summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--.gitattributes3
-rw-r--r--395-0.txt9533
-rw-r--r--395-0.zipbin0 -> 199023 bytes
-rw-r--r--395-h.zipbin0 -> 208037 bytes
-rw-r--r--395-h/395-h.htm10029
-rw-r--r--395-h/images/p0b.jpgbin0 -> 6013 bytes
-rw-r--r--395-h/images/p0s.jpgbin0 -> 1477 bytes
-rw-r--r--LICENSE.txt11
-rw-r--r--README.md2
-rw-r--r--old/hlywr10.txt10093
-rw-r--r--old/hlywr10.zipbin0 -> 197157 bytes
-rw-r--r--old/hlywr10h.htm9715
-rw-r--r--old/hlywr10h.zipbin0 -> 197253 bytes
13 files changed, 39386 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6833f05
--- /dev/null
+++ b/.gitattributes
@@ -0,0 +1,3 @@
+* text=auto
+*.txt text
+*.md text
diff --git a/395-0.txt b/395-0.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..f63111c
--- /dev/null
+++ b/395-0.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,9533 @@
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Holy War made by Shaddai upon Diabolus,
+by John Bunyan
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Holy War made by Shaddai upon Diabolus
+
+
+Author: John Bunyan
+
+
+
+Release Date: February 9, 2013 [eBook #395]
+[This file was first posted on December 7, 1995]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HOLY WAR MADE BY SHADDAI UPON
+DIABOLUS***
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1907 Religious Tract Society edition by David Price,
+email ccx074@pglaf.org
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE HOLY WAR MADE
+ BY SHADDI UPON
+ DIABOLUS FOR THE
+ REGAINING OF THE METROPOLIS
+ OF THE WORLD OR THE LOSING
+ AND TAKING AGAIN OF THE TOWN
+ OF MANSOUL. BY JOHN BUNYAN
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ WITH THREE
+ COLOURED ILLUSTRATIONS
+ BY VICTOR PROUT {0}
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ “I have used similitudes.” Hosea xii. 10
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ [Picture: Decorative design]
+
+ London
+ THE RELIGIOUS TRACT SOCIETY
+ 4 Bouverie Street and 65 St Paul’s Churchyard
+ 1907
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ PRINTED BY
+ HAZELL, WATSON AND VINEY, LD.
+ LONDON AND AYLESBURY.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+_IN the year 1682 there was published by Dorman Newman_, ‘_at the King’s
+Arms in the Poultry_,’_ and Benjamin Alsop_, ‘_at the Angel and Bible in
+the Poultry_,’_ a volume entitled_ ‘_The Holy War_, _made by Shaddai upon
+Diabolus for the regaining of the Metropolis of the World; or the Losing
+and Taking again of the Town of Mansoul_.’_ It was the work of John
+Bunyan_, _who_, _sixteen years before_, _had published the story of his
+own spiritual struggle under the title of_ ‘_Grace abounding to the Chief
+of Sinners_’;_ and_, _but four years before_, _had produced_ ‘_The
+Pilgrim’s Progress_’ (_Part I_). _Bunyan had speedily followed the issue
+of the_ ‘_Pilgrim’s Progress_’ _with the_ ‘_Life and Death of Mr.
+Badman_,’_ picture of English life and character as he had seen it_,
+_grimly faithful to fact_. _In_ ‘_The Holy War_’_ Bunyan returned to
+allegory_. _As a piece of literature the book is in no way inferior to
+the_ ‘_Pilgrim’s Progress_.’_ If Bunyan had written nothing else_, ‘_The
+Holy War_’ _would have sufficed to establish his claim to a place amongst
+the masters of English prose_. _As an appeal to the conscience it is not
+a whit less effective than the_ ‘_Pilgrim’s Progress_’; _but in the power
+of seizing and retaining the reader’s attention it is scarcely so
+successful_. _Nevertheless Macaulay held that_ ‘_if there had been no_
+“_Pilgrim’s Progress_” “_The Holy War_” _would have been the first of
+religious allegories_.’
+
+_In working out the details of_ ‘_The Holy War_’ _Bunyan seems to have
+kept in mind his own experience_. _The fortifications of the city_, _the
+movements of the opposing forces_, _the changes in the municipal offices
+of Mansoul were reproductions of scenes and events that had but recently
+gone on under Bunyan’s eyes_. _He adapted them with extraordinary
+success to the presentation both of the doctrines of grace and of the
+temptations which attend the Christian life_. _The characters and the
+incidents are_, _in effect_, _the characters and incidents of every age_.
+_It is this which gives to the story of Mansoul its undying freshness_,
+_and suits it to the needs of men in all climes_. ‘_The Holy War_’ _has
+been translated into many languages_, _including some of those with the
+scantiest of literature_. _Indeed_, _as this edition is being prepared
+for the press_, _assistance is being rendered by the Religious Tract
+Society in the printing of_ ‘_The Holy War_’ _in Kongo_.
+
+ _A. R. BUCKLAND_.
+
+
+
+
+TO THE READER.
+
+
+ ’Tis strange to me, that they that love to tell
+ Things done of old, yea, and that do excel
+ Their equals in historiology,
+ Speak not of Mansoul’s wars, but let them lie
+ Dead, like old fables, or such worthless things,
+ That to the reader no advantage brings:
+ When men, let them make what they will their own,
+ Till they know this, are to themselves unknown.
+ Of stories, I well know, there’s divers sorts,
+ Some foreign, some domestic; and reports
+ Are thereof made as fancy leads the writers:
+ (By books a man may guess at the inditers.)
+ Some will again of that which never was,
+ Nor will be, feign (and that without a cause)
+ Such matter, raise such mountains, tell such things
+ Of men, of laws, of countries, and of kings;
+ And in their story seem to be so sage,
+ And with such gravity clothe every page,
+ That though their frontispiece says all is vain,
+ Yet to their way disciples they obtain.
+ But, readers, I have somewhat else to do,
+ Than with vain stories thus to trouble you.
+ What here I say, some men do know so well,
+ They can with tears and joy the story tell.
+ The town of Mansoul is well known to many,
+ Nor are her troubles doubted of by any
+ That are acquainted with those Histories
+ That Mansoul and her wars anatomize.
+ Then lend thine ear to what I do relate,
+ Touching the town of Mansoul and her state:
+ How she was lost, took captive, made a slave:
+ And how against him set, that should her save;
+ Yea, how by hostile ways she did oppose
+ Her Lord, and with his enemy did close.
+ For they are true: he that will them deny
+ Must needs the best of records vilify.
+ For my part, I myself was in the town,
+ Both when ’twas set up, and when pulling down.
+ I saw Diabolus in his possession,
+ And Mansoul also under his oppression.
+ Yea, I was there when she own’d him for lord,
+ And to him did submit with one accord.
+ When Mansoul trampled upon things divine,
+ And wallowed in filth as doth a swine;
+ When she betook herself unto her arms,
+ Fought her Emmanuel, despis’d his charms;
+ Then I was there, and did rejoice to see
+ Diabolus and Mansoul so agree.
+ Let no men, then, count me a fable-maker,
+ Nor make my name or credit a partaker
+ Of their derision: what is here in view,
+ Of mine own knowledge, I dare say is true.
+ I saw the Prince’s armed men come down
+ By troops, by thousands, to besiege the town;
+ I saw the captains, heard the trumpets sound,
+ And how his forces covered all the ground.
+ Yea, how they set themselves in battle-’ray,
+ I shall remember to my dying day.
+ I saw the colours waving in the wind,
+ And they within to mischief how combin’d
+ To ruin Mansoul, and to make away
+ Her primum mobile without delay.
+ I saw the mounts cast up against the town,
+ And how the slings were placed to beat it down:
+ I heard the stones fly whizzing by mine ears,
+ (What longer kept in mind than got in fears?)
+ I heard them fall, and saw what work they made.
+ And how old Mors did cover with his shade
+ The face of Mansoul; and I heard her cry,
+ ‘Woe worth the day, in dying I shall die!’
+ I saw the battering-rams, and how they play’d
+ To beat open Ear-gate; and I was afraid
+ Not only Ear-gate, but the very town
+ Would by those battering-rams be beaten down.
+ I saw the fights, and heard the captains shout,
+ And in each battle saw who faced about;
+ I saw who wounded were, and who were slain;
+ And who, when dead, would come to life again.
+ I heard the cries of those that wounded were,
+ (While others fought like men bereft of fear,)
+ And while the cry, ‘Kill, kill,’ was in mine ears,
+ The gutters ran, not so with blood as tears.
+ Indeed, the captains did not always fight,
+ But then they would molest us day and night;
+ Their cry, ‘Up, fall on, let us take the town,’
+ Kept us from sleeping, or from lying down.
+ I was there when the gates were broken ope,
+ And saw how Mansoul then was stripp’d of hope;
+ I saw the captains march into the town,
+ How there they fought, and did their foes cut down.
+ I heard the Prince bid Boanerges go
+ Up to the castle, and there seize his foe;
+ And saw him and his fellows bring him down,
+ In chains of great contempt quite through the town.
+ I saw Emmanuel, when he possess’d
+ His town of Mansoul; and how greatly blest
+ A town his gallant town of Mansoul was,
+ When she received his pardon, loved his laws.
+ When the Diabolonians were caught,
+ When tried, and when to execution brought,
+ Then I was there; yea, I was standing by
+ When Mansoul did the rebels crucify.
+ I also saw Mansoul clad all in white,
+ I heard her Prince call her his heart’s delight.
+ I saw him put upon her chains of gold,
+ And rings, and bracelets, goodly to behold.
+ What shall I say? I heard the people’s cries,
+ And saw the Prince wipe tears from Mansoul’s eyes.
+ And heard the groans, and saw the joy of many:
+ Tell you of all, I neither will, nor can I.
+ But by what here I say, you well may see
+ That Mansoul’s matchless wars no fables be.
+ Mansoul, the desire of both princes was:
+ One keep his gain would, t’other gain his loss.
+ Diabolus would cry, ‘The town is mine!’
+ Emmanuel would plead a right divine
+ Unto his Mansoul: then to blows they go,
+ And Mansoul cries, ‘These wars will me undo.’
+ Mansoul! her wars seemed endless in her eyes;
+ She’s lost by one, becomes another’s prize:
+ And he again that lost her last would swear,
+ ‘Have her I will, or her in pieces tear.’
+ Mansoul! it was the very seat of war;
+ Wherefore her troubles greater were by far
+ Than only where the noise of war is heard,
+ Or where the shaking of a sword is fear’d;
+ Or only where small skirmishes are fought,
+ Or where the fancy fighteth with a thought.
+ She saw the swords of fighting men made red,
+ And heard the cries of those with them wounded:
+ Must not her frights, then, be much more by far
+ Than theirs that to such doings strangers are?
+ Or theirs that hear the beating of a drum,
+ But not made fly for fear from house and home?
+ Mansoul not only heard the trumpet’s sound,
+ But saw her gallants gasping on the ground:
+ Wherefore we must not think that she could rest
+ With them, whose greatest earnest is but jest:
+ Or where the blust’ring threat’ning of great wars
+ Do end in parlies, or in wording jars.
+ Mansoul! her mighty wars, they did portend
+ Her weal or woe, and that world without end:
+ Wherefore she must be more concern’d than they
+ Whose fears begin, and end the selfsame day;
+ Or where none other harm doth come to him
+ That is engaged, but loss of life or limb,
+ As all must needs confess that now do dwell
+ In Universe, and can this story tell.
+ Count me not, then, with them that, to amaze
+ The people, set them on the stars to gaze,
+ Insinuating with much confidence,
+ That each of them is now the residence
+ Of some brave creatures: yea, a world they will
+ Have in each star, though it be past their skill
+ To make it manifest to any man,
+ That reason hath, or tell his fingers can.
+ But I have too long held thee in the porch,
+ And kept thee from the sunshine with a torch,
+ Well, now go forward, step within the door,
+ And there behold five hundred times much more
+ Of all sorts of such inward rarities
+ As please the mind will, and will feed the eyes
+ With those, which, if a Christian, thou wilt see
+ Not small, but things of greatest moment be.
+ Nor do thou go to work without my key;
+ (In mysteries men soon do lose their way;)
+ And also turn it right, if thou wouldst know
+ My riddle, and wouldst with my heifer plough;
+ It lies there in the window. Fare thee well,
+ My next may be to ring thy passing-bell.
+
+ JOHN BUNYAN.
+
+
+
+
+AN ADVERTISEMENT TO THE READER.
+
+
+ SOME say the ‘Pilgrim’s Progress’ is not mine,
+ Insinuating as if I would shine
+ In name and fame by the worth of another,
+ Like some made rich by robbing of their brother.
+ Or that so fond I am of being sire,
+ I’ll father bastards; or, if need require,
+ I’ll tell a lie in print to get applause.
+ I scorn it: John such dirt-heap never was,
+ Since God converted him. Let this suffice
+ To show why I my ‘Pilgrim’ patronize.
+ It came from mine own heart, so to my head,
+ And thence into my fingers trickled;
+ Then to my pen, from whence immediately
+ On paper I did dribble it daintily.
+ Manner and matter, too, was all mine own,
+ Nor was it unto any mortal known
+ Till I had done it; nor did any then
+ By books, by wits, by tongues, or hand, or pen,
+ Add five words to it, or write half a line
+ Thereof: the whole, and every whit is mine.
+ Also for THIS, thine eye is now upon,
+ The matter in this manner came from none
+ But the same heart, and head, fingers, and pen,
+ As did the other. Witness all good men;
+ For none in all the world, without a lie,
+ Can say that this is mine, excepting I
+ I write not this of my ostentation,
+ Nor ‘cause I seek of men their commendation;
+ I do it to keep them from such surmise,
+ As tempt them will my name to scandalize.
+ Witness my name, if anagram’d to thee,
+ The letters make—‘Nu hony in a B.’
+
+ JOHN BUNYAN.
+
+
+
+
+A RELATION OF THE HOLY WAR.
+
+
+IN my travels, as I walked through many regions and countries, it was my
+chance to happen into that famous continent of Universe. A very large
+and spacious country it is: it lieth between the two poles, and just
+amidst the four points of the heavens. It is a place well watered, and
+richly adorned with hills and valleys, bravely situate, and for the most
+part, at least where I was, very fruitful, also well peopled, and a very
+sweet air.
+
+The people are not all of one complexion, nor yet of one language, mode,
+or way of religion, but differ as much as, it is said, do the planets
+themselves. Some are right, and some are wrong, even as it happeneth to
+be in lesser regions.
+
+In this country, as I said, it was my lot to travel; and there travel I
+did, and that so long, even till I learned much of their mother tongue,
+together with the customs and manners of them among whom I was. And, to
+speak truth, I was much delighted to see and hear many things which I saw
+and heard among them; yea, I had, to be sure, even lived and died a
+native among them, (so was I taken with them and their doings,) had not
+my master sent for me home to his house, there to do business for him,
+and to oversee business done.
+
+Now there is in this gallant country of Universe a fair and delicate
+town, a corporation called Mansoul; a town for its building so curious,
+for its situation so commodious, for its privileges so advantageous, (I
+mean with reference to its origin,) that I may say of it, as was said
+before of the continent in which it is placed, There is not its equal
+under the whole heaven.
+
+As to the situation of this town, it lieth just between the two worlds;
+and the first founder and builder of it, so far as by the best and most
+authentic records I can gather, was one Shaddai; and he built it for his
+own delight. He made it the mirror and glory of all that he made, even
+the top-piece, beyond anything else that he did in that country. Yea, so
+goodly a town was Mansoul when first built, that it is said by some, the
+gods, at the setting up thereof, came down to see it, and sang for joy.
+And as he made it goodly to behold, so also mighty to have dominion over
+all the country round about. Yea, all were commanded to acknowledge
+Mansoul for their metropolitan, all were enjoined to do homage to it.
+Aye, the town itself had positive commission and power from her King to
+demand service of all, and also to subdue any that anyways denied to do
+it.
+
+There was reared up in the midst of this town a most famous and stately
+palace; for strength, it might be called a castle; for pleasantness, a
+paradise; for largeness, a place so copious as to contain all the world.
+This place the King Shaddai intended but for himself alone, and not
+another with him; partly because of his own delights, and partly because
+he would not that the terror of strangers should be upon the town. This
+place Shaddai made also a garrison of, but committed the keeping of it
+only to the men of the town.
+
+The walls of the town were well built, yea, so fast and firm were they
+knit and compact together, that, had it not been for the townsmen
+themselves, they could not have been shaken or broken for ever. For here
+lay the excellent wisdom of him that builded Mansoul, that the walls
+could never be broken down nor hurt by the most mighty adverse potentate,
+unless the townsmen gave consent thereto.
+
+This famous town of Mansoul had five gates, in at which to come, out at
+which to go; and these were made likewise answerable to the walls, to
+wit, impregnable, and such as could never be opened nor forced but by the
+will and leave of those within. The names of the gates were these:
+Ear-gate, Eye-gate, Mouth-gate, Nose-gate, and Feel-gate.
+
+Other things there were that belonged to the town of Mansoul, which if
+you adjoin to these, will yet give farther demonstration to all, of the
+glory and strength of the place. It had always a sufficiency of
+provision within its walls; it had the best, most wholesome, and
+excellent law that then was extant in the world. There was not a rascal,
+rogue, or traitorous person then within its walls; they were all true
+men, and fast joined together; and this, you know, is a great matter.
+And to all these, it had always (so long as it had the goodness to keep
+true to Shaddai the King) his countenance, his protection, and it was his
+delight, etc.
+
+Well, upon a time, there was one Diabolus, a mighty giant, made an
+assault upon this famous town of Mansoul, to take it, and make it his own
+habitation. This giant was king of the blacks, and a most raving prince
+he was. We will, if you please, first discourse of the origin of this
+Diabolus, and then of his taking of this famous town of Mansoul.
+
+This Diabolus is indeed a great and mighty prince, and yet both poor and
+beggarly. As to his origin, he was at first one of the servants of King
+Shaddai, made, and taken, and put by him into most high and mighty place;
+yea, was put into such principalities as belonged to the best of his
+territories and dominions. This Diabolus was made ‘son of the morning,’
+and a brave place he had of it: it brought him much glory, and gave him
+much brightness, an income that might have contented his Luciferian
+heart, had it not been insatiable, and enlarged as hell itself.
+
+Well, he seeing himself thus exalted to greatness and honour, and raging
+in his mind for higher state and degree, what doth he but begins to think
+with himself how he might be set up as lord over all, and have the sole
+power under Shaddai. (Now that did the King reserve for his Son, yea,
+and had already bestowed it upon him.) Wherefore he first consults with
+himself what had best to be done; and then breaks his mind to some other
+of his companions, to the which they also agreed. So, in fine, they came
+to this issue that they should make an attempt upon the King’s Son to
+destroy him, that the inheritance might be theirs. Well, to be short,
+the treason, as I said, was concluded, the time appointed, the word
+given, the rebels rendezvoused, and the assault attempted. Now the King
+and his Son being all and always eye, could not but discern all passages
+in his dominions; and he, having always love for his Son as for himself,
+could not at what he saw but be greatly provoked and offended: wherefore
+what does he, but takes them in the very nick and first trip that they
+made towards their design, convicts them of the treason, horrid
+rebellion, and conspiracy that they had devised, and now attempted to put
+into practice, and casts them altogether out of all place of trust,
+benefit, honour, and preferment. This done, he banishes them the court,
+turns them down into the horrible pits, as fast bound in chains, never
+more to expect the least favour from his hands, but to abide the judgment
+that he had appointed, and that for ever.
