preached.
IX. Yet, for all that imprisonment, he preached then, and
there, and afterwards abroad, as a faithful labourer for the
salvation of souls.
X. And he was not a man that preached by way of bargain
for money, for he hath refused a more plentiful income to
keep his station.
XI. And his moderation, or desire of money, was as the
apostle Paul’s practice, below his privilege; so that he did
not, when he died, leave much wealth to his family.
XII. And the Church that wants such a pastor may find it
long before they get one, and therefore ought to respect our
Bunyan’s labours.
XIII. If God had not put it into the heart of some Christians
or Church to preserve the Epistles of the Apostle to the
Romans, Corinthians, Galatians, and others, we in this age
of the world should in all probability never have known
that there ever were any such Christians and doctrines; their
names and doctrines might have been lost, and we might
have perished, and that would have been dreadful; for God
mostly works by second causes.
XIV. And why should any Christian people, that have
reason to reckon themselves obliged herein, set themselves
aside from communicating to other Christians and the ages
to come the gospel labours of so eminent a minister as God
so graciously honoured and assisted them with?
XV. And if these labours (of, as I may say, an apostle of
our age, if we have any) are not preserved by printing thus
in folio, most of them in all probability will be lost, for
there are many of them have been out of print many years,
and will never otherwise be printed again because of the
charge, &c.
XVI. By the late Act for liberty of conscience, it is lawful
now to print the works of dissenters, though it was not so
formerly; therefore much danger cannot plead excuse.
XVII. It is a good work without controversy, and therefore
there can be no scruple of conscience about its pleasing
God.
XVIII. There is also to the subscribers a further benefit in
this folio; for, whereas these twenty books would, if bought
single, cost nigh twenty shillings now, as printed in folio
they will have them for about twelve shillings bound
together in one volume, which conveniency also prevents
losing.
XIX. These ten manuscripts, which were never before
printed, would, if printed in small books, and bought single,
cost almost the money that these twenty in folio comes for,
which is great odds.
XX. Not to preserve his labours and name, which are so
great, is a disingenuous slighting or despising them, and
serving them no better than a wicked man’s that rots.
Bunyan hath preached, and freely bestowed many a good
and gospel-truth, and soul-reviving expression; for which
of them doth any of his friends slight him? Nay, do not they
rather owe him something for his labour he bestowed on
them, as Philemon did to Paul?
XXI. The price of the first part will be an easier purchase
than of the whole; and all in one volume would be
somewhat too big in bulk and price.
XXII. There is need of printing these books now, because
errors and superstitions, like the smoke of the bottomless
pit, darken protestants understanding the purer truths of the
gospel.
XXIII. And when this first part is sold off, we shall
endeavour to publish a second part, whereby he that is
wiling may have the whole in folio.
XXIV. This preservation will preserve the name of John
Bunyan, a champion of our age to future ages; whereby it
may be said in the pulpit, The great convert Bunyan said so
and so.
XXV. If the labours of so eminent a minister should not be
preserved, I known not whose should.
XXVI. Antichristian people are diligent to preserve the
works of their eminent men; and therefore Christians
should be diligent to preserve theirs.
XXVII. The chief reasons we argue from are not common
rules, that therefore every good minister’s endeavours
ought to be printed in folio. But this case is extraordinary,
as an eminent minister, made so by abundance of gospel
grace, who has also writ much, which hath gone off well. I
say eminent, though he was, when young, profane, and had
not school education to enable him, as is apparent to all that
knew him.
XXVIII. By this printed in folio a man may have recourse
for satisfaction in a case of conscience to any of these
particular books with the rest, which otherwise are not to be
bought; and that I have proved by often trying most London
booksellers, and before that given them above twice the
price for a book; and I know not how to get another of
those sorts for any price whatsoever.
XXIX. All these things, or half of them, beside many others
that might be given, being considered, I cannot see but it is
an absolute duty.
XXX. And lastly (pardon me, if I speak too great a word, as
it may seem to some to be borne), all things considered;
that is, his own former profaneness, poverty,
unlearnedness, together with his great natural parts, the
great change made by grace, and his long imprisonment,
and the great maturity in grace and preaching he attained
to, I say our deceased Bunyan hath not left in England, or
the world, his equal behind him, as I know of. And this is
the unfeigned belief of,
Your Christian brother,
CHARLES DOE.
