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| Harvard Classics, Vol. 15, Part 1 |
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| The Pilgrims Progress |
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| John Bunyan |
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| The most well-known allegory ever written, this journey of the protaganist, Christian, is simultaneously filled with vivid and full human portraits of its characters. With over 100,000 copies sold in Bunyans lifetime, this most perfect and complex of fairy tales succeeded in attracting audiences from every Christian sect. |
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| CONTENTS |
| Bibliographic Record |
NEW YORK: P.F. COLLIER & SON COMPANY, 190914
NEW YORK: BARTLEBY.COM, 2001 |
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- Introductory Note
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- The Pilgrims Progress, in the Similitude of a Dream; The First Part
- The Authors Apology for His Book
- Paras. 199
- Paras. 100199
- Paras. 200299
- Paras. 300399
- Paras. 400499
- Paras. 500599
- Paras. 600699
- Paras. 700799
- Paras. 800907
- The Conclusion
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- The Pilgrims Progress, in the Similitude of a Dream; The Second Part
- The Authors Apology
- Paras. 199
- Paras. 100199
- Paras. 200299
- Paras. 300399
- Paras. 400499
- Paras. 500599
- Paras. 600699
- Paras. 700787
- The Authors Vindication of his Pilgrim, Found at the End of his Holy War
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