+
+Now they being thus cast out of all place of trust, profit, and honour,
+and also knowing that they had lost their prince’s favour for ever,
+(being banished his court, and cast down to the horrible pits,) you may
+he sure they would now add to their former pride what malice and rage
+against Shaddai, and against his Son, they could. Wherefore, roving and
+ranging in much fury from place to place, if, perhaps, they might find
+something that was the King’s, by spoiling of that, to revenge themselves
+on him; at last they happened into this spacious country of Universe, and
+steer their course towards the town of Mansoul; and considering that that
+town was one of the chief works and delights of King Shaddai, what do
+they but, after counsel taken, make an assault upon that. I say, they
+knew that Mansoul belonged unto Shaddai; for they were there when he
+built it and beautified it for himself. So when they had found the
+place, they shouted horribly for joy, and roared on it as a lion upon the
+prey, saying, ‘Now we have found the prize, and how to be revenged on
+King Shaddai for what he hath done to us.’ So they sat down and called a
+council of war, and considered with themselves what ways and methods they
+had best to engage in for the winning to themselves this famous town of
+Mansoul, and these four things were then propounded to be considered of.
+
+First. Whether they had best all of them to show themselves in this
+design to the town of Mansoul.
+
+Secondly. Whether they had best to go and sit down against Mansoul in
+their now ragged and beggarly guise.
+
+Thirdly. Whether they had best show to Mansoul their intentions, and
+what design they came about, or whether to assault it with words and ways
+of deceit.
+
+Fourthly. Whether they had not best to some of their companions to give
+out private orders to take the advantage, if they see one or more of the
+principal townsmen, to shoot them, if thereby they shall judge their
+cause and design will the better be promoted.
+
+1. It was answered to the first of these proposals in the negative, to
+wit, that it would not be best that all should show themselves before the
+town, because the appearance of many of them might alarm and frighten the
+town; whereas a few or but one of them was not so likely to do it. And
+to enforce this advice to take place it was added further, that if
+Mansoul was frighted, or did take the alarm, ‘It is impossible,’ said
+Diabolus (for he spake now), ‘that we should take the town: for that none
+can enter into it without its own consent. Let, therefore, but few, or
+but one, assault Mansoul; and in mine opinion,’ said Diabolus, ‘let me be
+he.’ Wherefore to this they all agreed.
+
+2. And then to the second proposal they came, namely, Whether they had
+best go and sit down before Mansoul in their now ragged and beggarly
+guise. To which it was answered also in the negative, By no means; and
+that because, though the town of Mansoul had been made to know, and to
+have to do, before now, with things that are invisible, they did never as
+yet see any of their fellow-creatures in so sad and rascally condition as
+they; and this was the advice of that fierce Alecto. Then said Apollyon,
+‘The advice is pertinent; for even one of us appearing to them as we are
+now, must needs both beget and multiply such thoughts in them as will
+both put them into a consternation of spirit, and necessitate them to put
+themselves upon their guard. And if so,’ said he, ‘then, as my Lord
+Diabolus said but now, it is in vain for us to think of taking the town.’
+Then said that mighty giant Beelzebub, ‘The advice that already is given
+is safe; for though the men of Mansoul have seen such things as we once
+were, yet hitherto they did never behold such things as we now are; and
+it is best, in mine opinion, to come upon them in such a guise as is
+common to, and most familiar among them.’ To this, when they had
+consented, the next thing to be considered was, in what shape, hue, or
+guise Diabolus had best to show himself when he went about to make
+Mansoul his own. Then one said one thing, and another the contrary. At
+last Lucifer answered, that, in his opinion, it was best that his
+lordship should assume the body of some of those creatures that they of
+the town had dominion over; ‘for,’ quoth he, ‘these are not only familiar
+to them, but, being under them, they will never imagine that an attempt
+should by them be made upon the town; and, to blind all, let him assume
+the body of one of those beasts that Mansoul deems to be wiser than any
+of the rest.’ This advice was applauded of all: so it was determined
+that the giant Diabolus should assume the dragon, for that he was in
+those days as familiar with the town of Mansoul as now is the bird with
+the boy; for nothing that was in its primitive state was at all amazing
+to them. Then they proceeded to the third thing, which was:
+
+3. Whether they had best to show their intentions, or the design of his
+coming, to Mansoul, or no. This also was answered in the negative,
+because of the weight that was in the former reasons, to wit, for that
+Mansoul were a strong people, a strong people in a strong town, whose
+wall and gates were impregnable, (to say nothing of their castle,) nor
+can they by any means be won but by their own consent. ‘Besides,’ said
+Legion, (for he gave answer to this,) ‘a discovery of our intentions may
+make them send to their king for aid; and if that be done, I know quickly
+what time of day it will be with us. Therefore let us assault them in
+all pretended fairness, covering our intentions with all manner of lies,
+flatteries, delusive words; feigning things that never will be, and
+promising that to them that they shall never find. This is the way to
+win Mansoul, and to make them of themselves open their gates to us; yea,
+and to desire us too to come in to them. And the reason why I think that
+this project will do is, because the people of Mansoul now are, every
+one, simple and innocent, all honest and true; nor do they as yet know
+what it is to be assaulted with fraud, guile, and hypocrisy. They are
+strangers to lying and dissembling lips; wherefore we cannot, if thus we
+be disguised, by them at all be discerned; our lies shall go for true
+sayings, and our dissimulations for upright dealings. What we promise
+them they will in that believe us, especially if, in all our lies and
+feigned words, we pretend great love to them, and that our design is only
+their advantage and honour.’ Now there was not one bit of a reply
+against this; this went as current down as doth the water down a steep
+descent. Wherefore they go to consider of the last proposal, which was:
+
+4. Whether they had not best to give out orders to some of their company
+to shoot some one or more of the principal of the townsmen, if they judge
+that their cause may be promoted thereby. This was carried in the
+affirmative, and the man that was designed by this stratagem to be
+destroyed was one Mr. Resistance, otherwise called Captain Resistance.
+And a great man in Mansoul this Captain Resistance was, and a man that
+the giant Diabolus and his band more feared than they feared the whole
+town of Mansoul besides. Now who should be the actor to do the murder?
+That was the next, and they appointed one Tisiphone, a fury of the lake,
+to do it.
+
+They thus having ended their council of war, rose up, and essayed to do
+as they had determined; they marched towards Mansoul, but all in a manner
+invisible, save one, only one; nor did he approach the town in his own
+likeness, but under the shade and in the body of the dragon.
+
+So they drew up and sat down before Ear-gate, for that was the place of
+hearing for all without the town, as Eye-gate was the place of
+perspection. So, as I said, he came up with his train to the gate, and
+laid his ambuscado for Captain Resistance within bow-shot of the town.
+This done, the giant ascended up close to the gate, and called to the
+town of Mansoul for audience. Nor took he any with him but one
+Ill-pause, who was his orator in all difficult matters. Now, as I said,
+he being come up to the gate, (as the manner of those times was,) sounded
+his trumpet for audience; at which the chief of the town of Mansoul, such
+as my Lord Innocent, my Lord Willbewill, my Lord Mayor, Mr. Recorder, and
+Captain Resistance, came down to the wall to see who was there, and what
+was the matter. And my Lord Willbewill, when he had looked over and saw
+who stood at the gate, demanded what he was, wherefore he was come, and
+why he roused the town of Mansoul with so unusual a sound.
+
+Diabolus, then, as if he had been a lamb, began his oration, and said:
+‘Gentlemen of the famous town of Mansoul, I am, as you may perceive, no
+far dweller from you, but near, and one that is bound by the king to do
+you my homage and what service I can; wherefore, that I may be faithful
+to myself and to you, I have somewhat of concern to impart unto you.
+Wherefore, grant me your audience, and hear me patiently. And first, I
+will assure you, it is not myself, but you—not mine, but your advantage
+that I seek by what I now do, as will full well be made manifest, by that
+I have opened my mind unto you. For, gentlemen, I am (to tell you the
+truth) come to show you how you may obtain great and ample deliverance
+from a bondage that, unawares to yourselves, you are captivated and
+enslaved under.’ At this the town of Mansoul began to prick up its ears.
+And ‘What is it? Pray what is it?’ thought they. And he said, ‘I have
+somewhat to say to you concerning your King, concerning his law, and also
+touching yourselves. Touching your King, I know he is great and potent;
+but yet all that he hath said to you is neither true nor yet for your
+advantage. 1. It is not true, for that wherewith he hath hitherto awed
+you, shall not come to pass, nor be fulfilled, though you do the thing
+that he hath forbidden. But if there was danger, what a slavery is it to
+live always in fear of the greatest of punishments, for doing so small
+and trivial a thing as eating of a little fruit is. 2. Touching his
+laws, this I say further, they are both unreasonable, intricate, and
+intolerable. Unreasonable, as was hinted before; for that the punishment
+is not proportioned to the offence: there is great difference and
+disproportion between the life and an apple; yet the one must go for the
+other by the law of your Shaddai. But it is also intricate, in that he
+saith, first, you may eat of all; and yet after forbids the eating of
+one. And then, in the last place, it must needs be intolerable,
+forasmuch as that fruit which you are forbidden to eat of (if you are
+forbidden any) is that, and that alone, which is able, by your eating, to
+minister to you a good as yet unknown by you. This is manifest by the
+very name of the tree; it is called the “tree of knowledge of good and
+evil;” and have you that knowledge as yet? No, no; nor can you conceive
+how good, how pleasant, and how much to be desired to make one wise it
+is, so long as you stand by your King’s commandment. Why should you be
+holden in ignorance and blindness? Why should you not be enlarged in
+knowledge and understanding? And now, O ye inhabitants of the famous
+town of Mansoul, to speak more particularly to yourselves you are not a
+free people! You are kept both in bondage and slavery, and that by a
+grievous threat; no reason being annexed but, “So I will have it; so it
+shall be.” And is it not grievous to think on, that that very thing
+which you are forbidden to do might you but do it, would yield you both
+wisdom and honour? for then your eyes will be opened, and you shall be as
+gods. Now, since this is thus,’ quoth he, ‘can you be kept by any prince
+in more slavery and in greater bondage than you are under this day? You
+are made underlings, and are wrapped up in inconveniences, as I have well
+made appear. For what bondage greater than to be kept in blindness?
+Will not reason tell you that it is better to have eyes than to be
+without them? and so to be at liberty to be better than to be shut up in
+a dark and stinking cave?’
+
+And just now, while Diabolus was speaking these words to Mansoul,
+Tisiphone shot at Captain Resistance, where he stood on the gate, and
+mortally wounded him in the head; so that he, to the amazement of the
+townsmen, and the encouragement of Diabolus, fell down dead quite over
+the wall. Now, when Captain Resistance was dead, (and he was the only
+man of war in the town,) poor Mansoul was wholly left naked of courage,
+nor had she now any heart to resist. But this was as the devil would
+have it. Then stood forth he, Mr. Ill-pause, that Diabolus brought with
+him, who was his orator; and he addressed himself to speak to the town of
+Mansoul; the tenour of whose speech here follows:—
+
+‘Gentlemen,’ quoth he, ‘it is my master’s happiness that he has this day
+a quiet and teachable auditory; and it is hoped by us that we shall
+prevail with you not to cast off good advice. My master has a very great
+love for you; and although, as he very well knows, that he runs the
+hazard of the anger of King Shaddai, yet love to you will make him do
+more than that. Nor doth there need that a word more should be spoken to
+confirm for truth what he hath said; there is not a word but carries with
+it self-evidence in its bowels; the very name of the tree may put an end
+to all controversy in this matter. I therefore, at this time, shall only
+add this advice to you, under and by the leave of my lord;’ (and with
+that he made Diabolus a very low congee;) ‘consider his words, look on
+the tree and the promising fruit thereof; remember also that yet you know
+but little, and that this is the way to know more: and if your reasons be
+not conquered to accept of such good counsel, you are not the men that I
+took you to be.’
+
+But when the townsfolk saw that the tree was good for food, and that it
+was pleasant to the eye, and a tree to be desired to make one wise, they
+did as old Ill-pause advised; they took and did eat thereof. Now this I
+should have told you before, that even then, when this Ill-pause was
+making his speech to the townsmen, my Lord Innocency (whether by a shot
+from the camp of the giant, or from some sinking qualm that suddenly took
+him, or whether by the stinking breath of that treacherous villain old
+Ill-pause, for so I am most apt to think) sunk down in the place where he
+stood, nor could be brought to life again. Thus these two brave men
+died—brave men, I call them; for they were the beauty and glory of
+Mansoul, so long as they lived therein; nor did there now remain any more
+a noble spirit in Mansoul; they all fell down and yielded obedience to
+Diabolus; and became his slaves and vassals, as you shall hear.
+
+Now these being dead, what do the rest of the townsfolk, but, as men that
+had found a fool’s paradise, they presently, as afore was hinted, fall to
+prove the truth of the giant’s words. And, first, they did as Ill-pause
+had taught them; they looked, they considered they were taken with the
+forbidden fruit; they took thereof, and did eat; and having eaten, they
+became immediately drunken therewith. So they open the gate, both
+Ear-gate and Eye-gate, and let in Diabolus with all his bands, quite
+forgetting their good Shaddai, his law, and the judgment that he had
+annexed, with solemn threatening, to the breach thereof.
+
+Diabolus, having now obtained entrance in at the gates of the town,
+marches up to the middle thereof, to make his conquest as sure as he
+could; and finding, by this time, the affections of the people warmly
+inclining to him, he, as thinking it was best striking while the iron is
+hot, made this further deceivable speech unto them, saying, ‘Alas, my
+poor Mansoul! I have done thee indeed this service, as to promote thee
+to honour, and to greaten thy liberty; but, alas! alas! poor Mansoul,
+thou wantest now one to defend thee; for assure thyself that when Shaddai
+shall hear what is done, he will come; for sorry will he be that thou
+hast broken his bonds, and cast his cords away from thee. What wilt thou
+do? Wilt thou, after enlargement, suffer thy privileges to be invaded
+and taken away, or what wilt resolve with thyself?’
+
+Then they all with one consent said to this bramble, ‘Do thou reign over
+us.’ So he accepted the motion, and became the king of the town of
+Mansoul. This being done, the next thing was to give him possession of
+the castle, and so of the whole strength of the town. Wherefore, into
+the castle he goes; it was that which Shaddai built in Mansoul for his
+own delight and pleasure; this now was become a den and hold for the
+giant Diabolus.
+
+Now, having got possession of this stately palace or castle, what doth he
+but makes it a garrison for himself, and strengthens and fortifies it
+with all sorts of provision, against the King Shaddai, or those that
+should endeavour the regaining of it to him and his obedience again.
+
+This done, but not thinking himself yet secure enough, in the next place
+he bethinks himself of new modelling the town; and so he does, setting up
+one, and putting down another at pleasure. Wherefore my Lord Mayor,
+whose name was my Lord Understanding, and Mr. Recorder, whose name was
+Mr. Conscience, these he put out of place and power.
+
+As for my Lord Mayor, though he was an understanding man, and one too
+that had complied with the rest of the town of Mansoul in admitting the
+giant into the town, yet Diabolus thought not fit to let him abide in his
+former lustre and glory, because he was a seeing man. Wherefore he
+darkened him, not only by taking from him his office and power, but by
+building a high and strong tower, just between the sun’s reflections and
+the windows of my lord’s palace; by which means his house and all, and
+the whole of his habitation, were made as dark as darkness itself. And
+thus, being alienated from the light, he became as one that was born
+blind. To this, his house, my lord was confined as to a prison; nor
+might he, upon his parole, go farther than within his own bounds. And
+now, had he had a heart to do for Mansoul, what could he do for it, or
+wherein could he be profitable to her? So then, so long as Mansoul was
+under the power and government of Diabolus, (and so long it was under
+him, as it was obedient to him, which was even until by a war it was
+rescued out of his hand,) so long my Lord Mayor was rather an impediment
+in, than an advantage to the famous town of Mansoul.
+
+As for Mr. Recorder, before the town was taken, he was a man well read in
+the laws of his king, and also a man of courage and faithfulness to speak
+truth at every occasion; and he had a tongue as bravely hung as he had a
+head filled with judgment. Now, this man Diabolus could by no means
+abide, because, though he gave his consent to his coming into the town,
+yet he could not, by all the wiles, trials, stratagems, and devices that
+he could use, make him wholly his own. True, he was much degenerated
+from his former king, and also much pleased with many of the giant’s laws
+and service; but all this would not do, forasmuch as he was not wholly
+his. He would now and then think upon Shaddai, and have dread of his law
+upon him, and then he would speak against Diabolus with a voice as great
+as when a lion roareth. Yea, and would also at certain times, when his
+fits were upon him, (for you must know that sometimes he had terrible
+fits,) make the whole town of Mansoul shake with his voice: and therefore
+the now king of Mansoul could not abide him.
+
+Diabolus, therefore, feared the Recorder more than any that was left
+alive in the town of Mansoul, because, as I said, his words did shake the
+whole town; they were like the rattling thunder, and also like
+thunder-claps. Since, therefore, the giant could not make him wholly his
+own, what doth he do but studies all that he could to debauch the old
+gentleman, and by debauchery to stupefy his mind, and more harden his
+heart in the ways of vanity. And as he attempted, so he accomplished his
+design: he debauched the man, and by little and little so drew him into
+sin and wickedness, that at last he was not only debauched, as at first,
+and so by consequence defiled, but was almost (at last, I say) past all
+conscience of sin. And this was the farthest Diabolus could go.
+Wherefore he bethinks him of another project, and that was, to persuade
+the men of the town that Mr. Recorder was mad, and so not to be regarded.
+And for this he urged his fits, and said, ‘If he be himself, why doth he
+not do thus always? But,’ quoth he, ‘as all mad folks have their fits,
+and in them their raving language, so hath this old and doating
+gentleman.’
+
+Thus, by one means or another, he quickly got Mansoul to slight, neglect,
+and despise whatever Mr. Recorder could say. For, besides what already
+you have heard, Diabolus had a way to make the old gentleman, when he was
+merry, unsay and deny what he in his fits had affirmed. And, indeed,
+this was the next way to make himself ridiculous, and to cause that no
+man should regard him. Also now he never spake freely for King Shaddai,
+but also by force and constraint. Besides, he would at one time be hot
+against that at which, at another, he would hold his peace; so uneven was
+he now in his doings. Sometimes he would be as if fast asleep, and again
+sometimes as dead, even then when the whole town of Mansoul was in her
+career after vanity, and in her dance after the giant’s pipe.
+
+Wherefore, sometimes when Mansoul did use to be frighted with the
+thundering voice of the Recorder that was, and when they did tell
+Diabolus of it, he would answer, that what the old gentleman said was
+neither of love to him nor pity to them, but of a foolish fondness that
+he had to be prating; and so would hush, still, and put all to quiet
+again. And that he might leave no argument unurged that might tend to
+make them secure, he said, and said it often, ‘O Mansoul! consider that,
+notwithstanding the old gentleman’s rage, and the rattle of his high and
+thundering words, you hear nothing of Shaddai himself;’ when, liar and
+deceiver that he was, every outcry of Mr. Recorder against the sin of
+Mansoul was the voice of God in him to them. But he goes on, and says,
+‘You see that he values not the loss nor rebellion of the town of
+Mansoul, nor will he trouble himself with calling his town to a reckoning
+for their giving themselves to me. He knows that though you were his,
+now you are lawfully mine; so, leaving us one to another, he now hath
+shaken his hands of us.