THE STRUGGLER
(FOR THE PRECEDING PRESERVATION OF MR.
JOHN BUNYAN’S LABOURS IN FOLIO) THINKS IT
MAY ANSWER THE DESIRES OF MANY TO GIVE
THE FOLLOWING RELATION:—
CHRISTIAN READER,
I do here as further duty presume to give you, according to
my understanding, a relation in three parts, concerning our
eminent author, Mr. John Bunyan, and his labours.
I. The author’s parentage, imprisonment, times, and manner
of his life and death, &c.
II. Relations and observations upon his labours, &c.
III. Notes on printing this folio and index, &c.
First, Our excellent author, by the abundant grace of God,
Mr. John Bunyan, was born at Elstow, a mile side of
Bedford, about the year 1628. His father was mean, and by
trade a mender of pots and kettles, vulgarly called a tinker,
and of the national religion, as commonly men of that trade
are, and was brought up to the tinkering trade, as also were
several of his brothers, whereat he worked about that
country,[6] being also very profane and poor, even when
married, &c.
But it pleased God, by his irresistible grace, to work in him
some convictions and fears of hell, and also desires of
heaven, which drove him to reading and hearing of
religious matters, so, controlling grace growing abundantly,
he did not take up religion upon trust, but grace in him
continually struggling with himself and others, took all
advantages he lit on to ripen his understanding in religion,
and so he lit on the dissenting congregation of Christians at
Bedford, and was, upon confession of faith, baptized about
the year 1651, o 52, or 53.
And after a little time, having a gift of utterance, and love
to the conviction of sinners, preached about the country the
same salvation he found by experience himself stood in
need of, by faith and repentance, and worked at his
tinkering trade for a livelihood, whereby the reigning grace
of God appeared the more sovereign and glorious in this
choice, even as it shone in the choice of Peter, a fisherman,
and the rest of the apostles, and others of the eminent saints
of old, most of them tradesmen, and of whom most
excellent things are spoken, &c.
In the year 1660, being the year king Charles returned to
England, having preached about[7] five years, the rage of
gospel enemies was so great that, November 12, they took
him prisoner at a meeting of good people, and put him in
Bedford jail, and there he continued about six years, and
then was let out again, 1666, being the year of the burning
of London, and, a little after his release, they took him
again at a meeting, and put him in the same jail, where he
lay six years more.[8] Before they took him his intent was
to preach on these words, ‘Dost thou believe on the Son of
God?’ (John 9:35). From whence he intended to show the
absolute need of faith in Jesus Christ. And after he was
released again, they took him again, and put him in prison
the third time, but that proved but for about half a year.
Whilst he was thus twelve years and a half in prison, he
writ several of his published books, as by many of their
epistles appears, as ‘Pray by the Spirit,’ ‘Holy City,’
‘Resurrection,’ ‘Grace Abounding,’ and others, also ‘The
Pilgrim’s Progress,’ as himself and many others have said.
The pastor of Bedford congregation died, and, after some
years’ vacancy, John Bunyan, though a prisoner, was, by
the church, called to the pastoral office, December 21,
1671, and as it pleased the Lord to rule the rage of men, it
proved in or about the last year of his twelve years’
imprisonment. And, being out, he preached the gospel
publicly at Bedford, and about the counties, and at London,
with very great success, being mightily followed
everywhere. And it pleased the Lord to preserve him out of
the hands of his enemies in the severe persecution at the
latter end of king Charles the Second’s reign, though they
often searched and laid wait for him, and sometimes
narrowly missed him.
In 1688, he published six books, being the time of king
James the Second’s liberty of conscience, and was seized
with a sweating distemper, which, after his some weeks
going about, proved his death, at his very loving friend’s,
Mr. Strudwick’s, a grocer, at Holborn Bridge, London, on
August 31, 1688, and in the 60th year of his age, and was
buried in Finsbury burying-ground, where many London
dissenting ministers are laid; and it proved some days
above a month before our great gospel deliverance was
begun by the Prince of Orange’s landing, whom the Lord of
his continued blessing hath since made our preserving king,
William the Third.
And as to his family, he left his widow, Elizabeth, and three
sons, John, Thomas, and Joseph, and three daughters,
Elizabeth, Sarah, and Mary; but his blind daughter he
writes of in his ‘Grace Abounding’ died some years before
him, and his widow died 1690-1.
