登陆注册
15484900000004

第4章 CHAPTER I.(4)

But some fictions die hard. However low the family had sunk, so that in his own words, "his father's house was of that rank that is meanest and most despised of all the families in the land," "of a low and inconsiderable generation," the name, as we have seen, was one of long standing in Bunyan's native county, and had once taken far higher rank in it. And his parents, though poor, were evidently worthy people, of good repute among their village neighbours. Bunyan seems to be describing his own father and his wandering life when he speaks of "an honest poor labouring man, who, like Adam unparadised, had all the world to get his bread in, and was very careful to maintain his family." He and his wife were also careful with a higher care that their children should be properly educated. "Notwithstanding the meanness and inconsiderableness of my parents," writes Bunyan, "it pleased God to put it into their hearts to put me to school, to learn both to read and write." If we accept the evidence of the "Scriptural Poems," published for the first time twelve years after his death, the genuineness of which, though questioned by Dr. Brown, there seems no sufficient reason to doubt, the little education he had was "gained in a grammar school." This would have been that founded by Sir William Harpur in Queen Mary's reign in the neighbouring town of Bedford. Thither we may picture the little lad trudging day by day along the mile and a half of footpath and road from his father's cottage by the brookside, often, no doubt, wet and miry enough, not, as he says, to "go to school to Aristotle or Plato," but to be taught "according to the rate of other poor men's children." The Bedford school-master about this time, William Barnes by name, was a negligent sot, charged with "night-walking" and haunting "taverns and alehouses," and other evil practices, as well as with treating the poor boys "when present"with a cruelty which must have made them wish that his absences, long as they were, had been more protracted. Whether this man was his master or no, it was little that Bunyan learnt at school, and that little he confesses with shame he soon lost "almost utterly."He was before long called home to help his father at the Harrowden forge, where he says he was "brought up in a very mean condition among a company of poor countrymen." Here, with but little to elevate or refine his character, the boy contracted many bad habits, and grew up what Coleridge somewhat too strongly calls "a bitter blackguard." According to his own remorseful confession, he was "filled with all unrighteousness," having "from a child" in his "tender years," "but few equals both for cursing, swearing, lying and blaspheming the holy name of God." Sins of this kind he declares became "a second nature to him;" he "delighted in all transgression against the law of God," and as he advanced in his teens he became a "notorious sinbreeder," the "very ringleader," he says, of the village lads "in all manner of vice and ungodliness."But the unsparing condemnation passed by Bunyan, after his conversion, on his former self, must not mislead us into supposing him ever, either as boy or man, to have lived a vicious life. "The wickedness of the tinker," writes Southey, "has been greatly overrated, and it is taking the language of self-accusation too literally to pronounce of John Bunyan that he was at any time depraved." The justice of this verdict of acquittal is fully accepted by Coleridge. "Bunyan," he says, "was never in our received sense of the word 'wicked.' He was chaste, sober, and honest." He hints at youthful escapades, such, perhaps, as orchard-robbing, or when a little older, poaching, and the like, which might have brought him under "the stroke of the laws," and put him to "open shame before the face of the world." But he confesses to no crime or profligate habit. We have no reason to suppose that he was ever drunk, and we have his own most solemn declaration that he was never guilty of an act of unchastity. "In our days," to quote Mr. Froude, "a rough tinker who could say as much for himself after he had grown to manhood, would be regarded as a model of self-restraint. If in Bedford and the neighbourhood there was no young man more vicious than Bunyan, the moral standard of an English town in the seventeenth century must have been higher than believers in progress will be pleased to allow." How then, it may be asked, are we to explain the passionate language in which he expresses his self-abhorrence, which would hardly seem exaggerated in the mouth of the most profligate and licentious? We are confident that Bunyan meant what he said. So intensely honest a nature could not allow his words to go beyond his convictions.