+
+‘Moreover, O Mansoul!’ quoth he, ‘consider how I have served you, even to
+the uttermost of my power; and that with the best that I have, could get,
+or procure for you in all the world: besides, I dare say that the laws
+and customs that you now are under, and by which you do homage to me, do
+yield you more solace and content than did the paradise that at first you
+possessed. Your liberty also, as yourselves do very well know, has been
+greatly widened and enlarged by me; whereas I found you a penned-up
+people. I have not laid any restraint upon you; you have no law,
+statute, or judgment of mine to fright you; I call none of you to account
+for your doings, except the madman—you know who I mean; I have granted
+you to live, each man like a prince in his own, even with as little
+control from me as I myself have from you.’
+
+And thus would Diabolus hush up and quiet the town of Mansoul, when the
+Recorder that was, did at times molest them: yea, and with such cursed
+orations as these, would set the whole town in a rage and fury against
+the old gentleman. Yea, the rascal crew at some times would be for
+destroying him. They have often wished, in my hearing, that he had lived
+a thousand miles off from them: his company, his words, yea, the sight of
+him, and specially when they remembered how in old times he did use to
+threaten and condemn them, (for all he was now so debauched,) did terrify
+and afflict them sore.
+
+But all wishes were vain, for I do not know how, unless by the power of
+Shaddai, and his wisdom, he was preserved in being amongst them.
+Besides, his house was as strong as a castle, and stood hard by a
+stronghold of the town: moreover, if at any time any of the crew or
+rabble attempted to make him away, he could pull up the sluices, and let
+in such floods as would drown all round about him.
+
+But to leave Mr. Recorder, and to come to my Lord Willbewill, another of
+the gentry of the famous town of Mansoul. This Willbewill was as
+high-born as any man in Mansoul, and was as much, if not more, a
+freeholder than many of them were; besides, if I remember my tale aright,
+he had some privileges peculiar to himself in the famous town of Mansoul.
+Now, together with these, he was a man of great strength, resolution, and
+courage, nor in his occasion could any turn him away. But I say, whether
+he was proud of his estate, privileges, strength, or what, (but sure it
+was through pride of something,) he scorns now to be a slave in Mansoul;
+and therefore resolves to bear office under Diabolus, that he might (such
+an one as he was) be a petty ruler and governor in Mansoul. And,
+headstrong man that he was! thus he began betimes; for this man, when
+Diabolus did make his oration at Ear-gate, was one of the first that was
+for consenting to his words, and for accepting his counsel at wholesome,
+and that was for the opening of the gate, and for letting him into the
+town; wherefore Diabolus had a kindness for him, and therefore he
+designed for him a place. And perceiving the valour and stoutness of the
+man, he coveted to have him for one of his great ones, to act and do in
+matters of the highest concern.
+
+So he sent for him, and talked with him of that secret matter that lay in
+his breast, but there needed not much persuasion in the case. For as at
+first he was willing that Diabolus should be let into the town, so now he
+was as willing to serve him there. When the tyrant, therefore, perceived
+the willingness of my lord to serve him, and that his mind stood bending
+that way, he forthwith made him the captain of the castle, governor of
+the wall, and keeper of the gates of Mansoul: yea, there was a clause in
+his commission, that nothing without him should be done in all the town
+of Mansoul. So that now, next to Diabolus himself, who but my Lord
+Willbewill in all the town of Mansoul! nor could anything now be done,
+but at his will and pleasure, throughout the town of Mansoul. He had
+also one Mr. Mind for his clerk, a man to speak on every way like his
+master: for he and his lord were in principle one, and in practice not
+far asunder. And now was Mansoul brought under to purpose, and made to
+fulfil the lusts of the will, and of the mind.
+
+But it will not out of my thoughts what a desperate one this Willbewill
+was when power was put into his hand. First, he flatly denied that he
+owed any suit or service to his former prince and liege lord. This done,
+in the next place he took an oath, and swore fidelity to his great master
+Diabolus, and then, being stated and settled in his places, offices,
+advancements, and preferments, oh! you cannot think, unless you had seen
+it, the strange work that this workman made in the town of Mansoul.
+
+First, he maligned Mr. Recorder to death; he would neither endure to see
+him, nor hear the words of his mouth; he would shut his eyes when he saw
+him, and stop his ears when he heard him speak. Also he could not endure
+that so much as a fragment of the law of Shaddai should be anywhere seen
+in the town. For example, his clerk, Mr. Mind, had some old, rent, and
+torn parchments of the law of Shaddai in his house, but when Willbewill
+saw them, he cast them behind his back. True, Mr. Recorder had some of
+the laws in his study; but my lord could by no means come at them. He
+also thought and said, that the windows of my old Lord Mayor’s house were
+always too light for the profit of the town of Mansoul. The light of a
+candle he could not endure. Now nothing at all pleased Willbewill but
+what pleased Diabolus his lord.
+
+There was none like him to trumpet about the streets the brave nature,
+the wise conduct, and great glory of the king Diabolus. He would range
+and rove throughout all the streets of Mansoul to cry up his illustrious
+lord, and would make himself even as an abject, among the base and rascal
+crew, to cry up his valiant prince. And I say, when and wheresoever he
+found these vassals, he would even make himself as one of them. In all
+ill courses he would act without bidding, and do mischief without
+commandment.
+
+The Lord Willbewill also had a deputy under him, and his name was Mr.
+Affection, one that was also greatly debauched in his principles, and
+answerable thereto in his life: he was wholly given to the flesh, and
+therefore they called him Vile-Affection. Now there was he and one
+Carnal-Lust, the daughter of Mr. Mind, (like to like,) that fell in love,
+and made a match, and were married; and, as I take it, they had several
+children, as Impudent, Blackmouth, and Hate-Reproof. These three were
+black boys. And besides these they had three daughters, as Scorn-Truth
+and Slight-God, and the name of the youngest was Revenge. These were all
+married in the town, and also begot and yielded many bad brats, too many
+to be here inserted. But to pass by this.
+
+When the giant had thus engarrisoned himself in the town of Mansoul, and
+had put down and set up whom he thought good, he betakes himself to
+defacing. Now there was in the market-place in Mansoul, and also upon
+the gates of the castle, an image of the blessed King Shaddai. This
+image was so exactly engraven, (and it was engraven in gold,) that it did
+the most resemble Shaddai himself of anything that then was extant in the
+world. This he basely commanded to be defaced, and it was as basely done
+by the hand of Mr. No-Truth. Now you must know that, as Diabolus had
+commanded, and that by the hand of Mr. No-Truth, the image of Shaddai was
+defaced, he likewise gave order that the same Mr. No-Truth should set up
+in its stead the horrid and formidable image of Diabolus, to the great
+contempt of the former King, and debasing of his town of Mansoul.
+
+Moreover, Diabolus made havoc of all remains of the laws and statutes of
+Shaddai that could be found in the town of Mansoul; to wit, such as
+contained either the doctrines of morals, with all civil and natural
+documents. Also relative severities he sought to extinguish. To be
+short, there was nothing of the remains of good in Mansoul which he and
+Willbewill sought not to destroy; for their design was to turn Mansoul
+into a brute, and to make it like to the sensual sow, by the hand of Mr.
+No-Truth.
+
+When he had destroyed what law and good orders he could, then further to
+effect his design, namely, to alienate Mansoul from Shaddai her King, he
+commands, and they set up his own vain edicts, statutes, and
+commandments, in all places of resort or concourse in Mansoul, to wit,
+such as gave liberty to the lusts of the flesh, the lusts of the eyes,
+and the pride of life, which are not of Shaddai, but of the world. He
+encouraged, countenanced, and promoted lasciviousness, and all
+ungodliness there. Yea, much more did Diabolus to encourage wickedness
+in the town of Mansoul; he promised them peace, content, joy, and bliss,
+in doing his commands, and that they should never be called to an account
+for their not doing the contrary. And let this serve to give a taste to
+them that love to hear tell of what is done beyond their knowledge afar
+off in other countries.
+
+Now Mansoul being wholly at his beck, and brought wholly to his bow,
+nothing was heard or seen therein but that which tended to set up him.
+
+But now he, having disabled the Lord Mayor and Mr. Recorder from bearing
+of office in Mansoul, and seeing that the town, before he came to it, was
+the most ancient of corporations in the world, and fearing, if he did not
+maintain greatness, they at any time should object that he had done them
+an injury; therefore, I say, (that they might see that he did not intend
+to lessen their grandeur, or to take from them any of their advantageous
+things,) he did choose for them a Lord Mayor and a Recorder himself, and
+such as contented them at the heart, and such also as pleased him
+wondrous well.
+
+The name of the Mayor that was of Diabolus’ making was the Lord Lustings,
+a man that had neither eyes nor ears. All that he did, whether as a man
+or an officer, he did it naturally, as doth the beast. And that which
+made him yet the more ignoble, though not to Mansoul, yet to them that
+beheld and were grieved for its ruin, was, that he never could favour
+good, but evil.
+
+The Recorder was one whose name was Forget-Good, and a very sorry fellow
+he was. He could remember nothing but mischief, and to do it with
+delight. He was naturally prone to do things that were hurtful, even
+hurtful to the town of Mansoul, and to all the dwellers there. These
+two, therefore, by their power and practice, examples, and smiles upon
+evil, did much more grammar and settle the common people in hurtful ways.
+For who doth not perceive that when those that sit aloft are vile and
+corrupt themselves, they corrupt the whole region and country where they
+are?
+
+Besides these, Diabolus made several burgesses and aldermen in Mansoul,
+such as out of whom the town, when it needed, might choose them officers,
+governors, and magistrates. And these are the names of the chief of
+them: Mr. Incredulity, Mr. Haughty, Mr. Swearing, Mr. Whoring, Mr.
+Hard-Heart, Mr. Pitiless, Mr. Fury, Mr. No-Truth, Mr. Stand-to-Lies, Mr.
+False-Peace, Mr. Drunkenness, Mr. Cheating, Mr. Atheism—thirteen in all.
+Mr. Incredulity is the eldest, and Mr. Atheism the youngest of the
+company.
+
+There was also an election of common councilmen and others, as bailiffs,
+sergeants, constables, and others; but all of them like to those
+afore-named, being either fathers, brothers, cousins, or nephews to them,
+whose names, for brevity’s sake, I omit to mention.
+
+When the giant had thus far proceeded in his work, in the next place, he
+betook him to build some strongholds in the town, and he built three that
+seemed to be impregnable. The first he called the Hold of Defiance,
+because it was made to command the whole town, and to keep it from the
+knowledge of its ancient King. The second he called Midnight Hold,
+because it was built on purpose to keep Mansoul from the true knowledge
+of itself. The third was called Sweet-Sin Hold, because by that he
+fortified Mansoul against all desires of good. The first of these holds
+stood close by Eye-gate, that, as much might be, light might be darkened
+there; the second was built hard by the old castle, to the end that that
+might be made more blind, if possible; and the third stood in the
+market-place.
+
+He that Diabolus made governor over the first of these was one Spite-God,
+a most blasphemous wretch: he came with the whole rabble of them that
+came against Mansoul at first, and was himself one of themselves. He
+that was made the governor of Midnight Hold was one Love-no-Light; he was
+also of them that came first against the town. And he that was made the
+governor of the hold called Sweet-Sin Hold was one whose name was
+Love-Flesh: he was also a very lewd fellow, but not of that country where
+the other are bound. This fellow could find more sweetness when he stood
+sucking of a lust than he did in all the paradise of God.
+
+And now Diabolus thought himself safe. He had taken Mansoul, he had
+engarrisoned himself therein; he had put down the old officers, and had
+set up new ones; he had defaced the image of Shaddai, and had set up his
+own; he had spoiled the old law books, and had promoted his own vain
+lies; he had made him new magistrates, and set up new aldermen; he had
+builded him new holds, and had manned them for himself: and all this he
+did to make himself secure, in case the good Shaddai, or his Son, should
+come to make an incursion upon him.
+
+Now you may well think, that long before this time, word, by some one or
+other, could not but be carried to the good King Shaddai, how his
+Mansoul, in the continent of Universe, was lost; and that the runagate
+giant Diabolus, once one of his Majesty’s servants, had, in rebellion
+against the King, made sure thereof for himself. Yea, tidings were
+carried and brought to the King thereof, and that to a very circumstance.
+
+At first, how Diabolus came upon Mansoul (they being a simple people and
+innocent) with craft, subtlety, lies, and guile. _Item_, that he had
+treacherously slain the right noble and valiant captain, their Captain
+Resistance, as he stood upon the gate with the rest of the townsmen.
+_Item_, how my brave Lord Innocent fell down dead (with grief, some say,
+or with being poisoned with the stinking breath of one Ill-Pause, as say
+others) at the hearing of his just lord and rightful prince, Shaddai, so
+abused by the mouth of so filthy a Diabolian as that varlet Ill-Pause
+was. The messenger further told, that after this Ill-Pause had made a
+short oration to the townsmen in behalf of Diabolus, his master; the
+simple town, believing that what was said was true, with one consent did
+open Ear-gate, the chief gate of the corporation, and did let him, with
+his crew, into a possession of the famous town of Mansoul. He further
+showed how Diabolus had served the Lord Mayor and Mr. Recorder, to wit,
+that he had put them from all place of power and trust. _Item_, he
+showed also that my Lord Willbewill was turned a very rebel, and
+runagate, and that so was one Mr. Mind, his clerk; and that they two did
+range and revel it all the town over, and teach the wicked ones their
+ways. He said, moreover, that this Willbewill was put into great trust,
+and particularly that Diabolus had put into Willbewill’s hand all the
+strong places in Mansoul; and that Mr. Affection was made my Lord
+Willbewill’s deputy in his most rebellious affairs. ‘Yea,’ said the
+messenger, ‘this monster, Lord Willbewill, has openly disavowed his King
+Shaddai, and hath horribly given his faith and plighted his troth to
+Diabolus.’
+
+‘Also,’ said the messenger, ‘besides all this, the new king, or rather
+rebellious tyrant, over the once famous, but now perishing town of
+Mansoul, has set up a Lord Mayor and a Recorder of his own. For Mayor,
+he has set up one Mr. Lustings; and for Recorder, Mr. Forget-Good; two of
+the vilest of all the town of Mansoul.’ This faithful messenger also
+proceeded, and told what a sort of new burgesses Diabolus had made; also
+that he had built several strong forts, towers, and strongholds in
+Mansoul. He told, too, the which I had almost forgot, how Diabolus had
+put the town of Mansoul into arms, the better to capacitate them, on his
+behalf, to make resistance against Shaddai their King, should he come to
+reduce them to their former obedience.
+
+Now this tidings-teller did not deliver his relation of things in
+private, but in open court, the King and his Son, high lords, chief
+captains, and nobles, being all there present to hear. But by that they
+had heard the whole of the story, it would have amazed one to have seen,
+had he been there to behold it, what sorrow and grief, and compunction of
+spirit, there was among all sorts, to think that famous Mansoul was now
+taken: only the King and his Son foresaw all this long before, yea, and
+sufficiently provided for the relief of Mansoul, though they told not
+everybody thereof. Yet because they also would have a share in condoling
+of the Misery of Mansoul, therefore they also did, and that at a rate of
+the highest degree, bewail the losing of Mansoul. The King said plainly
+that it grieved him at the heart, and you may be sure that his Son was
+not a whit behind him. Thus gave they conviction to all about them that
+they had love and compassion for the famous town of Mansoul. Well, when
+the King and his Son were retired into the privy chamber, there they
+again consulted about what they had designed before, to wit, that as
+Mansoul should in time be suffered to be lost, so as certainly it should
+be recovered again; recovered, I say, in such a way, as that both the
+King and his Son would get themselves eternal fame and glory thereby.
+Wherefore, after this consult, the Son of Shaddai (a sweet and comely
+Person, and one that had always great affection for those that were in
+affliction, but one that had mortal enmity in his heart against Diabolus,
+because he was designed for it, and because he sought his crown and
+dignity)—this Son of Shaddai, I say, having stricken hands with his
+Father and promised that he would be his servant to recover his Mansoul
+again, stood by his resolution, nor would he repent of the same. The
+purport of which agreement was this: to wit, that at a certain time,
+prefixed by both, the King’s Son should take a journey into the country
+of Universe, and there, in a way of justice and equity, by making amends
+for the follies of Mansoul, he should lay a foundation of perfect
+deliverance from Diabolus and from his tyranny.
+
+Moreover Emmanuel resolved to make, at a time convenient, a war upon the
+giant Diabolus, even while he was possessed of the town of Mansoul; and
+that he would fairly by strength of hand drive him out of his hold, his
+nest, and take it to himself to be his habitation.
+
+This now being resolved upon, order was given to the Lord Chief Secretary
+to draw up a fair record of what was determined, and to cause that it
+should be published in all the corners of the kingdom of Universe. A
+short breviate of the contents thereof you may, if you please, take here
+as follows:
+
+‘Let all men know who are concerned, that the Son of Shaddai, the great
+King, is engaged by covenant to his Father to bring his Mansoul to him
+again; yea, and to put Mansoul, too, through the power of his matchless
+love, into a far better and more happy condition than it was in before it
+was taken by Diabolus.’
+
+These papers, therefore, were published in several places, to the no
+little molestation of the tyrant Diabolus; ‘for now,’ thought he, ‘I
+shall be molested, and my habitation will be taken from me.’
+
+But when this matter, I mean this purpose of the King and his Son, did at
+first take air at court, who can tell how the high lords, chief captains,
+and noble princes that were there, were taken with the business! First,
+they whispered it one to another, and after that it began to ring out
+through the King’s palace, all wondering at the glorious design that
+between the King and his Son was on foot for the miserable town of
+Mansoul. Yea, the courtiers could scarce do anything either for the King
+or kingdom, but they would mix, with the doing thereof, a noise of the
+love of the King and his Son, that they had for the town of Mansoul.
+
+Nor could these lords, high captains, and princes be content to keep this
+news at court; yea, before the records thereof were perfected, themselves
+came down and told it in Universe. At last it came to the ears, as I
+said, of Diabolus, to his no little discontent; for you must think it
+would perplex him to hear of such a design against him. Well, but after
+a few casts in his mind, he concluded upon these four things.
+
+First, that this news, these good tidings, (if possible,) should be kept
+from the ears of the town of Mansoul; ‘for,’ said he, ‘if they should
+once come to the knowledge that Shaddai, their former King, and Emmanuel
+his Son, are contriving good for the town of Mansoul, what can be
+expected by me, but that Mansoul will make a revolt from under my hand
+and government, and return again to him?’
+
+Now, to accomplish this his design, he renews his flattery with my Lord
+Willbewill, and also gives him strict charge and command, that he should
+keep watch by day and by night at all the gates of the town, especially
+Ear-gate and Eye-gate; ‘for I hear of a design,’ quoth he, ‘a design to
+make us all traitors, and that Mansoul must be reduced to its first
+bondage again. I hope they are but flying stories,’ quoth he; ‘however,
+let no such news by any means be let into Mansoul, lest the people be
+dejected thereat. I think, my lord, it can be no welcome news to you; I
+am sure it is none to me; and I think that, at this time, it should be
+all our wisdom and care to nip the head of all such rumours as shall tend
+to trouble our people. Wherefore I desire, my lord, that you will in
+this matter do as I say. Let there be strong guards daily kept at every
+gate of the town. Stop also and examine from whence such come that you
+perceive do from far come hither to trade, nor let them by any means be
+admitted into Mansoul, unless you shall plainly perceive that they are
+favourers of our excellent government. I command, moreover,’ said
+Diabolus, ‘that there be spies continually walking up and down the town
+of Mansoul, and let them have power to suppress and destroy any that they
+shall perceive to be plotting against us, or that shall prate of what by
+Shaddai and Emmanuel is intended.’
