Bunyan Characters (3rd Series)
Bunyan Characters (3rd Series)
Being Lectures Delivered In St. George's Free Church, Edinburgh
Book Excerpt
erve Him
as Dante did. And so it is in the Holy War. John Bunyan is in the
Pilgrim's Progress, but there are more men and other men than its
author in that rich and populous book, and other experiences and
other attainments than his. But in the Holy War we have Bunyan
himself as fully and as exclusively as we have Dante in the Divine
Comedy. In the first edition of the Holy War there is a
frontispiece conceived and executed after the anatomical and
symbolical manner which was so common in that day, and which is to
be seen at its perfection in the English edition of Jacob Behmen.
The frontispiece is a full-length likeness of the author of the
Holy War, with his whole soul laid open and his hidden heart
'anatomised.' Why, asked Wordsworth, and Matthew Arnold in our day
has echoed the question--why does Homer still so live and rule
without a rival in the world of letters? And they answer that it
is because he always sang with his eye so fixed upon its object.
'Homer, to thee I turn.' And so it was with Da
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