The Pilgrim's Progress (1678) by John Bunyan is an allegorical novel. The protagonist is named Christian.
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| - The Pilgrim's Progress (1678) by John Bunyan is an allegorical novel. The protagonist is named Christian.
- John Bunyan was still a toddler at the time of the Ring of Fire, and therefore had not yet written The Pilgrim's Progress, or anything else. However, an attorney in Grantville was able to grant the young Bunyan the royalties to The Pilgrim's Progress.
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| - The Pilgrim's Progress from This World to That Which Is to Come, an allegorical novel, was published in 1678 after being written in 1675 while Bunyan was imprisoned for conducting unauthorised religious services outside of the Church of England. An expanded edition appeared in 1679, and the Second Part appeared in 1684. This work is regarded as one of the greatest classics of literature, and has been translated into more than 200 languages. It is divided into two parts, each of which reads as a continuous narrative, not being further divided into chapters. The unusual spelling and punctuation are not errors: they are the original style of Bunyan himself.
See also: The Little Pilgrim
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| - The Pilgrim's Progress (1678) by John Bunyan is an allegorical novel. The protagonist is named Christian.
- John Bunyan was still a toddler at the time of the Ring of Fire, and therefore had not yet written The Pilgrim's Progress, or anything else. However, an attorney in Grantville was able to grant the young Bunyan the royalties to The Pilgrim's Progress.
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