+
+This, therefore, was accordingly done; my Lord Willbewill hearkened to
+his lord and master, went willingly after the commandment, and, with all
+the diligence he could, kept any that would from going out abroad, or
+that sought to bring these tidings to Mansoul, from coming into the town.
+
+Secondly, this done, in the next place, Diabolus, that he might make
+Mansoul as sure as he could, frames and imposes a new oath and horrible
+covenant upon the townsfolk:—To wit, that they should never desert him
+nor his government, nor yet betray him, nor seek to alter his laws; but
+that they should own, confess, stand by, and acknowledge him for their
+rightful king, in defiance to any that do or hereafter shall, by any
+pretence, law, or title whatever, lay claim to the town of Mansoul;
+thinking, belike, that Shaddai had not power to absolve them from this
+covenant with death, and agreement with hell. Nor did the silly Mansoul
+stick or boggle at all at this most monstrous engagement; but, as if it
+had been a sprat in the mouth of a whale, they swallowed it without any
+chewing. Were they troubled at all? Nay, they rather bragged and
+boasted of their so brave fidelity to the tyrant, their pretended king,
+swearing that they would never be changelings, nor forsake their old lord
+for a new. Thus did Diabolus tie poor Mansoul fast.
+
+Thirdly. But jealousy, that never thinks itself strong enough, put him,
+in the next place, upon another exploit, which was, yet more, if
+possible, to debauch this town of Mansoul. Wherefore he caused, by the
+hand of one Mr. Filth, an odious, nasty, lascivious piece of beastliness
+to be drawn up in writing, and to be set upon the castle gates; whereby
+he granted and gave license to all his true and trusty sons in Mansoul to
+do whatsoever their lustful appetites prompted them to do; and that no
+man was to let, hinder, or control them, upon pain of incurring the
+displeasure of their prince.
+
+Now this he did for these reasons:—
+
+1. That the town of Mansoul might be yet made weaker and weaker, and so
+more unable, should tidings come that their redemption was designed, to
+believe, hope, or consent to the truth thereof; for reason says, The
+bigger the sinner, the less grounds of hopes of mercy.
+
+2. The second reason was, if perhaps Emmanuel, the Son of Shaddai their
+King, by seeing the horrible and profane doings of the town of Mansoul,
+might repent, though entered into a covenant of redeeming them, of
+pursuing that covenant of their redemption; for he knew that Shaddai was
+holy, and that his Son Emmanuel was holy; yea, he knew it by woeful
+experience, for for his iniquity and sin was Diabolus cast from the
+highest orbs. Wherefore what more rational than for him to conclude that
+thus, for sin, it might fare with Mansoul? But fearing also lest this
+knot should break, he bethinks himself of another, to wit:—
+
+Fourthly. To endeavour to possess all hearts in the town of Mansoul that
+Shaddai was raising an army, to come to overthrow and utterly to destroy
+this town of Mansoul. And this he did to forestall any tidings that
+might come to their ears of their deliverance: ‘For,’ thought he, ‘if I
+first bruit this, the tidings that shall come after will all be swallowed
+up of this; for what else will Mansoul say, when they shall hear that
+they must be delivered, but that the true meaning is, Shaddai intends to
+destroy them? Wherefore he summons the whole town into the market-place,
+and there, with deceitful tongue, thus he addressed himself unto them:—
+
+‘Gentlemen, and my very good friends, you are all, as you know, my legal
+subjects, and men of the famous town of Mansoul. You know how, from the
+first day that I have been with you until now, I have behaved myself
+among you, and what liberty and great privileges you have enjoyed under
+my government, I hope to your honour and mine, and also to your content
+and delight. Now, my famous Mansoul, a noise of trouble there is abroad,
+of trouble to the town of Mansoul; sorry I am thereof for your sakes: for
+I received but now by the post from my Lord Lucifer, (and he useth to
+have good intelligence,) that your old King Shaddai is raising an army to
+come against you, to destroy you root and branch; and this, O Mansoul, is
+now the cause that at this time I have called you together, namely, to
+advise what in this juncture is best to be done. For my part, I am but
+one, and can with ease shift for myself, did I list to seek my own case,
+and to leave my Mansoul in all the danger; but my heart is so firmly
+united to you, and so unwilling am I to leave you, that I am willing to
+stand and fall with you, to the utmost hazard that shall befall me. What
+say you, O my Mansoul? Will you now desert your old friend, or do you
+think of standing by me?’
+
+Then, as one man, with one mouth, they cried out together, ‘Let him die
+the death that will not.’
+
+Then said Diabolus again, ‘It is in vain for us to hope for quarter, for
+this King knows not how to show it. True, perhaps, he, at his first
+sitting down before us, will talk of and pretend to mercy, that thereby,
+with the more ease, and less trouble, he may again make himself the
+master of Mansoul. Whatever, therefore, he shall say, believe not one
+syllable or tittle of it; for all such language is but to overcome us,
+and to make us, while we wallow in our blood, the trophies of his
+merciless victory. My mind is, therefore, that we resolve to the last
+man to resist him, and not to believe him upon any terms, for in at that
+door will come our danger. But shall we be flattered out of our lives?
+I hope you know more of the rudiments of politics than to suffer
+yourselves so pitifully to be served.
+
+‘But suppose he should, if he get us to yield, save some of our lives, or
+the lives of some of them that are underlings in Mansoul, what help will
+that be to you that are the chief of the town, especially you whom I have
+set up and whose greatness has been procured by you through your faithful
+sticking to me? And suppose, again, that he should give quarter to every
+one of you, be sure he will bring you into that bondage under which you
+were captivated before, or a worse, and then what good will your lives do
+you? Shall you with him live in pleasure as you do now? No, no; you
+must be bound by laws that will pinch you, and be made to do that which
+at present is hateful to you. I am for you, if you are for me; and it is
+better to die valiantly than to live like pitiful slaves. But, I say,
+the life of a slave will be counted a life too good for Mansoul now.
+Blood, blood, nothing but blood is in every blast of Shaddai’s trumpet
+against poor Mansoul now. Pray, be concerned; I hear he is coming. Up,
+and stand to your arms that now, while you have any leisure, I may learn
+you some feats of war. Armour for you I have, and by me it is; yea, and
+it is sufficient for Mansoul from top to toe; nor can you be hurt by what
+his force can do, if you shall keep it well girt and fastened about you.
+Come, therefore, to my castle, and welcome, and harness yourselves for
+the war. There is helmet, breastplate, sword, and shield, and what not,
+that will make you fight like men.
+
+‘1. My helmet, otherwise called an head-piece, is in hope of doing well
+at last, what lives soever you live. This is that which they had who
+said, that they should have peace, though they walked in the wickedness
+of their heart, to add drunkenness to thirst. A piece of approved armour
+this is, and whoever has it, and can hold it, so long no arrow, dart,
+sword, or shield can hurt him. This, therefore, keep on, and thou wilt
+keep off many a blow, my Mansoul.
+
+‘2. My breastplate is a breastplate of iron. I had it forged in mine own
+country, and all my soldiers are armed therewith. In plain language, it
+is a hard heart, a heart as hard as iron, and as much past feeling as a
+stone; the which if you get and keep, neither mercy shall win you, nor
+judgment fright you. This therefore, is a piece of armour most necessary
+for all to put on that hate Shaddai, and that would fight against him
+under my banner.
+
+‘3. My sword is a tongue that is set on fire of hell, and that can bend
+itself to speak evil of Shaddai, his Son, his ways, and people. Use
+this; it has been tried a thousand times twice told. Whoever hath it,
+keeps it, and makes that use of it as I would have him, can never be
+conquered by mine enemy.
+
+‘4. My, shield is unbelief, or calling into question the truth of the
+word, or all the sayings that speak of the judgment that Shaddai has
+appointed for wicked men. Use this shield; many attempts he has made
+upon it, and sometimes, it is true, it has been bruised; but they that
+have writ of the wars of Emmanuel against my servants, have testified
+that he could do no mighty work there because of their unbelief. Now, to
+handle this weapon of mine aright, it is not to believe things because
+they are true, of what sort or by whomsoever asserted. If he speaks of
+judgment, care not for it; if he speaks of mercy, care not for it; if he
+promises, if he swears that he would do to Mansoul, if it turns, no hurt,
+but good, regard not what is said, question the truth of all, for it is
+to wield the shield of unbelief aright, and as my servants ought and do;
+and he that doth otherwise loves me not, nor do I count him but an enemy
+to me.
+
+‘5. Another part or piece,’ said Diabolus, ‘of mine excellent armour is a
+dumb and prayerless spirit, a spirit that scorns to cry for mercy:
+wherefore be you, my Mansoul, sure that you make use of this. What! cry
+for quarter! Never do that, if you would be mine. I know you are stout
+men, and am sure that I have clad you with that which is armour of proof.
+Wherefore, to cry to Shaddai for mercy, let that be far from you.
+Besides all this, I have a maul, firebrands, arrows, and death, all good
+hand-weapons, and such as will do execution.’
+
+After he had thus furnished his men with armour and arms, he addressed
+himself to them in such like words as these: ‘Remember,’ quoth he, ‘that
+I am your rightful king, and that you have taken an oath and entered into
+covenant to be true to me and my cause: I say, remember this, and show
+yourselves stout and valiant men of Mansoul. Remember also the kindness
+that I have always showed to you, and that without your petition I have
+granted to you external things; wherefore the privileges, grants,
+immunities, profits, and honours wherewith I have endowed you do call
+for, at your hands, returns of loyalty, my lion-like men of Mansoul: and
+when so fit a time to show it as when another shall seek to take my
+dominion over you into his own hands? One word more, and I have done.
+Can we but stand, and overcome this one shock or brunt, I doubt not but
+in little time all the world will be ours; and when that day comes, my
+true hearts, I will make you kings, princes, and captains, and what brave
+days shall we have then!’
+
+Diabolus having thus armed and forearmed his servants and vassals in
+Mansoul against their good and lawful King Shaddai, in the next place, he
+doubleth his guards at the gates of the town, and he takes himself to the
+castle, which was his stronghold. His vassals also, to show their wills,
+and supposed (but ignoble) gallantry, exercise themselves in their arms
+every day, and teach one another feats of war; they also defied their
+enemies, and sang up the praises of their tyrant; they threatened also
+what men they would be if ever things should rise so high as a war
+between Shaddai and their king.
+
+Now all this time the good King, the King Shaddai, was preparing to send
+an army to recover the town of Mansoul again from under the tyranny of
+their pretended king Diabolus; but he thought good, at first, not to send
+them by the hand and conduct of brave Emmanuel his Son, but under the
+hand of some of his servants, to see first by them the temper of Mansoul,
+and whether by them they would be won to the obedience of their King.
+The army consisted of above forty thousand, all true men, for they came
+from the King’s own court, and were those of his own choosing.
+
+They came up to Mansoul under the conduct of four stout generals, each
+man being a captain of ten thousand men, and these are their names and
+their ensigns. The name of the first was Boanerges, the name of the
+second was Captain Conviction, the name of the third was Captain
+Judgment, and the name of the fourth was Captain Execution. These were
+the captains that Shaddai sent to regain Mansoul.
+
+These four captains, as was said, the King thought fit, in the first
+place, to send to Mansoul, to make an attempt upon it; for indeed
+generally in all his wars he did use to send these four captains in the
+van, for they were very stout and rough-hewn men, men that were fit to
+break the ice, and to make their way by dint of sword, and their men were
+like themselves.
+
+To each of these captains the King gave a banner, that it might be
+displayed, because of the goodness of his cause, and because of the right
+that he had to Mansoul.
+
+First, to Captain Boanerges, for he was the chief, to him, I say, were
+given ten thousand men. His ensign was Mr. Thunder; he bare the black
+colours, and his scutcheon was the three burning thunderbolts.
+
+The second captain was Captain Conviction; to him also were given ten
+thousand men. His ensign’s name was Mr. Sorrow; he did bear the pale
+colours, and his scutcheon was the book of the law wide open, from whence
+issued a flame of fire.
+
+The third captain was Captain Judgment; to him were given ten thousand
+men. His ensign’s name was Mr. Terror; he bare the red colours, and his
+scutcheon was a burning fiery furnace.
+
+The fourth captain was Captain Execution; to him were given ten thousand
+men. His ensign was one Mr. Justice; he also bare the red colours, and
+his scutcheon was a fruitless tree, with an axe lying at the root
+thereof.
+
+These four captains, as I said, had every one of them under his command
+ten thousand men, all of good fidelity to the King, and stout at their
+military actions.
+
+Well, the captains and their forces, their men and under officers, being
+had upon a day by Shaddai into the field, and there called all over by
+their names, were then and there put into such harness as became their
+degree and that service which now they were going about for their King.
+
+Now, when the King had mustered his forces, (for it is he that mustereth
+the host to the battle,) he gave unto the captains their several
+commissions, with charge and commandment in the audience of all the
+soldiers, that they should take heed faithfully and courageously to do
+and execute the same. Their commissions were, for the substance of them,
+the same in form, though, as to name, title, place and degree of the
+captains, there might be some, but very small variation. And here let me
+give you an account of the matter and sum contained in their commission.
+
+ _A Commission from the great Shaddai_, _King of Mansoul_, _to his
+ trusty and noble Captain_, _the Captain Boanerges_, _for his making
+ War upon the town of Mansoul_.
+
+ ‘O, thou Boanerges, one of my stout and thundering captains over one
+ ten thousand of my valiant and faithful servants, go thou in my name,
+ with this thy force, to the miserable town of Mansoul; and when thou
+ comest thither, offer them first conditions of peace; and command
+ them that, casting off the yoke and tyranny of the wicked Diabolus,
+ they return to me, their rightful Prince and Lord. Command them also
+ that they cleanse themselves from all that is his in the town of
+ Mansoul, and look to thyself, that thou hast good satisfaction
+ touching the truth of their obedience. Thus when thou hast commanded
+ them, (if they in truth submit thereto,) then do thou, to the
+ uttermost of thy power, what in thee lies to set up for me a garrison
+ in the famous town of Mansoul; nor do thou hurt the least native that
+ moveth or breatheth therein, if they will submit themselves to me,
+ but treat thou such as if they were thy friend or brother; for all
+ such I love, and they shall be dear unto me, and tell them that I
+ will take a time to come unto them, and to let them know that I am
+ merciful.
+
+ ‘But if they shall, notwithstanding thy summons and the producing of
+ thy authority, resist, stand out against thee, and rebel, then do I
+ command thee to make use of all thy cunning, power, might, and force,
+ to bring them under by strength of hand. Farewell.’
+
+Thus you see the sum of their commissions; for, as I said before, for the
+substance of them, they were the same that the rest of the noble captains
+had.
+
+Wherefore they, having received each commander his authority at the hand
+of their King, the day being appointed, and the place of their rendezvous
+prefixed, each commander appeared in such gallantry as became his cause
+and calling. So, after a new entertainment from Shaddai, with flying
+colours they set forward to march towards the famous town of Mansoul.
+Captain Boanerges led the van, Captain Conviction and Captain Judgment
+made up the main body, and Captain Execution brought up the rear. They
+then, having a great way to go, (for the town of Mansoul was far off from
+the court of Shaddai,) marched through the regions and countries of many
+people, not hurting or abusing any, but blessing wherever they came.
+They also lived upon the King’s cost in all the way they went.
+
+Having travelled thus for many days, at last they came within sight of
+Mansoul; the which when they saw, the captains could for their hearts do
+no less than for a while bewail the condition of the town; for they
+quickly saw how that it was prostrate to the will of Diabolus, and to his
+ways and designs.
+
+Well, to be short, the captains came up before the town, march up to
+Ear-gate, sit down there (for that was the place of hearing). So, when
+they had pitched their tents and entrenched themselves, they addressed
+themselves to make their assault.
+
+Now the townsfolk at first, beholding so gallant a company, so bravely
+accoutred, and so excellently disciplined, having on their glittering
+armour, and displaying of their flying colours, could not but come out of
+their houses and gaze. But the cunning fox Diabolus, fearing that the
+people, after this sight, should, on a sudden summons, open the gates to
+the captains, came down with all haste from the castle, and made them
+retire into the body of the town, who, when he had them there, made this
+lying and deceivable speech unto them:
+
+‘Gentlemen,’ quoth he, ‘although you are my trusty and well-beloved
+friends, yet I cannot but a little chide you for your late uncircumspect
+action, in going out to gaze on that great and mighty force that but
+yesterday sat down before, and have now entrenched themselves in order to
+the maintaining of a siege against the famous town of Mansoul. Do you
+know who they are, whence they come, and what is their purpose in sitting
+down before the town of Mansoul? They are they of whom I have told you
+long ago, that they would come to destroy this town, and against whom I
+have been at the cost to arm you with _cap-a-pie_ for your body, besides
+great fortifications for your mind. Wherefore, then, did you not rather,
+even at the first appearance of them, cry out, “Fire the beacons!” and
+give the whole town an alarm concerning them, that we might all have been
+in a posture of defence, and been ready to have received them with the
+highest acts of defiance? Then had you showed yourselves men to my
+liking; whereas, by what you have done, you have made me half afraid—I
+say, half afraid—that when they and we shall come to push a pike, I shall
+find you want courage to stand it out any longer. Wherefore have I
+commanded a watch, and that you should double your guards at the gates?
+Wherefore have I endeavoured to make you as hard as iron, and your hearts
+as a piece of the nether millstone? Was it, think you, that you might
+show yourselves women, and that you might go out like a company of
+innocents to gaze on your mortal foes? Fie, fie! put yourselves into a
+posture of defence, beat up the drum, gather together in warlike manner,
+that our foes may know that, before they shall conquer this corporation,
+there are valiant men in the town of Mansoul.
+
+‘I will leave off now to chide, and will not further rebuke you; but I
+charge you, that henceforwards you let me see no more such actions. Let
+not henceforward a man of you, without order first obtained from me, so
+much as show his head over the wall of the town of Mansoul. You have now
+heard me; do as I have commanded, and you shall cause me that I dwell
+securely with you, and that I take care, as for myself, so for your
+safety and honour also. Farewell.’
+
+Now were the townsmen strangely altered; they were as men stricken with a
+panic fear; they ran to and fro through the streets of the town of
+Mansoul, crying out, ‘Help, help! the men that turn the world upside down
+are come hither also.’ Nor could any of them be quiet after; but still,
+as men bereft of wit, they cried out, ‘The destroyers of our peace and
+people are come.’ This went down with Diabolus. ‘Ah,’ quoth he to
+himself, ‘this I like well: now it is as I would have it; now you show
+your obedience to your prince. Hold you but here, and then let them take
+the town if they can.’
+
+Well, before the King’s forces had sat before Mansoul three days, Captain
+Boanerges commanded his trumpeter to go down to Ear-gate, and there, in
+the name of the great Shaddai, to summon Mansoul to give audience to the
+message that he, in his Master’s name, was to them commanded to deliver.
+So the trumpeter, whose name was Take-heed-what-you-hear, went up, as he
+was commanded, to Ear-gate, and there sounded his trumpet for a hearing;
+but there was none that appeared that gave answer or regard, for so had
+Diabolus commanded. So the trumpeter returned to his captain, and told
+him what he had done, and also how he had sped; whereat the captain was
+grieved, but bid the trumpeter go to his tent.
