Church, began to preach, and in 1660 was committed
to Bedford Jail, at first for three months, but on
his refusing to conform, or to desist from preaching,
his confinement was extended with little interval
for a period of nearly 12 years, not always, however,
very rigorous. He supported his family (wife
and four children, including a blind girl) by making
tagged laces, and devoted all the time he could spare
from this to studying his few books and writing.
During this period he wrote among other things, The
Holy City and Grace Abounding. Under
the Declaration of Indulgence he was released in 1672,
and became a licensed preacher. In 1675 the Declaration
was cancelled, and he was, under the Conventicle Act,
again imprisoned for six months, during which he wrote
the first part of The Pilgrim’s Progress,
which appeared in 1678, and to which considerable
additions were made in subsequent editions. It
was followed by the Life and Death of Mr. Badman
(1680), The Holy War (1682), and the second
part of The Pilgrim’s Progress (1684).
B. was now widely known as a popular preacher and author,
and exercised a wide influence. In 1688 he set
out on a journey to mediate between a father and son,
in which he was successful. On the return journey
he was drenched with rain, caught a chill and d.
in London on August 31. He is buried in Bunhill
Fields. B. has the distinction of having written,
in The Pilgrim’s Progress, probably the
most widely read book in the English language, and
one which has been translated into more tongues than
any book except the Bible. The charm of the work,
which makes it the joy of old and young, learned and
ignorant, and of readers of all possible schools of
thought and theology, lies in the interest of a story
in which the intense imagination of the writer makes
characters, incidents, and scenes alike live in that
of his readers as things actually known and remembered
by themselves, in its touches of tenderness and quaint
humour, its bursts of heart-moving eloquence, and its
pure, nervous, idiomatic English, Macaulay has said,
“Every reader knows the straight and narrow
path as well as he knows a road on which he has been
backwards and forwards a hundred times,” and
he adds that “In England during the latter half
of the seventeenth century there were only two minds
which possessed the imaginative faculty in a very eminent
degree. One of these minds produced the Paradise
Lost, the other The Pilgrim’s Progress.”
B. wrote about 60 books and tracts, of which The
Holy War ranks next to The Pilgrim’s
Progress in popularity, while Grace Abounding
is one of the most interesting pieces of biography
in existence.
There are numerous Lives, the most complete being that by Dr. John Brown of Bedford (1885 new 1888): others are Southey’s (1830), on which Macaulay’s Essay is based, Offor (1862), Froude (1880). On The Pilgrim’s Progress, The People of the Pilgrimage, by J. Kerr Bain, D.D.