Secondly, Concerning his labours; God did give of his
extraordinary grace of the gospel to our author, Bunyan,
and it is worthy our observation, for thereby God may have
due honour, his people comfort, and adversaries confuted in
their several corrupt notions, especially that of only them
that have school education are fitly qualified for ministers
of the glorious gospel of Jesus Christ. And also hereby the
superstitious man is confounded in his way of worship, as
were his predecessors, the rulers of the Jews, in the case of
Peter and John, saying, Whence had these men this
knowledge, seeing they are unlearned? but there was and is
a reason beyond their false rules of education—for they had
been with Jesus.
This is also apt to convince sincere-hearted Christians that
God can, when he will, make a minister of his gospel, and
send him forth in the power of his Spirit, and defend him,
nay, may I say, it is God’s prerogative to make his gospel-
ministers, and he makes them effectual to all the ends of his
gospel, to preach, as the great apostle saith, in season and
out of season, to abase and abound, &c. He that can make
the dry bones live (as in Eze 37), what can he not do? yea,
they shall live, and become a great host, and antichristian
arts must fall; for the Lord doth make his servants, as he
did Jeremiah, as brazen walls against people and priests.
And however some subtilly and vain-gloriously pretend to
be the only lawful successors of the apostles, yet certain I
am, from safer reason of faith, that our author Bunyan was
really, sincerely, and effectually a lawful successor of the
apostles, and as lawful as any have been above this
thousand years. Nay, may I say, he was a second Paul; for
that his conversion was in a great measure like that great
apostle’s, who, of a great enemy to godliness, was, by
strong and irresistible workings of sovereign grace, made a
great minister of, and sufferer for, the gospel. Thousands of
Christians in country and city, can testify that their comfort
under his ministry has been to admiration, so that their joy
hath showed itself by much weeping.
To the eye of carnal reason it may seem that the great
apostle Paul’s imprisonment was a contradiction to his
commission of effectually preaching the gospel to many
countries; especially considering his commission was
strengthened by his miraculous conversion, from the glory
and call of the Lord Jesus from heaven, for the making of
him such a great gospel preacher. And yet God suffered it
so to be, and we have reason to believe for the best;
because God usually works those seeming contrary things
to his own end and glory. And the effect was, the saints
were strengthened thereby, and several epistles were
written thereby, which hath preserved much of the gospel
in writing to the ages after, and even for our very great and
needful help.
And I reckon I shall not be out of the way, if I observe and
say—What hath the devil or his agents gotten by putting
our great gospel-ministry, Bunyan, in prison? for in prison,
as before mentioned, he wrote many excellent books, that
have published to the world his great grace, and great truth,
and great judgment, and great ingenuity; and to instance in
one, the Pilgrim’s Progress, he hath suited to the life of a
traveler so exactly and pleasantly, and to the life of a
Christian, that this very book, besides the rest, hath done
the superstitious sort of men and their practice more harm,
or rather good, as I may call it, than if he had been let alone
at his meeting at Bedford, to preach the gospel to his own
auditory, as it might have fallen out; for none but priest-
ridden people know how to cavil at it, it wins so smoothly
upon their affections, and so insensibly distils the gospel
into them, and hath been printed in France, Holland, New
England, and in Welsh, and about a hundred thousand in
England, whereby they are made some means of grace, and
the author become famous; and may be the cause of
spreading his other gospel-books over the European and
American world, and in process of time may be so to the
whole universe.
When Mr. Bunyan preached in London, if there were but
one day’s notice given, there would be more people come
together to hear him preach than the meeting-house would
hold. I have seen to hear him preach, by my computation,
about twelve hundred at a morning lecture, by seven
o’clock, on a working day, in the dark winter time. I also
computed about three thousand that came to hear him one
Lord’s-day, at London, at a town’s end meeting-house; so
that half were fain to go back again for want of room, and
then himself was fain, at a back door, to be pulled almost
over people to get upstairs to his pulpit.
Mr. Bunyan’s dispute with a scholar to this effect.
As Mr. Bunyan was upon the road near Cambridge, there
overtakes him a scholar that had observed him a preacher,
and said to him, How dare you preach, seeing you have not
the original, being not a scholar?