+
+Again Captain Boanerges sendeth his trumpeter to Ear-gate, to sound as
+before for a hearing; but they again kept close, came not out, nor would
+they give him an answer, so observant were they of the command of
+Diabolus their king.
+
+Then the captains and other field officers called a council of war, to
+consider what further was to be done for the gaining of the town of
+Mansoul; and, after some close and thorough debate upon the contents of
+their commissions, they concluded yet to give to the town, by the hand of
+the fore-named trumpeter, another summons to hear; but if that shall be
+refused, said they, and that the town shall stand it out still, then they
+determined, and bid the trumpeter tell them so, that they would
+endeavour, by what means they could, to compel them by force to the
+obedience of their King.
+
+So Captain Boanerges commanded his trumpeter to go up to Ear-gate again,
+and, in the name of the great King Shaddai, to give it a very loud
+summons to come down without delay to Ear-gate, there to give audience to
+the King’s most noble captains. So the trumpeter went, and did as he was
+commanded: he went up to Ear-gate, and sounded his trumpet, and gave a
+third summons to Mansoul. He said, moreover, that if this they should
+still refuse to do, the captains of his prince would with might come down
+upon them, and endeavour to reduce them to their obedience by force.
+
+Then stood up my Lord Willbewill, who was the governor of the town, (this
+Willbewill was that apostate of whom mention was made before,) and the
+keeper of the gates of Mansoul. He therefore, with big and ruffling
+words, demanded of the trumpeter who he was, whence he came, and what was
+the cause of his making so hideous a noise at the gate, and speaking such
+insufferable words against the town of Mansoul.
+
+The trumpeter answered, ‘I am servant to the most noble captain, Captain
+Boanerges, general of the forces of the great King Shaddai, against whom
+both thyself, with the whole town of Mansoul, have rebelled, and lift up
+the heel; and my master, the captain, hath a special message to this
+town, and to thee, as a member thereof; the which if you of Mansoul shall
+peaceably hear, so; and if not, you must take what follows.’
+
+Then said the Lord Willbewill, ‘I will carry thy words to my lord, and
+will know what he will say.’
+
+But the trumpeter soon replied, saying. ‘Our message is not to the giant
+Diabolus, but to the miserable town of Mansoul; nor shall we at all
+regard what answer by him is made, nor yet by any for him. We are sent
+to this town to recover it from under his cruel tyranny, and to persuade
+it to submit, as in former times it did, to the most excellent King
+Shaddai.’
+
+Then said the Lord Willbewill, ‘I will do your errand to the town.’
+
+The trumpeter then replied, ‘Sir, do not deceive us, lest, in so doing,
+you deceive yourselves much more.’ He added, moreover, ‘For we are
+resolved, if in peaceable manner you do not submit yourselves, then to
+make a war upon you, and to bring you under by force. And of the truth
+of what I now say, this shall be a sign unto you,—you shall see the black
+flag, with its hot, burning thunder-bolts, set upon the mount to-morrow,
+as a token of defiance against your prince, and of our resolutions to
+reduce you to your Lord and rightful King.’
+
+So the said Lord Willbewill returned from off the wall, and the trumpeter
+came into the camp. When the trumpeter was come into the camp, the
+captains and officers of the mighty King Shaddai came together to know if
+he had obtained a hearing, and what was the effect of his errand. So the
+trumpeter told, saying, ‘When I had sounded my trumpet, and had called
+aloud to the town for a hearing, my Lord Willbewill, the governor of the
+town, and he that hath charge of the gates, came up when he heard me
+sound, and, looking over the wall, he asked me what I was, whence I came,
+and what was the cause of my making this noise. So I told him my errand,
+and by whose authority I brought it. “Then,” said he, “I will tell it to
+the governor and to Mansoul;” and then I returned to my lords.’
+
+Then said the brave Boanerges, ‘Let us yet for a while lie still in our
+trenches, and see what these rebels will do.’
+
+Now when the time drew nigh that audience by Mansoul must be given to the
+brave Boanerges and his companions, it was commanded that all the men of
+war throughout the whole camp of Shaddai should as one man stand to their
+arms, and make themselves ready, if the town of Mansoul shall hear, to
+receive it forthwith to mercy; but if not, to force a subjection. So the
+day being come, the trumpeters sounded, and that throughout the whole
+camp, that the men of war might be in a readiness for that which then
+should be the work of the day. But when they that were in the town of
+Mansoul heard the sound of the trumpets throughout the camp of Shaddai,
+and thinking no other but that it must be in order to storm the
+corporation, they at first were put to great consternation of spirit; but
+after they a little were settled again, they also made what preparation
+they could for a war, if they did storm; else, to secure themselves.
+
+Well, when the utmost time was come, Boanerges was resolved to hear their
+answer; wherefore he sent out his trumpeter again to summon Mansoul to a
+hearing of the message that they had brought from Shaddai.
+
+So he went and sounded, and the townsmen came up, but made Ear-gate as
+sure as they could. Now when they were come up to the top of the wall,
+Captain Boanerges desired to see the Lord Mayor; but my Lord Incredulity
+was then Lord Mayor, for he came in the room of my Lord Lustings. So
+Incredulity came up and showed himself over the wall; but when the
+Captain Boanerges had set his eyes upon him, he cried out aloud, ‘This is
+not he: where is my Lord Understanding, the ancient Lord Mayor of the
+town of Mansoul? for to him I would deliver my message.’
+
+Then said the giant (for Diabolus was also come down) to the captain,
+‘Mr. Captain, you have by your boldness given to Mansoul at least four
+summonses to subject herself to your King, by whose authority I know not,
+nor will I dispute that now. I ask, therefore, what is the reason of all
+this ado, or what would you be at if you knew yourselves?’
+
+Then Captain Boanerges, whose were the black colours, and whose scutcheon
+was the three burning thunderbolts, taking no notice of the giant or of
+his speech, thus addressed himself to the town of Mansoul: ‘Be it known
+unto you, O unhappy and rebellious Mansoul, that the most gracious King,
+the great King Shaddai, my Master, hath sent me unto you with commission’
+(and so he showed to the town his broad seal) ‘to reduce you to his
+obedience; and he hath commanded me, in case you yield upon my summons,
+to carry it to you as if you were my friends or brethren; but he also
+hath bid, that if, after summons to submit you still stand out and rebel,
+we should endeavour to take you by force.’
+
+Then stood forth Captain Conviction, and said, (his were the pale
+colours, and for a scutcheon he had the book of the law wide open, etc.,)
+‘Hear, O Mansoul! Thou, O Mansoul, wast once famous for innocency, but
+now thou art degenerated into lies and deceit. Thou hast heard what my
+brother, the Captain Boanerges, hath said; and it is your wisdom, and
+will be your happiness, to stoop to, and accept of conditions of peace
+and mercy when offered, specially when offered by one against whom thou
+hast rebelled, and one who is of power to tear thee in pieces, for so is
+Shaddai, our King; nor, when he is angry, can anything stand before him.
+If you say you have not sinned, or acted rebellion against our King, the
+whole of your doings since the day that you cast off his service (and
+there was the beginning of your sin) will sufficiently testify against
+you. What else means your hearkening to the tyrant, and your receiving
+him for your king? What means else your rejecting of the laws of
+Shaddai, and your obeying of Diabolus? Yea, what means this your taking
+up of arms against, and the shutting of your gates upon us, the faithful
+servants of your King? Be ruled then, and accept of my brother’s
+invitation, and overstand not the time of mercy, but agree with thine
+adversary quickly. Ah, Mansoul! suffer not thyself to be kept from
+mercy, and to be run into a thousand miseries, by the flattering wiles of
+Diabolus. Perhaps that piece of deceit may attempt to make you believe
+that we seek our own profit in this our service, but know it is obedience
+to our King, and love to your happiness, that is the cause of this
+undertaking of ours.
+
+‘Again I say to thee, O Mansoul, consider if it be not amazing grace that
+Shaddai should so humble himself as he doth: now he, by us, reasons with
+you, in a way of entreaty and sweet persuasions, that you would subject
+yourselves to him. Has he that need of you that we are sure you have of
+him? No, no; but he is merciful, and will not that Mansoul should die,
+but turn to him and live.’
+
+Then stood forth Captain Judgment, whose were the red colours, and for a
+scutcheon he had the burning fiery furnace, and he said, ‘O ye, the
+inhabitants of the town of Mansoul, that have lived so long in rebellion
+and acts of treason against the King Shaddai, know that we come not
+to-day to this place, in this manner, with our message of our own minds,
+or to revenge our own quarrel; it is the King, my Master, that hath sent
+us to reduce you to your obedience to him; the which if you refuse in a
+peaceable way to yield, we have commission to compel you thereto. And
+never think of yourselves, nor yet suffer the tyrant Diabolus to persuade
+you to think, that our King, by his power, is not able to bring you down,
+and to lay you under his feet; for he is the former of all things, and if
+he touches the mountains, they smoke. Nor will the gate of the King’s
+clemency stand always open; for the day that shall burn like an oven is
+before him; yea, it hasteth greatly, it slumbereth not.
+
+‘O Mansoul, is it little in thine eyes that our King doth offer thee
+mercy, and that after so many provocations? Yea, he still holdeth out
+his golden sceptre to thee, and will not yet suffer his gate to be shut
+against thee: wilt thou provoke him to do it? If so, consider of what I
+say; to thee it is opened no more for ever. If thou sayest thou shalt
+not see him, yet judgment is before him; therefore trust thou in him.
+Yea, because there is wrath, beware lest he take thee away with his
+stroke; then a great ransom cannot deliver thee. Will he esteem thy
+riches? No, not gold, nor all the forces of strength. He hath prepared
+his throne for judgment, for he will come with fire, and with his
+chariots like a whirlwind, to render his anger with fury, and his rebukes
+with flames of fire. Therefore, O Mansoul, take heed lest, after thou
+hast fulfilled the judgment of the wicked, justice and judgment should
+take hold of thee.’
+
+Now while the Captain Judgment was making this oration to the town of
+Mansoul, it was observed by some that Diabolus trembled; but he proceeded
+in his parable and said, ‘O thou woful town of Mansoul, wilt thou not yet
+set open thy gate to receive us, the deputies of thy King, and those that
+would rejoice to see thee live? Can thine heart endure, or can thy hands
+be strong, in the day that he shall deal in judgment with thee? I say,
+canst thou endure to be forced to drink, as one would drink sweet wine,
+the sea of wrath that our King has prepared for Diabolus and his angels?
+Consider, betimes consider.’
+
+Then stood forth the fourth captain, the noble Captain Execution, and
+said, ‘O town of Mansoul, once famous, but now like the fruitless bough,
+once the delight of the high ones, but now a den for Diabolus, hearken
+also to me, and to the words that I shall speak to thee in the name of
+the great Shaddai. Behold, the axe is laid to the root of the trees:
+every tree, therefore, that bringeth not forth good fruit, is hewn down
+and cast into the fire.
+
+‘Thou, O town of Mansoul, hast hitherto been this fruitless tree; thou
+bearest nought but thorns and briars. Thy evil fruit bespeaks thee not
+to be a good tree; thy grapes are grapes of gall, thy clusters are
+bitter. Thou hast rebelled against thy King; and, lo! we, the power and
+force of Shaddai, are the axe that is laid to thy root. What sayest
+thou? Wilt thou turn? I say again, tell me, before the first blow is
+given, wilt thou turn? Our axe must first be laid _to_ thy root before
+it be laid _at_ thy root; it must first be laid _to_ thy root in a way of
+threatening, before it is laid _at_ thy root by way of execution; and
+between these two is required thy repentance, and this is all the time
+that thou hast. What wilt thou do? Wilt thou turn, or shall I smite?
+If I fetch my blow, Mansoul, down you go; for I have commission to lay my
+axe _at_ as well as _to_ thy roots, nor will anything but yielding to our
+King prevent doing of execution. What art thou fit for, O Mansoul, if
+mercy preventeth not, but to be hewn down, and cast into the fire and
+burned?
+
+‘O Mansoul, patience and forbearance do not act for ever: a year, or two,
+or three, they may; but if thou provoke by a three years’ rebellion, (and
+thou hast already done more than this,) then what follows but, ‘Cut it
+down’? nay, ‘After that thou shalt cut it down.’ And dost thou think
+that these are but threatenings, or that our King has not power to
+execute his words? O Mansoul, thou wilt find that in the words of our
+King, when they are by sinners made little or light of, there is not only
+threatening, but burning coals of fire.
+
+‘Thou hast been a cumber-ground long already, and wilt thou continue so
+still? Thy sin has brought this army to thy walls, and shall it bring it
+in judgment to do execution into thy town? Thou hast heard what the
+captains have said, but as yet thou shuttest thy gates. Speak out,
+Mansoul; wilt thou do so still, or wilt thou accept of conditions of
+peace?’
+
+These brave speeches of these four noble captains the town of Mansoul
+refused to hear; yet a sound thereof did beat against Ear-gate, though
+the force thereof could not break it open. In fine, the town desired a
+time to prepare their answer to these demands. The captains then told
+them, that if they would throw out to them one Ill-Pause that was in the
+town, that they might reward him according to his works, then they would
+give them time to consider; but if they would not cast him to them over
+the wall of Mansoul, then they would give them none; ‘for,’ said they,
+‘we know that, so long as Ill-Pause draws breath in Mansoul, all good
+consideration will be confounded, and nothing but mischief will come
+thereon.’
+
+Then Diabolus, who was there present, being loath to lose his Ill-Pause,
+because he was his orator, (and yet be sure he had, could the captains
+have laid their fingers on him,) was resolved at this instant to give
+them answer by himself; but then changing his mind, he commanded the then
+Lord Mayor, the Lord Incredulity, to do it, saying, ‘My lord, do you give
+these runagates an answer, and speak out, that Mansoul may hear and
+understand you.’
+
+So Incredulity, at Diabolus’ command, began, and said, ‘Gentlemen, you
+have here, as we do behold, to the disturbance of our prince and the
+molestation of the town of Mansoul, camped against it: but from whence
+you come, we will not know; and what you are, we will not believe.
+Indeed, you tell us in your terrible speech that you have this authority
+from Shaddai, but by what right he commands you to do it, of that we
+shall yet be ignorant.
+
+‘You have also, by the authority aforesaid, summoned this town to desert
+her lord, and, for protection, to yield up herself to the great Shaddai,
+your King; flatteringly telling her, that if she will do it, he will pass
+by and not charge her with her past offences.
+
+‘Further, you have also, to the terror of the town of Mansoul, threatened
+with great and sore destructions to punish this corporation, if she
+consents not to do as your wills would have her.
+
+‘Now, captains, from whencesoever you come, and though your designs be
+ever so right, yet know ye that neither my Lord Diabolus, nor I, his
+servant, Incredulity, nor yet our brave Mansoul, doth regard either your
+persons, message, or the King that you say hath sent you. His power, his
+greatness, his vengeance, we fear not; nor will we yield at all to your
+summons.
+
+‘As for the war that you threaten to make upon us, we must therein defend
+ourselves as well as we can; and know ye, that we are not without
+wherewithal to bid defiance to you; and, in short, (for I will not be
+tedious,) I tell you, that we take you to be some vagabond runagate crew,
+that having shaken off all obedience to your King, have gotten together
+in tumultuous manner, and are ranging from place to place to see if,
+through the flatteries you are skilled to make on the one side, and
+threats wherewith you think to fright on the other, to make some silly
+town, city, or country, desert their place, and leave it to you; but
+Mansoul is none of them.
+
+‘To conclude: we dread you not, we fear you not, nor will we obey your
+summons. Our gates we will shut upon you, our place we will keep you out
+of. Nor will we long thus suffer you to sit down before us: our people
+must live in quiet: your appearance doth disturb them. Wherefore arise
+with bag and baggage, and begone, or we will let fly from the walls
+against you.’
+
+This oration, made by old Incredulity, was seconded by desperate
+Willbewill, in words to this effect: ‘Gentlemen, we have heard your
+demands, and the noise of your threats, and have heard the sound of your
+summons; but we fear not your force, we regard not your threats, but will
+still abide as you found us. And we command you, that in three days’
+time you cease to appear in these parts, or you shall know what it is
+once to dare offer to rouse the lion Diabolus when asleep in his town of
+Mansoul.’
+
+The Recorder, whose name was Forget-Good, he also added as followeth:
+‘Gentlemen, my lords, as you see, have with mild and gentle words
+answered your rough and angry speeches: they have, moreover, in my
+hearing, given you leave quietly to depart as you came; wherefore, take
+their kindness and be gone. We might have come out with force upon you,
+and have caused you to feel the dint of our swords; but as we love ease
+and quiet ourselves, so we love not to hurt or molest others.’
+
+Then did the town of Mansoul shout for joy, as if by Diabolus and his
+crew some great advantage had been gotten of the captains. They also
+rang the bells, and made merry, and danced upon the walls.
+
+Diabolus also returned to the castle, and the Lord Mayor and Recorder to
+their place; but the Lord Willbewill took special care that the gates
+should be secured with double guards, double bolts, and double locks and
+bars; and that Ear-gate especially might the better be looked to, for
+that was the gate in at which the King’s forces sought most to enter.
+The Lord Willbewill made one old Mr. Prejudice, an angry and
+ill-conditioned fellow, captain of the ward at that gate, and put under
+his power sixty men, called deaf men; men advantageous for that service,
+forasmuch as they mattered no words of the captains, nor of the soldiers.
+
+Now when the captains saw the answer of the great ones, and that they
+could not get a hearing from the old natives of the town, and that
+Mansoul was resolved to give the King’s army battle, they prepared
+themselves to receive them, and to try it out by the power of the arm.
+And, first, they made their force more formidable against Ear-gate; for
+they knew that, unless they could penetrate that, no good could be done
+upon the town. This done, they put the rest of their men in their
+places; after which, they gave out the word, which was, ‘YE MUST BE BORN
+AGAIN.’ Then they sounded the trumpet; then they in the town made them
+answer, with shout against shout, charge against charge, and so the
+battle began. Now they in the town had planted upon the tower over
+Ear-gate two great guns, the one called High-mind, and the other Heady.
+Unto these two guns they trusted much; they were cast in the castle by
+Diabolus’ founder, whose name was Mr. Puff-up, and mischievous pieces
+they were. But so vigilant and watchful, when the captains saw them,
+were they, that though sometimes their shot would go by their ears with a
+whiz, yet they did them no harm. By these two guns the townsfolk made no
+question but greatly to annoy the camp of Shaddai, and well enough to
+secure the gate; but they had not much cause to boast of what execution
+they did, as by what follows will be gathered.
+
+The famous Mansoul had also some other small pieces in it, of the which
+they made use against the camp of Shaddai.
+
+They from the camp also did as stoutly, and with as much of that as may
+in truth be called valour, let fly as fast at the town and at Ear-gate;
+for they saw that, unless they could break open Ear-gate, it would be but
+in vain to batter the wall. Now the King’s captains had brought with
+them several slings, and two or three battering-rams; with their slings,
+therefore, they battered the houses and people of the town, and with
+their rams they sought to break Ear-gate open.