When he speaks of "letting loose the reins to his lusts," and sinning "with the greatest delight and ease," we know that however exaggerated they may appear to us, his expressions did not seem to him overstrained. Dr. Johnson marvelled that St. Paul could call himself "the chief of sinners," and expressed a doubt whether he did so honestly. But a highly-strung spiritual nature like that of the apostle, when suddenly called into exercise after a period of carelessness, takes a very different estimate of sin from that of the world, even the decent moral world, in general. It realizes its own offences, venial as they appear to others, as sins against infinite love - a love unto death - and in the light of the sacrifice on Calvary, recognizes the heinousness of its guilt, and while it doubts not, marvels that it can be pardoned. The sinfulness of sin - more especially their own sin - is the intensest of all possible realities to them. No language is too strong to describe it. We may not unreasonably ask whether this estimate, however exaggerated it may appear to those who are strangers to these spiritual experiences, is altogether a mistaken one?

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 改变人生的厚黑策略

    改变人生的厚黑策略

    《改变人生的厚黑策略》通过大量贴近生活的事例和精练的要点,从为人、处事等方面,生动地展示了轻松为人、巧妙处世的方法。愿所有渴望成功的人们,在本书的指导下,寻找到通向成功殿堂的曲幽捷径,早日享受成功的鲜花和掌声。
  • 子非魔

    子非魔

    黑暗当中的永生是最为孤独的,因为没有感情,所以无法体会这难熬。直到它的出现,它的消失,黑暗的世界,终究还是厌倦了,最后和它一起离开的还有黑暗当中的永生。
  • 秘境谜藏之皇城鬼斋

    秘境谜藏之皇城鬼斋

    清末民初,伴随一个三百年王朝的没落,随之而生的却是无尽的财富流入民间,北京古玩行就此兴起。人们只知其财富惊人,却不知器物存世越久,其灵也就越大,故有诸般宝贝养人却也害人一说。老贝勒府中夜半惊魂的梆子声,八大胡同瓷瓶养妖,阎王问路,鹦鹉衔珠,夜走酆都城...一件件玉石青铜,一个个街头巷尾流传已久的传说,炼器世家代代弟子皆是等待鬼谷洞中一个器物的出现.......
  • 富二代生活指南

    富二代生活指南

    社会讽刺,各类打脸,天马行空,悬疑,你所不知道的历史。
  • 我的神秘男友

    我的神秘男友

    那一年,我自甘堕落混迹酒吧讨要生活,他是高冷耍帅却分外神秘的地痞无赖。我们的故事从那个让我毕生难忘的夜晚开始,却结束在他要结婚的前夕。再遇时,他已摇身变成炙手可热的单身青年才俊,而我从湛江辗转至东莞,撞入浮华,在无数男人身上寻求生机。从那时候起我就知道,原来爱情里面最背道而驰的是:他给的我不想要,我要的他不能给。
  • 逆天前行

    逆天前行

    踏着尸堆,越过血海,不信神佛,不拜仙魔,以我之躯盖天威,以我之魂平天道,睁眼一抖天要呛抖,闭眼一座地要让座。
  • 血与火的传承

    血与火的传承

    命运的道路是如此的错综复杂,而任何理智的人都不该沉缅于“如果当初……”而从中获得虚假的满足感。发生过的事情,就是发生过了;我们必须承担我们的选择所带来的一切,无论那是耻辱,还是荣耀。
  • 顾城之战

    顾城之战

    四年前,顾城肆虐卡赞病毒,顾城三少林植不幸感染,巨大的卡赞力量时常暴走,在噩梦般的记忆中父母惨死在自己手中,恢复神智的林植不知所措,疯了一样的逃出顾城,从此不知所踪。四年后,苍国举兵来犯,顾城危急,受城主之托的江少陵找到林植,希望他能援救顾城,在外流浪的林植欣然同意,以崭新的勇者姿态踏上归城之路。
  • 审判日之创世纪

    审判日之创世纪

    百亿年的约定?神的审判?神魔降临,世界即将毁灭。谁将创建世纪?成为创世神?
  • 甜蜜溺宠:景少的异能女友

    甜蜜溺宠:景少的异能女友

    她是古武世家嫡女,她是懦弱胆小的花痴,她是天才,她是草包,当身份尊贵的她变成胆小懦弱的她时,会发生什么,又是如何俘获霸道冷酷男神的心.....【重生文,女强男强一对一,欢迎来跳坑!】