Gateway to the Classics: Pilgrims Progress Told to the Children by Mary Macgregor
 
Pilgrims Progress Told to the Children by  Mary Macgregor

Front Matter




[Cover]



[Series Page]


[Illustration]

"Do you see yonder wicket-gate?"



[Title Page]

In Dreamland

When the day is over, and the dark night comes, children often wander into a strange land,—the Land of Dreams.

Sometimes what they see and hear there is more strange than anything they see or hear in the wake-a-day world, and that is why, when morning comes, they long to tell their dreams to all who will listen.

More than two hundred years ago, a tinker, called John Bunyan, was imprisoned in Bedford Jail. But one night the tinker left his prison and wandered into the Land of Dreams, and there he saw wonderful sights and heard wonderful words.

As there was no one to listen to his dream, John Bunyan wrote it down and had it made into a book, and the book he called The Pilgrim’s Progress. It is about the journey and adventures of a pilgrim and his companions.

Into this little book I have copied the adventures that will interest boys and girls, and that will make them want to read the whole of Bunyan’s dream when they grow older.

Mary Macgregor



[List of Pictures]


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