+
+The camp and the town had several skirmishes and brisk encounters, while
+the captains with their engines made many brave attempts to break open or
+beat down the tower that was over Ear-gate, and at the said gate to make
+their entrance; but Mansoul stood it out so lustily, through the rage of
+Diabolus, the valour of the Lord Willbewill, and the conduct of old
+Incredulity, the Mayor, and Mr. Forget-Good, the Recorder, that the
+charge and expense of that summer’s wars, on the King’s side, seemed to
+be almost quite lost, and the advantage to return to Mansoul. But when
+the captains saw how it was they made a fair retreat, and entrenched
+themselves in their winter quarters. Now, in this war, you must needs
+think there was much loss on both sides, of which be pleased to accept of
+this brief account following.
+
+The King’s captains, when they marched from the court to come up against
+Mansoul to war, as they came crossing over the country, they happened to
+light upon three young fellows that had a mind to go for soldiers: proper
+men they were, and men of courage and skill, to appearance. Their names
+were Mr. Tradition, Mr. Human-Wisdom, and Mr. Man’s-Invention. So they
+came up to the captains, and proffered their service to Shaddai. The
+captains then told them of their design, and bid them not to be rash in
+their offers; but the young men told them they had considered the thing
+before, and that hearing they were upon their march for such a design,
+came hither on purpose to meet them, that they might be listed under
+their excellencies. Then Captain Boanerges, for that they were men of
+courage, listed them into his company, and so away they went to the war.
+
+Now, when the war was begun, in one of the briskest skirmishes, so it
+was, that a company of the Lord Willbewill’s men sallied out at the
+sallyport or postern of the town, and fell in upon the rear of Captain
+Boanerges’ men, where these three fellows happened to be; so they took
+them prisoners, and away they carried them into the town, where they had
+not lain long in durance, but it began to be noised about the streets of
+the town what three notable prisoners the Lord Willbewill’s men had
+taken, and brought in prisoners out of the camp of Shaddai. At length
+tidings thereof were carried to Diabolus to the castle, to wit what my
+Lord Willbewill’s men had done, and whom they had taken prisoners.
+
+Then Diabolus called for Willbewill, to know the certainty of this
+matter. So he asked him, and he told him. Then did the giant send for
+the prisoners, and, when they were come, demanded of them who they were,
+whence they came, and what they did in the camp of Shaddai; and they told
+him. Then he sent them to ward again. Not many days after, he sent for
+them to him again, and then asked them if they would be willing to serve
+him against their former captains. They then told him that they did not
+so much live by religion as by the fates of fortune; and that since his
+lordship was willing to entertain them, they should be willing to serve
+him. Now while things were thus in hand, there was one Captain Anything,
+a great doer, in the town of Mansoul; and to this Captain Anything did
+Diabolus send these men, and a note under his hand, to receive them into
+his company, the contents of which letter were thus:
+
+‘Anything, my darling,—The three men that are the bearers of this letter
+have a desire to serve me in the war; nor know I better to whose conduct
+to commit them than to thine. Receive them, therefore, in my name, and,
+as need shall require, make use of them against Shaddai and his men.
+Farewell.’
+
+So they came, and he received them; and he made of two of them sergeants;
+but he made Mr. Man’s-Invention his ancient-bearer. But thus much for
+this, and now to return to the camp.
+
+They of the camp did also some execution upon the town; for they did beat
+down the roof of the Lord Mayor’s house, and so laid him more open than
+he was before. They had almost, with a sling, slain my Lord Willbewill
+outright; but he made a shift to recover again. But they made a notable
+slaughter among the aldermen, for with one only shot they cut off six of
+them; to wit, Mr. Swearing, Mr. Whoring, Mr. Fury, Mr. Stand-to-Lies, Mr.
+Drunkenness, and Mr. Cheating.
+
+They also dismounted the two guns that stood upon the tower over
+Ear-gate, and laid them flat in the dirt. I told you before that the
+King’s noble captains had drawn off to their winter quarters, and had
+there entrenched themselves and their carriages, so as with the best
+advantage to their King, and the greatest annoyance to the enemy, they
+might give seasonable and warm alarms to the town of Mansoul. And this
+design of them did so hit, that I may say they did almost what they would
+to the molestation of the corporation. For now could not Mansoul sleep
+securely as before, nor could they now go to their debaucheries with that
+quietness as in times past; for they had from the camp of Shaddai such
+frequent, warm, and terrifying alarms, yea, alarms upon alarms, first at
+one gate and then at another, and again at all the gates at once, that
+they were broken as to former peace. Yea, they had their alarms so
+frequently, and that when the nights were at longest, the weather
+coldest, and so consequently the season most unseasonable, that that
+winter was to the town of Mansoul a winter by itself. Sometimes the
+trumpets would sound, and sometimes the slings would whirl the stones
+into the town. Sometimes ten thousand of the King’s soldiers would be
+running round the walls of Mansoul at midnight, shouting and lifting up
+the voice for the battle. Sometimes, again, some of them in the town
+would be wounded, and their cry and lamentable voice would be heard, to
+the great molestation of the now languishing town of Mansoul. Yea, so
+distressed with those that laid siege against them were they, that, I
+dare say, Diabolus, their king, had in these days his rest much broken.
+
+In these days, as I was informed, new thoughts, and thoughts that began
+to run counter one to another, began to possess the minds of the men of
+the town of Mansoul. Some would say, ‘There is no living thus.’ Others
+would then reply, ‘This will be over shortly.’ Then would a third stand
+up and answer, ‘Let us turn to the King Shaddai, and so put an end to
+these troubles.’ And a fourth would come in with a fear, saying, ‘I
+doubt he will not receive us.’ The old gentleman, too, the Recorder,
+that was so before Diabolus took Mansoul, he also began to talk aloud,
+and his words were now to the town of Mansoul as if they were great claps
+of thunder. No noise now so terrible to Mansoul as was his, with the
+noise of the soldiers and shoutings of the captains.
+
+Also things began to grow scarce in Mansoul; now the things that her soul
+lusted after were departing from her. Upon all her pleasant things there
+was a blast, and burning instead of beauty. Wrinkles now, and some shows
+of the shadow of death, were upon the inhabitants of Mansoul. And now, O
+how glad would Mansoul have been to have enjoyed quietness and
+satisfaction of mind, though joined with the meanest condition in the
+world!
+
+The captains also, in the deep of this winter, did send by the mouth of
+Boanerges’ trumpeter a summons to Mansoul to yield up herself to the
+King, the great King Shaddai. They sent it once, and twice, and thrice;
+not knowing but that at some times there might be in Mansoul some
+willingness to surrender up themselves unto them, might they but have the
+colour of an invitation to do it under. Yea, so far as I could gather,
+the town had been surrendered up to them before now, had it not been for
+the opposition of old Incredulity, and the fickleness of the thoughts of
+my Lord Willbewill. Diabolus also began to rave; wherefore Mansoul, as
+to yielding, was not yet all of one mind; therefore they still lay
+distressed under these perplexing fears.
+
+I told you but now that they of the King’s army had this winter sent
+three times to Mansoul to submit herself.
+
+The first time the trumpeter went he went with words of peace, telling
+them that the captains, the noble captains of Shaddai, did pity and
+bewail the misery of the now perishing town of Mansoul, and were troubled
+to see them so much to stand in the way of their own deliverance. He
+said, moreover, that the captains bid him tell them, that if now poor
+Mansoul would humble herself and turn, her former rebellions and most
+notorious treasons should by their merciful King be forgiven them, yea,
+and forgotten too. And having bid them beware that they stood not in
+their own way, that they opposed not themselves, nor made themselves
+their own losers, he returned again into the camp.
+
+The second time the trumpeter went, he did treat them a little more
+roughly; for, after sound of trumpet, he told them that their continuing
+in their rebellion did but chafe and heat the spirit of the captains, and
+that they were resolved to make a conquest of Mansoul, or to lay their
+bones before the town walls.
+
+He went again the third time, and dealt with them yet more roughly;
+telling them that now, since they had been so horribly profane, he did
+not know, not certainly know, whether the captains were inclining to
+mercy or judgment. ‘Only,’ said he, ‘they commanded me to give you a
+summons to open the gates unto them.’ So he returned, and went into the
+camp.
+
+These three summonses, and especially the last two, did so distress the
+town that they presently call a consultation, the result of which was
+this—That my Lord Willbewill should go up to Ear-gate, and there, with
+sound of trumpet, call to the captains of the camp for a parley. Well,
+the Lord Willbewill sounded upon the wall; so the captains came up in
+their harness, with their ten thousands at their feet. The townsmen then
+told the captains that they had heard and considered their summons, and
+would come to an agreement with them, and with their King Shaddai, upon
+such certain terms, articles, and propositions as, with and by the order
+of their prince, they to them were appointed to propound; to wit, they
+would agree upon these grounds to be one people with them.
+
+1. If that those of their own company, as the now Lord Mayor and their
+Mr. Forget-Good, with then brave Lord Willbewill, might, under Shaddai,
+be still the governors of the town, castle, and gates of Mansoul.
+
+2. Provided that no man that now serveth under their great giant Diabolus
+be by Shaddai cast out of house, harbour, or the freedom that he hath
+hitherto enjoyed in the famous town of Mansoul.
+
+3. That it shall be granted them, that they of the town of Mansoul shall
+enjoy certain of their rights and privileges; to wit, such as have
+formerly been granted them, and that they have long lived in the
+enjoyment of, under the reign of their king Diabolus, that now is, and
+long has been, their only lord and great defender.
+
+4. That no new law, officer, or executioner of law or office, shall have
+any power over them, without their own choice and consent.
+
+‘These be our propositions, or conditions of peace; and upon these
+terms,’ said they, ‘we will submit to your King.’
+
+But when the captains had heard this weak and feeble offer of the town of
+Mansoul, and their high and bold demands, they made to them again, by
+their noble captain, the Captain Boanerges, this speech following:
+
+‘O ye inhabitants of the town of Mansoul, when I heard your trumpet sound
+for a parley with us, I can truly say I was glad; but when you said you
+were willing to submit yourselves to our King and Lord, then I was yet
+more glad; but when, by your silly provisos and foolish cavils, you laid
+the stumbling-block of your iniquity before your own faces, then was my
+gladness turned into sorrows, and my hopeful beginnings of your return,
+into languishing fainting fears.
+
+‘I count that old Ill-Pause, the ancient enemy of Mansoul, did draw up
+those proposals that now you present us with as terms of an agreement;
+but they deserve not to be admitted to sound in the ear of any man that
+pretends to have service for Shaddai. We do therefore jointly, and that
+with the highest disdain, refuse and reject such things, as the greatest
+of iniquities.
+
+‘But, O Mansoul, if you will give yourselves into our hands, or rather
+into the hands of our King, and will trust him to make such terms with
+and for you as shall seem good in his eyes, (and I dare say they shall be
+such as you shall find to be most profitable to you,) then we will
+receive you, and be at peace with you; but if you like not to trust
+yourselves in the arms of Shaddai our King, then things are but where
+they were before, and we know also what we have to do.’
+
+Then cried out old Incredulity, the Lord Mayor, and said, ‘And who, being
+out of the hands of their enemies, as ye see we are now, will be so
+foolish as to put the staff out of their own hands into the hands of they
+know not who? I, for my part, will never yield to so unlimited a
+proposition. Do we know the manner and temper of their King? It is said
+by some that he will be angry with his subjects if but the breadth of an
+hair they chance to step out of the way; and by others, that he requireth
+of them much more than they can perform. Wherefore, it seems, O Mansoul,
+to be thy wisdom to take good heed what thou dost in this matter; for if
+you once yield, you give up yourselves to another, and so you are no more
+your own. Wherefore, to give up yourselves to an unlimited power, is the
+greatest folly in the world; for now you indeed may repent, but can never
+justly complain. But do you indeed know, when you are his, which of you
+he will kill, and which of you he will save alive; or whether he will not
+cut off every one of us, and send out of his own country another new
+people, and cause them to inhabit this town?’
+
+This speech of the Lord Mayor undid all, and threw flat to the ground
+their hopes of an accord. Wherefore the captains returned to their
+trenches, to their tents, and to their men, as they were; and the Mayor
+to the castle and to his King.
+
+Now Diabolus had waited for his return, for he had heard that they had
+been at their points. So, when he was come into the chamber of state,
+Diabolus saluted him with—‘Welcome, my lord. How went matters betwixt
+you to-day?’ So the Lord Incredulity, with a low congee, told him the
+whole of the matter, saying, ‘Thus and thus said the captains of Shaddai,
+and thus and thus said I.’ The which when it was told to Diabolus, he
+was very glad to hear it, and said, ‘My Lord Mayor, my faithful
+Incredulity, I have proved thy fidelity above ten times already, but
+never yet found thee false. I do promise thee, if we rub over this
+brunt, to prefer thee to a place of honour, a place far better than to be
+Lord Mayor of Mansoul. I will make thee my universal deputy, and thou
+shalt, next to me, have all nations under thy hand; yea, and thou shalt
+lay bands upon them, that they may not resist thee; nor shall any of our
+vassals walk more at liberty, but those that shall be content to walk in
+thy fetters.’
+
+Now came the Lord Mayor out from Diabolus, as if he had obtained a favour
+indeed. Wherefore to his habitation he goes in great state, and thinks
+to feed himself well enough with hopes, until the time came that his
+greatness should be enlarged.
+
+But now, though the Lord Mayor and Diabolus did thus well agree, yet this
+repulse to the brave captains put Mansoul into a mutiny. For while old
+Incredulity went into the castle to congratulate his lord with what had
+passed, the old Lord Mayor, that was so before Diabolus came to the town,
+to wit, my Lord Understanding, and the old Recorder, Mr. Conscience,
+getting intelligence of what had passed at Ear-gate, (for you must know
+that they might not be suffered to be at that debate, lest they should
+then have mutinied for the captains; but, I say, they got intelligence of
+what had passed there, and were much concerned therewith,) wherefore
+they, getting some of the town together, began to possess them with the
+reasonableness of the noble captains’ demands, and with the bad
+consequences that would follow upon the speech of old Incredulity, the
+Lord Mayor; to wit how little reverence he showed therein either to the
+captains or to their King; also how he implicitly charged them with
+unfaithfulness and treachery. ‘For what less,’ quoth they, ‘could be
+made of his words, when he said he would not yield to their proposition;
+and added, moreover, a supposition that he would destroy us, when before
+he had sent us word that he would show us mercy!’ The multitude, being
+now possessed with the conviction of the evil that old Incredulity had
+done, began to run together by companies in all places, and in every
+corner of the streets of Mansoul; and first they began to mutter, then to
+talk openly, and after that they run to and fro, and cried as they run,
+‘Oh the brave captains of Shaddai! would we were under the government of
+the captains, and of Shaddai their King!’ When the Lord Mayor had
+intelligence that Mansoul was in an uproar, down he comes to appease the
+people, and thought to have quashed their heat with the bigness and the
+show of his countenance; but when they saw him, they came running upon
+him, and had doubtless done him a mischief, had he not betaken himself to
+house. However, they strongly assaulted the house where he was, to have
+pulled it down about his ears; but the place was too strong, so they
+failed of that. So he, taking some courage, addressed himself, out at a
+window, to the people in this manner:
+
+‘Gentlemen, what is the reason that there is here such an uproar to-day?’
+
+Then answered my Lord Understanding, ‘It is even because that thou and
+thy master have carried it not rightly, and as you should, to the
+captains of Shaddai; for in three things you are faulty. First, in that
+you would not let Mr. Conscience and myself be at the hearing of your
+discourse. Secondly, in that you propounded such terms of peace to the
+captains that by no means could be granted, unless they had intended that
+their Shaddai should have been only a titular prince, and that Mansoul
+should still have had power by law to have lived in all lewdness and
+vanity before him, and so by consequence Diabolus should still here be
+king in power, and the other only king in name. Thirdly, for that thou
+didst thyself, after the captains had showed us upon what conditions they
+would have received us to mercy, even undo all again with thy unsavoury,
+unseasonable, and ungodly speech.’
+
+When old Incredulity had heard this speech, he cried out, ‘Treason!
+treason! To your arms! to your arms! O ye, the trusty friends of
+Diabolus in Mansoul.’
+
+_Und._—Sir, you may put upon my words what meaning you please; but I am
+sure that the captains of such an high lord as theirs is, deserved a
+better treatment at your hands.
+
+Then said old Incredulity, ‘This is but little better. But, Sir,’ quoth
+he, ‘what I spake I spake for my prince, for his government, and the
+quieting of the people, whom by your unlawful actions you have this day
+set to mutiny against us.’
+
+Then replied the old Recorder, whose name was Mr. Conscience, and said,
+‘Sir, you ought not thus to retort upon what my Lord Understanding hath
+said. It is evident enough that he hath spoken the truth, and that you
+are an enemy to Mansoul. Be convinced, then, of the evil of your saucy
+and malapert language, and of the grief that you have put the captains
+to; yea, and of the damages that you have done to Mansoul thereby. Had
+you accepted of the conditions, the sound of the trumpet and the alarm of
+war had now ceased about the town of Mansoul; but that dreadful sound
+abides, and your want of wisdom in your speech has been the cause of it.’
+
+Then said old Incredulity, ‘Sir, if I live, I will do your errand to
+Diabolus, and there you shall have an answer to your words. Meanwhile we
+will seek the good of the town, and not ask counsel of you.’
+
+_Und._—Sir, your prince and you are both foreigners to Mansoul, and not
+the natives thereof; and who can tell but that, when you have brought us
+into greater straits, (when you also shall see that yourselves can be
+safe by no other means than by flight,) you may leave us and shift for
+yourselves, or set us on fire, and go away in the smoke, or by the light
+of our burning, and so leave us in our ruins?
+
+_Incred._—Sir, you forget that you are under a governor, and that you
+ought to demean yourself like a subject; and know ye, when my lord the
+king shall hear of this day’s work, he will give you but little thanks
+for your labour.
+
+Now while these gentlemen were thus in their chiding words, down come
+from the walls and gates of the town the Lord Willbewill, Mr. Prejudice,
+old Ill-Pause, and several of the new-made aldermen and burgesses, and
+they asked the reason of the hubbub and tumult; and with that every man
+began to tell his own tale, so that nothing could be heard distinctly.
+Then was a silence commanded, and the old fox Incredulity began to speak.
+‘My lord,’ quoth he, ‘here are a couple of peevish gentlemen, that have,
+as a fruit of their bad dispositions, and, as I fear, through the advice
+of one Mr. Discontent, tumultuously gathered this company against me this
+day, and also attempted to run the town into acts of rebellion against
+our prince.’
+
+Then stood up all the Diabolonians that were present, and affirmed these
+things to be true.
+
+Now when they that took part with my Lord Understanding and with Mr.
+Conscience perceived that they were like to come to the worst, for that
+force and power was on the other side, they came in for their help and
+relief; so a great company was on both sides. Then they on Incredulity’s
+side would have had the two old gentlemen presently away to prison; but
+they on the other side said they should not. Then they began to cry up
+parties again: the Diabolonians cried up old Incredulity, Forget-Good,
+the new aldermen, and their great one Diabolus; and the other party, they
+as fast cried up Shaddai, the captains, his laws, their mercifulness, and
+applauded their conditions and ways. Thus the bickerment went awhile; at
+last they passed from words to blows, and now there were knocks on both
+sides. The good old gentleman, Mr. Conscience, was knocked down twice by
+one of the Diabolonians, whose name was Mr. Benumbing; and my Lord
+Understanding had like to have been slain with an arquebuse, but that he
+that shot did not take his aim aright. Nor did the other side wholly
+escape; for there was one Mr. Rashhead, a Diabolonian, that had his
+brains beaten out by Mr. Mind, the Lord Willbewill’s servant; and it made
+me laugh to see how old Mr. Prejudice was kicked and tumbled about in the
+dirt; for though, a while since, he was made captain of a company of the
+Diabolonians, to the hurt and damage of the town, yet now they had got
+him under their feet, and, I’ll assure you, he had, by some of the Lord
+Understanding’s party, his crown cracked to boot. Mr. Anything also, he
+became a brisk man in the broil; but both sides were against him, because
+he was true to none. Yet he had, for his malapertness, one of his legs
+broken, and he that did it wished it had been his neck. Much more harm
+was done on both sides, but this must not be forgotten; it was now a
+wonder to see my Lord Willbewill so indifferent as he was: he did not
+seem to take one side more than another, only it was perceived that he
+smiled to see how old Prejudice was tumbled up and down in the dirt.