Then said Mr. Bunyan, Have you the original?
Yes, said the scholar.
Nay, but, said Mr. Bunyan, have you the very self-same
original copies that were written by the penmen of the
scriptures, prophets and apostles?
No, said the scholar, but we have the true copies of those
originals.
How do you know that? said Mr. Bunyan.
How? said the scholar. Why, we believe what we have is a
true copy of the original.
Then, said Mr. Bunyan, so do I believe our English Bible is
a true copy of the original.
Then away rid the scholar.
Another dispute with a scholar.
As Mr. Bunyan was preaching in a barn, and showing the
fewness of those that should be saved, there stood one of
the learned to take advantage of his words; and having done
preaching, the schoolman said to him, You are a deceiver, a
person of no charity, and therefore not fit to preach; for he
that in effect condemneth the greatest part of his hearers
hath no charity, and therefore not fit to preach.
Then Mr. Bunyan answered—The Lord Jesus Christ
preached in a ship to his hearers on the shore (Matt 13); and
showed that they were as four sorts of ground—The high-
way, The stony, The thorny, and The good ground; whereof
the good ground was the only persons to be saved.
And your position is—That he that in effect condementh
the greatest part of his hearers hath no charity, and
therefore not fit to preach the gospel.
But here the Lord Jesus Christ did so; then your conclusion
is—The Lord Jesus Christ wanted charity, and therefore
not fit to preach the gospel.
Horrid blasphemy; away with your hellish logic, and speak
Scripture.
Then replied the learned: ‘Tis blasphemy to call logic
hellish, which is our reason—the gift of God; for that
which distinguisheth a man from a beast is the gift of God.
But Mr. Bunyan replied: Sin doth distinguish a man from a
beast; is sin therefore the gift of God? &c.
They parted.
I once asked him his opinion in a common religious point,
and offered some arguments to prove my opinion for the
general of it; but he answered, that where the Scripture is
silent we ought to forbear our opinions; and so he forebore
to affirm either for or against, the Scripture being altogether
silent in this point.
Thirdly, concerning this folio, &c. I have struggled to bring
about this great good work; and it had succeeded in Mr.
Bunyan’s lifetime, even all his labours in folio, but that an
interested bookseller opposed it; and notwithstanding the
many discouragements I have met with in my struggles in
this so great a work, we have—and I may believe by the
blessing of the Lord—gotten about four hundred
subscriptions, whereof about thirty are ministers; which
also shows the great esteem our author’s labours are in
among Christian people. And that the reasonableness and
duty of the preservation of his labours in folio, by
subscription, may be continued to memory, I have also
added my reasons, which I distributed in my late struggles
to effect this work.
His effigies was cut in copper,[9] from an original paint
done to the life, by his very good friend, a limner; and those
who desire it single, to put in a frame, may have it at this
bookseller’s—Mr. Marshall; and also the catalogue-table.
The epistle is writ by two ministers, Mr. Wilson of Hichin,
in Hertfordshire, and Mr. Chandler, who succeeds Mr.
Bunyan at Bedford.
And Mr. Burton, that writ the epistle to Some Gospel-truths
Opened, being the first book Mr. Bunyan writ, was minister
at Bedford.
Note.—I would not charge the following running-titles
upon our author, Bunyan; because they were added in the
proposals, for want of running titles and the knowledge of
them, and the copies being at Bedford when the proposals
were drawn up at London; and also because, perhaps, he
designed some other like running-titles:—
Paul’s departure and crown.
Israel’s hope encouraged.
The saint’s privilege and profit.
Christ a complete Saviour.
The saint’s knowledge of Christ’s love.
Of the Trinity and a Christian.
Of the Law and a Christian.
Notes upon the Index, &c.[10]
I did intend to print a complete table of all the texts of
Scriptures used in our author’s labours, that from thence,
looking into his book, his sense might be easily found upon
any text; so his labours might have been also in the nature
of an exposition upon the whole Bible; but I have delayed
till some other opportunity, it may be of the next folio, and
whenever it falls I intend to give notice.
