Skip navigation
London Review of Books London Review Bookshop

Search the LRB

All the words
Exact phrase

advanced search

SUBSCRIBER REGISTRATION

Subscribers to the LRB currently get free access to the full content of the magazine in an online edition. If you are a subscriber and would like to register for online access click here

If you are already registered you can log in from our login page

If you would like further information about subscribing to the LRB click here.

London Review Bookshop

Holy Boldness subscriber-only content

Tom Paulin

  • Glimpses of Glory: John Bunyan and English Dissent by Richard Greaves  Buy this book
  • Theology and Narrative in the Works of John Bunyan by Michael Davies  Buy this book
  • The Portable Bunyan: A Transnational History of ‘The Pilgrim’s Progress’ by Isabel Hofmeyr

According to E.P. Thompson, The Pilgrim’s Progress and The Rights of Man are the two ‘foundation texts’ of the English working-class movement. It is above all in John Bunyan, he argues, that we find ‘the slumbering Radicalism’ which was preserved through the 18th century, and broke out again and again in the 19th.

Bunyan was born in a cottage on the edge of Elstow, a village near Bedford, in November 1628. His father was a brazier. He was 13 when the Civil War broke out, and at 16 joined a regiment garrisoned at Newport Pagnell. During his army years Bunyan witnessed the struggle between Presbyterians, who wanted to reform the Church of England, and radical sectaries. He had a religious awakening in 1650 – the year his blind daughter, Mary, was born – and suffered from a series of nervous illnesses which Richard Greaves unhelpfully approaches by means of psychiatric theory and William Styron’s compelling account of his own severe depression. In 1650 Bunyan had heard three or four women discussing religion: they were, he said, ‘far above out of my reach’, and he began seeking out the company of these people, who were members of a separatist church organised by John Gifford, a former major in the royalist army. A few years later Bunyan started to preach himself, to a Bedford congregation which a contemporary called ‘Bunian his society’, and this got him into trouble even before the restoration of the monarchy and the traditional church in 1660. He was indicted at the Bedford Assizes in February 1658, probably following a complaint from the local vicar, Thomas Becke, who was a Presbyterian.

subscriber-only content Subscribers to the print edition can log in to view the entire article. For information about subscribing to the London Review of Books click here. This article is available for purchase online. Buy this article.

Tom Paulin’s most recent book is Crusoe’s Secret. His study of poetic form, The Secret Life of Poems, will be published in January.

LRB cover artwork

From the archive

Shoe-Contemplative
David Bromwich on The Day-Star of Liberty: William Hazlitt’s Radical Style by Tom Paulin

Nuremberg Rally, Invasion of Poland, Dunkirk . . .
James Meek considers the never-ending wish to write about the Second World War

You Muddy Fools
Dan Jacobson interviews Ian Hamilton: In the months before his death Ian Hamilton talked about himself to Dan Jacobson

Impossible Wishes
Michael Wood on Thomas Mann

In the Workshop
Tom Paulin on Shakespeare’s Sonnets