+Also, when Captain Anything came halting up before him, he seemed to take
+but little notice of him.
+
+Now, when the uproar was over, Diabolus sends for my Lord Understanding
+and Mr. Conscience, and claps them both up in prison as the ringleaders
+and managers of this most heavy, riotous rout in Mansoul. So now the
+town began to be quiet again, and the prisoners were used hardly; yea, he
+thought to have made them away, but that the present juncture did not
+serve for that purpose, for that war was in all their gates.
+
+But let us return again to our story. The captains, when they were gone
+back from the gate, and were come into the camp again, called a council
+of war, to consult what was further for them to do. Now, some said, ‘Let
+us go up presently, and fall upon the town;’ but the greatest part
+thought rather better it would be to give them another summons to yield;
+and the reason why they thought this to be best was, because that, so far
+as could be perceived, the town of Mansoul now was more inclinable than
+heretofore. ‘And if,’ said they, ‘while some of them are in a way of
+inclination, we should by ruggedness give them distaste, we may set them
+further from closing with our summons than we would be willing they
+should.’ Wherefore to this advice they agreed, and called a trumpeter,
+put words into his mouth, set him his time, and bid him God speed. Well,
+many hours were not expired before the trumpeter addressed himself to his
+journey. Wherefore, coming up to the wall of the town, he steereth his
+course to Ear-gate, and there sounded, as he was commanded. They then
+that were within came out to see what was the matter, and the trumpeter
+made them this speech following:
+
+‘O hard-hearted and deplorable town of Mansoul, how long wilt thou love
+thy sinful, sinful simplicity, and, ye fools, delight in your scorning?
+As yet despise you the offers of peace and deliverance? As yet will ye
+refuse the golden offers of Shaddai, and trust to the lies and falsehoods
+of Diabolus? Think you, when Shaddai shall have conquered you, that the
+remembrance of these your carriages towards him will yield you peace and
+comfort, or that by ruffling language you can make him afraid as a
+grasshopper? Doth he entreat you for fear of you? Do you think that you
+are stronger than he? Look to the heavens, and behold and consider the
+stars, how high are they? Can you stop the sun from running his course,
+and hinder the moon from giving her light? Can you count the number of
+the stars, or stay the bottles of heaven? Can you call for the waters of
+the sea, and cause them to cover the face of the ground? Can you behold
+every one that is proud, and abase him, and bind their faces in secret?
+Yet these are some of the works of our King, in whose name this day we
+come up unto you, that you may be brought under his authority. In his
+name, therefore, I summon you again to yield up yourselves to his
+captains.’
+
+At this summons the Mansoulians seemed to be at a stand, and knew not
+what answer to make. Wherefore Diabolus forthwith appeared, and took
+upon him to do it himself; and thus he begins, but turns his speech to
+them of Mansoul.
+
+‘Gentlemen,’ quoth he, ‘and my faithful subjects, if it is true that this
+summoner hath said concerning the greatness of their King, by his terror
+you will always be kept in bondage, and so be made to sneak. Yea, how
+can you now, though he is at a distance, endure to think of such a mighty
+one? And if not to think of him while at a distance, how can you endure
+to be in his presence? I, your prince, am familiar with you, and you may
+play with me as you would with a grasshopper. Consider, therefore, what
+is for your profit, and remember the immunities that I have granted you.
+
+‘Farther, if all be true that this man hath said, how comes it to pass
+that the subjects of Shaddai are so enslaved in all places where they
+come? None in the universe so unhappy as they, none so trampled upon as
+they.
+
+‘Consider, my Mansoul: would thou wert as loath to leave me as I am loath
+to leave thee. But consider, I say, the ball is yet at thy foot; liberty
+you have, if you know how to use it; yea, a king you have too, if you can
+tell how to love and obey him.’
+
+Upon this speech, the town of Mansoul did again harden their hearts yet
+more against the captains of Shaddai. The thoughts of his greatness did
+quite quash them, and the thoughts of his holiness sunk them in despair.
+Wherefore, after a short consult, they (of the Diabolonian party they
+were) sent back this word by the trumpeter, That, for their parts, they
+were resolved to stick to their king, but never to yield to Shaddai; so
+it was but in vain to give them any further summons, for they had rather
+die upon the place than yield. And now things seemed to be gone quite
+back, and Mansoul to be out of reach or call, yet the captains who knew
+what their Lord could do, would not yet be beat out of heart; they
+therefore sent them another summons, more sharp and severe than the last;
+but the oftener they were sent to, to reconcile to Shaddai, the further
+off they were. ‘As they called them, so they went from them—yea, though
+they called them to the Most High.’
+
+So they ceased that way to deal with them any more, and inclined to think
+of another way. The captains, therefore, did gather themselves together,
+to have free conference among themselves, to know what was yet to be done
+to gain the town, and to deliver it from the tyranny of Diabolus; and one
+said after this manner, and another after that. Then stood up the right
+noble the Captain Conviction, and said, ‘My brethren, mine opinion is
+this:
+
+‘First, that we continually play our slings into the town, and keep it in
+a continual alarm, molesting them day and night. By thus doing, we shall
+stop the growth of their rampant spirit; for a lion may be tamed by
+continual molestation.
+
+‘Secondly, this done, I advise that, in the next place, we with one
+consent draw up a petition to our Lord Shaddai, by which, after we have
+showed our King the condition of Mansoul and of affairs here, and have
+begged his pardon for our no better success, we will earnestly implore
+his Majesty’s help, and that he will please to send us more force and
+power, and some gallant and well-spoken commander to head them, that so
+his Majesty may not lose the benefit of these his good beginnings, but
+may complete his conquest upon the town of Mansoul.’
+
+To this speech of the noble Captain Conviction they as one man consented,
+and agreed that a petition should forthwith be drawn up, and sent by a
+fit man away to Shaddai with speed. The contents of the petition were
+thus:—
+
+‘Most gracious and glorious King, the Lord of the best world, and the
+builder of the town of Mansoul, we have, dread Sovereign, at thy
+commandment, put our lives in jeopardy, and at thy bidding made a war
+upon the famous town of Mansoul. When we went up against it, we did,
+according to our commission, first offer conditions of peace unto it.
+But they, great King, set light by our counsel, and would none of our
+reproof. They were for shutting their gates, and for keeping us out of
+the town. They also mounted their guns, they sallied out upon us, and
+have done us what damage they could; but we pursued them with alarm upon
+alarm, requiting them with such retribution as was meet, and have done
+some execution upon the town.
+
+‘Diabolus, Incredulity, and Willbewill are the great doers against us:
+now we are in our winter quarters, but so as that we do yet with an high
+hand molest and distress the town.
+
+‘Once, as we think, had we had but one substantial friend in the town,
+such as would but have seconded the sound of our summons as they ought,
+the people might have yielded themselves; but there were none but enemies
+there, nor any to speak in behalf of our Lord to the town. Wherefore,
+though we have done as we could, yet Mansoul abides in a state of
+rebellion against thee.
+
+‘Now, King of kings, let it please thee to pardon the unsuccessfulness of
+thy servants, who have been no more advantageous in so desirable a work
+as the conquering of Mansoul is. And send, Lord, as we now desire, more
+forces to Mansoul, that it may be subdued; and a man to head them, that
+the town may both love and fear.
+
+‘We do not thus speak because we are willing to relinquish the wars, (for
+we are for laying of our bones against the place,) but that the town of
+Mansoul may be won for thy Majesty. We also pray thy Majesty, for
+expedition in this matter, that, after their conquest, we may be at
+liberty to be sent about other thy gracious designs. Amen.’
+
+The petition, thus drawn up, was sent away with haste to the King by the
+hand of that good man, Mr. Love-to-Mansoul.
+
+When this petition was come to the palace of the King, who should it be
+delivered to but to the King’s Son? So he took it and read it, and
+because the contents of it pleased him well, he mended, and also in some
+things added to the petition himself. So, after he had made such
+amendments and additions as he thought convenient, with his own hand, he
+carried it in to the King; to whom, when he had with obeisance delivered
+it, he put on authority, and spake to it himself.
+
+Now the King, at the sight of the petition, was glad; but how much more,
+think you, when it was seconded by his Son! It pleased him also to hear
+that his servants who camped against Mansoul were so hearty in the work,
+and so steadfast in their resolves, and that they had already got some
+ground upon the famous town of Mansoul.
+
+Wherefore the King called to him Emmanuel, his Son, who said, ‘Here am I,
+my Father.’ Then said the King, ‘Thou knowest, as I do myself, the
+condition of the town of Mansoul, and what we have purposed, and what
+thou hast done to redeem it. Come now, therefore, my Son, and prepare
+thyself for the war, for thou shalt go to my camp at Mansoul. Thou shalt
+also there prosper and prevail, and conquer the town of Mansoul.’
+
+Then said the King’s Son, ‘Thy law is within my heart: I delight to do
+thy will. This is the day that I have longed for, and the work that I
+have waited for all this while. Grant me, therefore, what force thou
+shalt in thy wisdom think meet; and I will go and will deliver from
+Diabolus, and from his power, thy perishing town of Mansoul. My heart
+has been often pained within me for the miserable town of Mansoul; but
+now it is rejoiced, but now it is glad.’
+
+And with that he leaped over the mountains for joy, saying, ‘I have not,
+in my heart, thought anything too dear for Mansoul: the day of vengeance
+is in mine heart for thee, my Mansoul: and glad am I that thou, my
+Father, hast made me the Captain of their salvation. And I will now
+begin to plague all those that have been a plague to my town of Mansoul,
+and will deliver it from their hand.’
+
+When the King’s Son had said thus to his Father, it presently flew like
+lightning round about at court; yea, it there became the only talk what
+Emmanuel was to go to do for the famous town of Mansoul. But you cannot
+think how the courtiers, too, were taken with this design of the Prince;
+yea, so affected were they with this work, and with the justness of the
+war, that the highest lord and greatest peer of the kingdom did covet to
+have commissions under Emmanuel, to go to help to recover again to
+Shaddai the miserable town of Mansoul.
+
+Then was it concluded that some should go and carry tidings to the camp,
+that Emmanuel was to come to recover Mansoul, and that he would bring
+along with him so mighty, so impregnable a force, that he could not be
+resisted. But, oh! how ready were the high ones at court to run like
+lackeys to carry these tidings to the camp that was at Mansoul. Now,
+when the captains perceived that the King would send Emmanuel his Son,
+and that it also delighted the Son to be sent on this errand by the great
+Shaddai his Father, they also, to show how they were pleased at the
+thoughts of his coming gave a shout that made the earth rend at the sound
+thereof. Yea, the mountains did answer again by echo, and Diabolus
+himself did totter and shake.
+
+For you must know, that though the town of Mansoul itself was not much,
+if at all concerned with the project, (for, alas for them! they were
+wofully besotted, for they chiefly regarded their pleasure and their
+lusts,) yet Diabolus their governor was; for he had his spies continually
+abroad, who brought him intelligence of all things, and they told him
+what was doing at court against him, and that Emmanuel would shortly
+certainly come with a power to invade him. Nor was there any man at
+court, nor peer of the kingdom, that Diabolus so feared as he feared this
+Prince; for, if you remember, I showed you before that Diabolus had felt
+the weight of his hand already; so that, since it was he that was to
+come, this made him the more afraid.
+
+Well, you see how I have told you that the King’s Son was engaged to come
+from the court to save Mansoul, and that his Father had made him the
+Captain of the forces. The time, therefore, of his setting forth being
+now expired, he addressed himself for his march, and taketh with him, for
+his power, five noble captains and their forces.
+
+1. The first was that famous captain, the noble Captain Credence. His
+were the red colours, and Mr. Promise bare them; and for a scutcheon he
+had the holy lamb and golden shield; and he had ten thousand men at his
+feet.
+
+2. The second was that famous captain, the Captain Good-Hope. His were
+the blue colours; his standard-bearer was Mr. Expectation, and for his
+scutcheon he had the three golden anchors; and he had ten thousand men at
+his feet.
+
+3. The third was that valiant captain, the Captain Charity. His
+standard-bearer was Mr. Pitiful: his were the green colours, and for his
+scutcheon he had three naked orphans embraced in the bosom; and he had
+ten thousand men at his feet.
+
+4. The fourth was that gallant commander, the Captain Innocent. His
+standard-bearer was Mr. Harmless: his were the white colours, and for his
+scutcheon he had the three golden doves.
+
+5. The fifth was the truly loyal and well-beloved captain, the Captain
+Patience. His standard-bearer was Mr. Suffer-Long: his were the black
+colours, and for a scutcheon he had three arrows through the golden
+heart.
+
+These were Emmanuel’s captains; these their standard-bearers, their
+colours, and their scutcheons; and these the men under their command.
+So, as was said, the brave Prince took his march to go to the town of
+Mansoul. Captain Credence led the van, and Captain Patience brought up
+the rear; so the other three, with their men, made up the main body, the
+Prince himself riding in his chariot at the head of them.
+
+But when they set out for their march, oh, how the trumpets sounded,
+their armour glittered, and how the colours waved in the wind! The
+Prince’s armour was all of gold, and it shone like the sun in the
+firmament; the captains’ armour was of proof, and was in appearance like
+the glittering stars. There were also some from the court that rode
+reformades for the love that they had to the King Shaddai, and for the
+happy deliverance of the town of Mansoul.
+
+Emmanuel also, when he had thus set forwards to go to recover the town of
+Mansoul, took with him, at the commandment of his Father, fifty-four
+battering-rams, and twelve slings to whirl stones withal. Every one of
+these was made of pure gold, and these they carried with them, in the
+heart and body of their army, all along as they went to Mansoul.
+
+So they marched till they came within less than a league of the town;
+there they lay till the first four captains came thither to acquaint them
+with matters. Then they took their journey to go to the town of Mansoul,
+and unto Mansoul they came; but when the old soldiers that were in the
+camp saw that they had new forces to join with, they again gave such a
+shout before the walls of the town of Mansoul, that it put Diabolus into
+another fright. So they sat down before the town, not now as the other
+four captains did, to wit, against the gates of Mansoul only; but they
+environed it round on every side, and beset it behind and before; so that
+now, let Mansoul look which way it will, it saw force and power lie in
+siege against it. Besides, there were mounts cast up against it. The
+Mount Gracious was on the one side, and Mount Justice was on the other.
+Further, there were several small banks and advance-grounds, as
+Plain-Truth Hill and No-Sin Banks, where many of the slings were placed
+against the town. Upon Mount Gracious were planted four, and upon Mount
+Justice were placed as many, and the rest were conveniently placed in
+several parts round about the town. Five of the best battering-rams,
+that is, of the biggest of them, were placed upon Mount Hearken, a mount
+cast up hard by Ear-gate, with intent to break that open.
+
+Now when the men of the town saw the multitude of the soldiers that were
+come up against the place, and the rams and slings, and the mounts on
+which they were planted, together with the glittering of the armour and
+the waving of their colours, they were forced to shift, and shift, and
+again to shift their thoughts; but they hardly changed for thoughts more
+stout, but rather for thoughts more faint; for though before they thought
+themselves sufficiently guarded, yet now they began to think that no man
+knew what would be their hap or lot.
+
+When the good Prince Emmanuel had thus beleaguered Mansoul, in the first
+place he hangs out the white flag, which he caused to be set up among the
+golden slings that were planted upon Mount Gracious. And this he did for
+two reasons: 1. To give notice to Mansoul that he could and would yet be
+gracious if they turned to him. 2. And that he might leave them the more
+without excuse, should he destroy them, they continuing in their
+rebellion.
+
+So the white flag, with the three golden doves in it, was hung out for
+two days together, to give them time and space to consider; but they, as
+was hinted before, as if they were unconcerned, made no reply to the
+favourable signal of the Prince.
+
+Then he commanded, and they set the red flag upon that mount called Mount
+Justice. It was the red flag of Captain Judgment, whose scutcheon was
+the burning fiery furnace; and this also stood waving before them in the
+wind for several days together. But look how they carried it under the
+white flag, when that was hung out, so did they also when the red one
+was; and yet he took no advantage of them.
+
+Then he commanded again that his servants should hang out the black flag
+of defiance against them, whose scutcheon was the three burning
+thunderbolts; but as unconcerned was Mansoul at this as at those that
+went before. But when the Prince saw that neither mercy nor judgment,
+nor execution of judgment, would or could come near the heart of Mansoul,
+he was touched with much compunction, and said, ‘Surely this strange
+carriage of the town of Mansoul doth rather arise from ignorance of the
+manner and feats of war, than from a secret defiance of us, and
+abhorrence of their own lives; or if they know the manner of the war of
+their own, yet not the rites and ceremonies of the wars in which we are
+concerned, when I make wars upon mine enemy Diabolus.’
+
+Therefore he sent to the town of Mansoul, to let them know what he meant
+by those signs and ceremonies of the flag; and also to know of them which
+of the things they would choose, whether grace and mercy, or judgment and
+the execution of judgment. All this while they kept their gates shut
+with locks, bolts, and bars, as fast as they could. Their guards also
+were doubled, and their watch made as strong as they could. Diabolus
+also did pluck up what heart he could, to encourage the town to make
+resistance.
+
+The townsmen also made answer to the Prince’s messenger, in substance
+according to that which follows:—
+
+‘Great Sir,—As to what, by your messenger, you have signified to us,
+whether we will accept of your mercy, or fall by your justice, we are
+bound by the law and custom of this place, and can give you no positive
+answer; for it is against the law, government, and the prerogative royal
+of our king, to make either peace or war without him. But this we will
+do,—we will petition that our prince will come down to the wall, and
+there give you such treatment as he shall think fit and profitable for
+us.’
+
+When the good Prince Emmanuel heard this answer, and saw the slavery and
+bondage of the people, and how much content they were to abide in the
+chains of the tyrant Diabolus, it grieved him at the heart; and, indeed,
+when at any time he perceived that any were contented under the slavery
+of the giant, he would be affected with it.
+
+But to return again to our purpose. After the town had carried this news
+to Diabolus, and had told him, moreover, that the Prince, that lay in the
+leaguer without the wall, waited upon them for an answer, he refused, and
+huffed as well as he could; but in heart he was afraid.
+
+Then said he, ‘I will go down to the gates myself, and give him such an
+answer as I think fit.’ So he went down to Mouth-gate, and there
+addressed himself to speak to Emmanuel, (but in such language as the town
+understood not,) the contents whereof were as follows:—
+
+‘O thou great Emmanuel, Lord of all the world, I know thee, that thou art
+the Son of the great Shaddai! Wherefore art thou come to torment me, and
+to cast me out of my possession? This town of Mansoul, as thou very well
+knowest, is mine, and that by a twofold right. 1. It is mine by right of
+conquest; I won it in the open field; and shall the prey be taken from
+the mighty, or the lawful captive be delivered? 2. This town of Mansoul
+is mine also by their subjection. They have opened the gates of their
+town unto me; they have sworn fidelity to me, and have openly chosen me
+to be their king; they have also given their castle into my hands; yea,
+they have put the whole strength of Mansoul under me.