Because I and other subscribers, especially ministers, were
willing this folio should be commoded with an index, I
have, as a Christian, exposed myself and made one, and
that without money for my labour of writing it, though I
confess it might have seemed some other men’s duty; yet
being ignorant of the man that had the opportunity, and
would have done it, unless paid for it, I was necessitated to
effect it; and if the bookseller had paid for it, he would
have lessened the number of 140 sheets of Mr. Bunyan’s
labours in this folio at ten shillings. Excuse this fault in me,
if it be one.
I could have collected abundance more of excellent matter
in this table; and I have placed an Italic-lettered word in
every paragraph in the table, to be the guide-word to the
same word in the folio, which is a black-lettered word in
the folio, latter part; that is, those books formerly printed,
where the printer hath not failed to make it so, and also in
the manuscripts, forepart, a guide-word to the same word
under which I have drawn a black line, in as many folios as
opportunity and time would permit me to do, because I had
not time and convenience before this folio was printed to
mark the manuscripts for to be a black-lettered word, as I
had time for the formerly printed books.[11] Also note, the
book, though marked, doth not always refer to the table, but
the table to the book, is the intent; and because the word in
the book doth not always, though very often, fall in
alphabetical order, therefore some other like word is put in
its place in the table.
Also note, sometimes many principal words are in one
paragraph, and then, though the matter be not to be found
in the table by the word, that some perhaps may expect, yet
it may be found by another word, because several words
are so united that one cannot well part them; and it would
be too large a table to put them all in severally in
alphabetical order—as soul, sinner, saved, salvation,
justification, Christ, God, &c.
Also note. When to the table-phrase more than one number
is placed, then expect not that the same black-letter word is
always to be found in the book to the last number, as is to
the first number, but it may be some other black or marked
word of like meaning; as for antichrist the black-lettered
word in some places is harlot, and for apostles the black-
letter word sometimes is twelve, because the word apostle
is not in that part of the folio, though intended by twelve.
Also note. The phrase in the table is not always the very
same, word for word, in the book, because the design of the
table is to give matter in short saying, as well as most
commonly a complete sentence; and, therefore, they that
would have Mr. Bunyan’s entire, complete, and full sense
of the matter, let them look out of the table into the book,
and there take all its connection together. Also, I have to
keep the table as short as I well could; and yet, to direct
well to the matter in the book, placed one part of the matter
under one word, in alphabetical order, and another part of
the same matter in another following paragraph, under
another word in the table; so that, by finding one word in
the table, you may often find in the same paragraph, in the
book, before or after that word, other matter thereto
relating.[12]
I had but about two years’ acquaintance with our author,
and, therefore, have said but little of him, because of
hastening this to the press; yet if any more comes to my
memory, I intend to put it at the end of the index.
Your Christian brother,
C. D.
FOOTNOTES:
1. Difficulties as to copyright prevented this second volume
from being published.—See EDITOR’S PREFACE.
2. A good copy of this rare volume with the wood-cuts,
having the reverse blank, in the editor’s possession, and a
fine copy, without the cuts, at Mr. Pickering’s, agree as to
the date of 1680. It is misplaced in this chronological table;
but the date shows that it was not intended as a third part of
the Pilgrim’s Progress; the second part of which was not
published for four years after the life of Badman.—Ed.
3. These MSS., although diligently sought, cannot be
found.
4. This was published in a separate pocket volume by C.
Doe, 1698.
5. Published from Mr. Bunyan’s MS, 1765.
6. As doth appear by his book of his conversion, intitled,
Grace Abounding, &c.
7. As in his book intitled, Grace Abounding, s. 319.
8. As he says in his Epistle to his Confession of Faith.
9. Alluding to the portrait published as a frontispiece to the
folio volume, 1692.—Ed.
10. The Index accompanying the first folio.—Ed.
11. This is as originally printed. Mr. Doe means, he had not
time to mark in the manuscript such words as the printer
should put in black-letter.—Ed.
12. The table to which Charles Doe here refers is only to
twenty of Mr. Bunyan’s books. It is diffuse, and badly
arranged. The Index given with this first complete edition
of all the admirable works of our great pilgrim forefather, is
entirely new. It is the result of a careful reading of every
treatise, extracting a notice of such tings as the editor
conceived to be most deeply interesting. These extracts
were then arranged, in order to furnish a useful index to all
the works of Bunyan. It has been attended with very great
labour, and some delay to the publication; but no sacrifice
is too great, in order to render Bunyan’s works as complete
as possible.
GEORGE OFFOR.