The pilgrim's progress John Bunyan.

By: Material type: TextTextSeries: Penguin classics | Signet classic | Oxford world's classics (Oxford University Press)Publication details: Harmondsworth : Penguin Books, 1965.Description: 1 v. (various pagings)ISBN:
  • 0451523997 (1981 Signet Classic pbk.)
Uniform titles:
  • The pilgrim's progress
Subject(s): Genre/Form:
DDC classification:
  • 828/.4/07
Summary: The Pilgrim's Progress (Part I 1678/Part II 1684) holds a unique place in the history of English literature. No other seventeenth-century work except the King James Bible, nothing from the pen of a writer of Bunyan's social class in any period, and no other Christian work, has enjoyed such an extensive readership. The pilgrim Christian, Mr Worldly Wiseman, Giant Despair, Hopeful, and Ignorance are engaged in a powerful drama set against a solidly realistic background of town and country. Bunyan captures the speech of ordinary people as accurately as he depicts their behaviour and appearance and as firmly as he realizes their inner emotional and spiritual life. The tale is related in language remarkable for its beauty and simplicity, and is spiced with Bunyan's acute and satirical perceptions of the vanity and hypocrisy of his own society.
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Originally published: 1678.

1965 Penguin paperback edition is edited with an introduction by Roger Sharrock.

1981 Signet Classic paperback contains an afterword by F.R. Leavis ; rev. and updated bibliography.

1984 Oxford paperback edtion is edited with an introduction by N.H. Keeble.

2003 Oxford World's Classics trade paperback edition is edited with an introduction and notes by W.R. Owens.

The Pilgrim's Progress (Part I 1678/Part II 1684) holds a unique place in the history of English literature. No other seventeenth-century work except the King James Bible, nothing from the pen of a writer of Bunyan's social class in any period, and no other Christian work, has enjoyed such an extensive readership. The pilgrim Christian, Mr Worldly Wiseman, Giant Despair, Hopeful, and Ignorance are engaged in a powerful drama set against a solidly realistic background of town and country. Bunyan captures the speech of ordinary people as accurately as he depicts their behaviour and appearance and as firmly as he realizes their inner emotional and spiritual life. The tale is related in language remarkable for its beauty and simplicity, and is spiced with Bunyan's acute and satirical perceptions of the vanity and hypocrisy of his own society.

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