Bunyan Characters (2nd Series) eBook

Alexander Whyte
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 314 pages of information about Bunyan Characters (2nd Series).

Bunyan Characters (2nd Series) eBook

Alexander Whyte
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 314 pages of information about Bunyan Characters (2nd Series).
them what errand had been brought to him, and what token he had received of the truth of the message.  As for my feeble mind he said, that I shall leave behind me, for I shall have no need of that in the place whither I go.  Nor is it worth bestowing upon the poorest pilgrim.  Wherefore, when I am gone, I desire that you would bury it in a dung-hill.  This done, and the day being come in which he was about to depart, he entered the river as the rest.  His last words were, Hold out, faith and patience!  So he went over to the other side.”

GREAT-HEART

   “—­when thou shalt enlarge my heart.”—­David.

On Sabbath, the 12th December 1886, I heard the late Canon Liddon preach a sermon in St. Paul’s Cathedral, in which he classed Oliver Cromwell with Alexander the Sixth and with Richard the Third.  I had taken my estimate of the great Protector’s character largely from Carlyle’s famous book, and you can judge with what feelings I heard the canon’s comparison.  And, besides, I had been wont to think of the Protector as having entered largely into John Bunyan’s portrait of Greatheart, the pilgrim guide.  And the researches and the judgments of Dr. Gardiner have only gone to convince me, the eloquent canon notwithstanding, that Bunyan could not have chosen a better contemporary groundwork for his Greatheart than just the great Puritan soldier.  Cromwell’s “mental struggles before his conversion,” his life-long “searchings of heart,” his “utter absence of vindictiveness,” his unequalled capacity for “seeing into the heart of a situation,” and his own “all-embracing hospitality of heart”—­all have gone to reassure me that my first guess as to Bunyan’s employment of the Protector’s matchless personality and services had not been so far astray.  And the oftener I read the noble history of Greatheart, the better I seem to hear, beating behind his fine figure, by far the greatest heart that ever ruled over the realm of England.

1.  The first time that we catch a glimpse of Greatheart’s weather-beaten and sword-seamed face is when he is taking a stolen look out of the window at Mr. Fearing, who is conducting himself more like a chicken than a man around the Interpreter’s door.  And from that moment till Mr. Fearing shouted “Grace reigns!” as he cleared the last river, never sportsman surely stalked a startled deer so patiently and so skilfully and so successfully as Greatheart circumvented that chicken-hearted pilgrim.  “At last 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 him what he was; but, poor man, the water stood ill his eyes.  So I perceived what he wanted.  I went in, therefore, 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.”  Greatheart’s whole account of Mr. Fearing always

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Bunyan Characters (2nd Series) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.