+
+‘Moreover, this town of Mansoul hath disavowed thee, yea, they have cast
+thy law, thy name, thy image, and all that is thine, behind their back,
+and have accepted and set up in their room my law, my name, my image, and
+all that ever is mine. Ask else thy captains, and they will tell thee
+that Mansoul hath, in answer to all their summonses, shown love and
+loyalty to me, but always disdain, despite, contempt, and scorn to thee
+and thine. Now, thou art the Just One and the Holy, and shouldest do no
+iniquity. Depart, then, I pray thee, therefore, from me, and leave me to
+my just inheritance peaceably.’
+
+This oration was made in the language of Diabolus himself; for although
+he can, to every man, speak in their own language, (else he could not
+tempt them all as he does,) yet he has a language proper to himself, and
+it is the language of the infernal cave, or black pit.
+
+Wherefore the town of Mansoul (poor hearts!) understood him not; nor did
+they see how he crouched and cringed while he stood before Emmanuel,
+their Prince.
+
+Yea, they all this while took him to be one of that power and force that
+by no means could be resisted. Wherefore, while he was thus entreating
+that he might have yet his residence there, and that Emmanuel would not
+take it from him by force, the inhabitants boasted even of his valour,
+saying, ‘Who is able to make war with him?’
+
+Well, when this pretended king had made an end of what he would say,
+Emmanuel, the golden Prince, stood up and spake; the contents of whose
+words follow:—
+
+‘Thou deceiving one,’ said he, ‘I have, in my Father’s name, in mine own
+name, and on the behalf and for the good of this wretched town of
+Mansoul, somewhat to say unto thee. Thou pretendest a right, a lawful
+right, to the deplorable town of Mansoul, when it is most apparent to all
+my Father’s court that the entrance which thou hast obtained in at the
+gates of Mansoul was through thy lie and falsehood; thou beliedst my
+Father, thou beliedst his law, and so deceivedst the people of Mansoul.
+Thou pretendest that the people have accepted thee for their king, their
+captain, and right liege lord; but that also was by the exercise of
+deceit and guile. Now, if lying, wiliness, sinful craft, and all manner
+of horrible hypocrisy, will go in my Father’s court (in which court thou
+must be tried) for equity and right, then will I confess unto thee that
+thou hast made a lawful conquest. But, alas! what thief, what tyrant,
+what devil is there that may not conquer after this sort? But I can make
+it appear, O Diabolus, that thou, in all thy pretences to a conquest of
+Mansoul, hast nothing of truth to say. Thinkest thou this to be right,
+that that didst put the lie upon my Father, and madest him (to Mansoul)
+the greatest deluder in the world? And what sayest thou to thy
+perverting knowingly the right purport and intent of the law? Was it
+good also that thou madest a prey of the innocency and simplicity of the
+now miserable town of Mansoul? Yea, thou didst overcome Mansoul by
+promising to them happiness in their transgressions against my Father’s
+law, when thou knewest, and couldest not but know, hadst thou consulted
+nothing but thine own experience, that that was the way to undo them.
+Thou hast also thyself, O thou master of enmity, of spite defaced my
+Father’s image in Mansoul, and set up thy own in its place, to the great
+contempt of my Father, the heightening of thy sin, and to the intolerable
+damage of the perishing town of Mansoul.
+
+‘Thou hast, moreover, (as if all these were but little things with thee,)
+not only deluded and undone this place, but, by thy lies and fradulent
+carriage, hast set them against their own deliverance. How hast thou
+stirred them up against my Father’s captains, and made them to fight
+against those that were sent of him to deliver them from their bondage!
+All these things, and very many more, thou hast done against thy light,
+and in contempt of my Father and of his law, yea, and with design to
+bring under his displeasure for ever the miserable town of Mansoul. I am
+therefore come to avenge the wrong that thou hast done to my Father, and
+to deal with thee for the blasphemies wherewith thou hast made poor
+Mansoul blaspheme his name. Yea, upon thy head, thou prince of the
+infernal cave, will I requite it.
+
+‘As for myself, O Diabolus, I am come against thee by lawful power, and
+to take, by strength of hand, this town of Mansoul out of thy burning
+fingers; for this town of Mansoul is mine, O Diabolus, and that by
+undoubted right, as all shall see that will diligently search the most
+ancient and most authentic records, and I will plead my title to it, to
+the confusion of thy face.
+
+‘First, for the town of Mansoul, my Father built and did fashion it with
+his hand. The palace also that is in the midst of that town, he built it
+for his own delight. This town of Mansoul, therefore, is my Father’s,
+and that by the best of titles, and he that gainsays the truth of this
+must lie against his soul.
+
+‘Secondly, O thou master of the lie, this town of Mansoul is mine.
+
+‘1. For that I am my Father’s heir, his firstborn, and the only delight
+of his heart. I am therefore come up against thee in mine own right,
+even to recover mine own inheritance out of thine hand.
+
+‘2. But further, as I have a right and title to Mansoul by being my
+Father’s heir, so I have also by my Father’s donation. His it was, and
+he gave it me; nor have I at any time offended my Father, that he should
+take it from me, and give it to thee. Nor have I been forced, by playing
+the bankrupt, to sell or set to sale to thee my beloved town of Mansoul.
+Mansoul is my desire, my delight, and the joy of my heart. But,
+
+‘3. Mansoul is mine by right of purchase. I have bought it, O Diabolus,
+I have bought it to myself. Now, since it was my Father’s and mine, as I
+was his heir, and since also I have made it mine by virtue of a great
+purchase, it followeth that, by all lawful right, the town of Mansoul is
+mine, and that thou art an usurper, a tyrant, and traitor, in thy holding
+possession thereof. Now, the cause of my purchasing of it was this:
+Mansoul had trespassed against my Father; now my Father had said, that in
+the day that they broke his law they should die. Now, it is more
+possible for heaven and earth to pass away than for my Father to break
+his word. Wherefore when Mansoul had sinned indeed by hearkening to thy
+lie, I put in and became a surety to my Father, body for body, and soul
+for soul, that I would make amends for Mansoul’s transgressions, and my
+Father did accept thereof. So, when the time appointed was come, I gave
+body for body, soul for soul, life for life, blood for blood, and so
+redeemed my beloved Mansoul.
+
+‘4. Nor did I do this by halves: my Father’s law and justice, that were
+both concerned in the threatening upon transgression, are both now
+satisfied, and very well content that Mansoul should be delivered.
+
+‘5. Nor am I come out this day against thee, but by commandment of my
+Father; it was he that said unto me, “Go down and deliver Mansoul.”
+
+‘Wherefore be it known unto thee, O thou fountain of deceit, and be it
+also known to the foolish town of Mansoul, that I am not come against
+thee this day without my Father.
+
+‘And now,’ said the golden-headed Prince, ‘I have a word to the town of
+Mansoul.’ But so soon as mention was made that he had a word to speak to
+the besotted town of Mansoul, the gates were double-guarded, and all men
+commanded not to give him audience. So he proceeded and said, ‘O unhappy
+town of Mansoul, I cannot but be touched with pity and compassion for
+thee. Thou hast accepted of Diabolus for thy king, and art become a
+nurse and minister of Diabolonians against thy sovereign Lord. Thy gates
+thou hast opened to him, but hast shut them fast against me; thou hast
+given him an hearing, but hast stopped thine ears at my cry. He brought
+to thee thy destruction, and thou didst receive both him and it: I am
+come to thee bringing salvation, but thou regardest me not. Besides,
+thou hast, as with sacrilegious hands, taken thyself, with all that was
+mine in thee, and hast given all to my foe, and to the greatest enemy my
+Father has. You have bowed and subjected yourselves to him, you have
+vowed and sworn yourselves to be his. Poor Mansoul! what shall I do unto
+thee? Shall I save thee?—shall I destroy thee? What shall I do unto
+thee? Shall I fall upon thee, and grind thee to powder, or make thee a
+monument of the richest grace? What shall I do unto thee? Hearken,
+therefore, thou town of Mansoul, hearken to my word, and thou shalt live.
+I am merciful, Mansoul, and thou shalt find me so: shut me not out of thy
+gates.
+
+‘O Mansoul, neither is my commission nor inclination at all to do thee
+hurt. Why fliest thou so fast from thy friend, and stickest so close to
+thine enemy? Indeed, I would have thee, because it becomes thee to be
+sorry for thy sin, but do not despair of life; this great force is not to
+hurt thee, but to deliver thee from thy bondage, and to reduce thee to
+thy obedience.
+
+‘My commission, indeed, is to make a war upon Diabolus thy king, and upon
+all Diabolonians with him; for he is the strong man armed that keeps the
+house, and I will have him out: his spoils I must divide, his armour I
+must take from him, his hold I must cast him out of, and must make it a
+habitation for myself. And this, O Mansoul, shall Diabolus know when he
+shall be made to follow me in chains, and when Mansoul shall rejoice to
+see it so.
+
+‘I could, would I now put forth my might, cause that forthwith he should
+leave you and depart; but I have it in my heart so to deal with him, as
+that the justice of the war that I shall make upon him may be seen and
+acknowledged by all. He hath taken Mansoul by fraud, and keeps it by
+violence and deceit, and I will make him bare and naked in the eyes of
+all observers.
+
+‘All my words are true. I am mighty to save, and will deliver my Mansoul
+out of his hand.’
+
+This speech was intended chiefly for Mansoul, but Mansoul would not have
+the hearing of it. They shut up Ear-gate, they barricaded it up, they
+kept it locked and bolted, they set a guard thereat, and commanded that
+no Mansoulonian should go out to him, nor that any from the camp should
+be admitted into the town. All this they did, so horribly had Diabolus
+enchanted them to do, and seek to do for him, against their rightful Lord
+and Prince; wherefore no man, nor voice, nor sound of man that belonged
+to the glorious host, was to come into the town.
+
+So when Emmanuel saw that Mansoul was thus involved in sin, he calls his
+army together, (since now also his words were despised,) and gave out a
+commandment throughout all his host to be ready against the time
+appointed. Now, forasmuch as there was no way lawfully to take the town
+of Mansoul but to get in by the gates, and at Ear-gate as the chief,
+therefore he commanded his captains and commanders to bring their rams,
+their slings and their men, and place them at Eye-gate and Ear-gate, in
+order to his taking the town.
+
+When Emmanuel had put all things in a readiness to give Diabolus battle,
+he sent again to know of the town of Mansoul, if in peaceable manner they
+would yield themselves, or whether they were yet resolved to put him to
+try the utmost extremity? They then, together with Diabolus their king,
+called a council of war, and resolved upon certain propositions that
+should be offered to Emmanuel, if he will accept thereof, so they agreed;
+and then the next was, who should be sent on this errand. Now, there was
+in the town of Mansoul an old man, a Diabolonian, and his name was Mr.
+Loth-to-stoop, a stiff man in his way, and a great doer for Diabolus;
+him, therefore, they sent, and put into his mouth what he should say. So
+he went and came to the camp to Emmanuel, and when he was come, a time
+was appointed to give him audience. So at the time he came, and after a
+Diabolonian ceremony or two, he thus began and said, ‘Great sir, that it
+may be known unto all men how good-natured a prince my master is, he has
+sent me to tell your lordship that he is very willing, rather than go to
+war, to deliver up into your hands one half of the town of Mansoul. I am
+therefore to know if your Mightiness will accept of this proposition.’
+
+Then said Emmanuel, ‘The whole is mine by gift and purchase, wherefore I
+will never lose one half.’
+
+Then said Mr. Loth-to-stoop, ‘Sir, my master hath said that he will be
+content that you shall be the nominal and titular Lord of all, if he may
+possess but a part.’
+
+Then Emmanuel answered, ‘The whole is mine really, not in name and word
+only; wherefore I will be the sole lord and possessor of all, or of none
+at all, of Mansoul.’
+
+Then Mr. Loth-to-stoop said again, ‘Sir, behold the condescension of my
+master! He says, that he will be content, if he may but have assigned to
+him some place in Mansoul as a place to live privately in, and you shall
+be Lord of all the rest.’
+
+Then said the golden Prince, ‘All that the Father giveth me shall come to
+me; and of all that he giveth me I will lose nothing—no, not a hoof nor a
+hair. I will not, therefore, grant him, no, not the least corner of
+Mansoul to dwell in; I will have all to myself.’
+
+Then Loth-to-stoop said again, ‘But, sir, suppose that my Lord should
+resign the whole town to you, only with this proviso, that he sometimes,
+when he comes into this country, may, for old acquaintance’ sake, be
+entertained as a wayfaring man for two days, or ten days or a month, or
+so. May not this small matter be granted?’
+
+Then said Emmanuel, ‘No. He came as a wayfaring man to David, nor did he
+stay long with him, and yet it had like to have cost David his soul. I
+will not consent that he ever should have any harbour more there.’
+
+Then said Mr. Loth-to-stoop, ‘Sir, you seem to be very hard. Suppose my
+master should yield to all that your lordship hath said, provided that
+his friends and kindred in Mansoul may have liberty to trade in the town,
+and to enjoy their present dwellings. May not that be granted, sir?’
+
+Then said Emmanuel, ‘No; that is contrary to my Father’s will; for all,
+and all manner of Diabolonians that now are, or that at any time shall be
+found in Mansoul, shall not only lose their lands and liberties, but also
+their lives.’
+
+Then said Mr. Loth-to-stoop again, ‘But, sir, may not my master and great
+lord, by letters, by passengers, by accidental opportunities, and the
+like, maintain, if he shall deliver up all unto thee, some kind of old
+friendship with Mansoul?’
+
+Emmanuel answered, ‘No, by no means; forasmuch as any such fellowship,
+friendship, intimacy, or acquaintance, in what way, sort, or mode soever
+maintained, will tend to the corrupting of Mansoul, the alienating of
+their affections from me, and the endangering of their peace with my
+Father.’
+
+Mr. Loth-to-stoop yet added further, saying, ‘But, great sir, since my
+master hath many friends, and those that are dear to him, in Mansoul, may
+he not, if he shall depart from them, even of his bounty and good-nature,
+bestow upon them, as he sees fit, some tokens of his love and kindness
+that he had for them, to the end that Mansoul, when he is gone, may look
+upon such tokens of kindness once received from their old friend, and
+remember him who was once their king, and the merry times that they
+sometimes enjoyed one with another, while he and they lived in peace
+together?’
+
+Then said Emmanuel, ‘No; for if Mansoul come to be mine, I shall not
+admit of nor consent that there should be the least scrap, shred, or dust
+of Diabolus left behind, as tokens of gifts bestowed upon any in Mansoul,
+thereby to call to remembrance the horrible communion that was betwixt
+them and him.’
+
+‘Well, sir,’ said Mr. Loth-to-stoop, ‘I have one thing more to propound,
+and then I am got to the end of my commission. Suppose that, when my
+master is gone from Mansoul, any that shall yet live in the town should
+have such business of high concerns to do, that if they be neglected the
+party shall be undone; and suppose, sir, that nobody can help in that
+case so well as my master and lord, may not now my master be sent for
+upon so urgent an occasion as this? Or if he may not be admitted into
+the town, may not he and the person concerned meet in some of the
+villages near Mansoul, and there lay their heads together, and there
+consult of matters?’
+
+This was the last of those ensnaring propositions that Mr. Loth-to-stoop
+had to propound to Emmanuel on behalf of his master Diabolus; but
+Emmanuel would not grant it; for he said, ‘There can be no case, or
+thing, or matter fall out in Mansoul, when thy master shall be gone, that
+may not be solved by my Father; besides, it will be a great disparagement
+to my Father’s wisdom and skill to admit any from Mansoul to go out to
+Diabolus for advice, when they are bid before, in everything, by prayer
+and supplication to let their requests be made known to my Father.
+Further, this, should it be granted, would be to grant that a door should
+be set open for Diabolus, and the Diabolonians in Mansoul, to hatch, and
+plot, and bring to pass treasonable designs, to the grief of my Father
+and me, and to the utter destruction of Mansoul.’
+
+When Mr. Loth-to-stoop had heard this answer, he took his leave of
+Emmanuel, and departed, saying that he would carry word to his master
+concerning this whole affair. So he departed, and came to Diabolus to
+Mansoul, and told him the whole of the matter, and how Emmanuel would not
+admit, no, not by any means, that he, when he was once gone out, should
+for ever have anything more to do either in, or with any that are of the
+town of Mansoul. When Mansoul and Diabolus had heard this relation of
+things, they with one consent concluded to use their best endeavour to
+keep Emmanuel out of Mansoul, and sent old Ill-Pause, of whom you have
+heard before, to tell the Prince and his captains so. So the old
+gentleman came up to the top of Ear-gate, and called to the camp for a
+hearing, who when they gave audience, he said, ‘I have in commandment
+from my high lord to bid you tell it to your Prince Emmanuel, that
+Mansoul and their king are resolved to stand and fall together; and that
+it is in vain for your Prince to think of ever having Mansoul in his
+hand, unless he can take it by force.’ So some went and told to Emmanuel
+what old Ill-Pause, a Diabolonian in Mansoul, had said. Then said the
+Prince, ‘I must try the power of my sword, for I will not (for all the
+rebellions and repulses that Mansoul has made against me) raise my siege
+and depart, but will assuredly take my Mansoul, and deliver it from the
+hand of her enemy.’ And with that he gave out a commandment that Captain
+Boanerges, Captain Conviction, Captain Judgment, and Captain Execution
+should forthwith march up to Ear-gate with trumpets sounding, colours
+flying, and with shouting for the battle. Also he would that Captain
+Credence should join himself with them. Emmanuel, moreover, gave order
+that Captain Good-Hope and Captain Charity should draw themselves up
+before Eye-gate. He bid also that the rest of his captains and their men
+should place themselves for the best of their advantage against the enemy
+round about the town; and all was done as he had commanded.
+
+Then he bid that the word should be given forth, and the word was at that
+time, ‘EMMANUEL.’ Then was an alarm sounded, and the battering-rams were
+played, and the slings did whirl stones into the town amain, and thus the
+battle began. Now Diabolus himself did manage the townsmen in the war,
+and that at every gate; wherefore their resistance was the more forcible,
+hellish, and offensive to Emmanuel. Thus was the good Prince engaged and
+entertained by Diabolus and Mansoul for several days together; and a
+sight worth seeing it was to behold how the captains of Shaddai behaved
+themselves in this war.
+
+And first for Captain Boanerges, (not to under-value the rest,) he made
+three most fierce assaults, one after another, upon Ear-gate, to the
+shaking of the posts thereof. Captain Conviction, he also made up as
+fast with Boanerges as possibly he could, and both discerning that the
+gate began to yield, they commanded that the rams should still be played
+against it. Now, Captain Conviction, going up very near to the gate, was
+with great force driven back, and received three wounds in the mouth.
+And those that rode reformades, they went about to encourage the
+captains.
+
+For the valour of the two captains, made mention of before, the Prince
+sent for them to his pavilion, and commanded that a while they should
+rest themselves, and that with somewhat they should be refreshed. Care
+also was taken for Captain Conviction, that he should be healed of his
+wounds. The Prince also gave to each of them a chain of gold, and bid
+them yet be of good courage.
+
+Nor did Captain Good-Hope nor Captain Charity come behind in this most
+desperate fight, for they so well did behave themselves at Eye-gate, that
+they had almost broken it quite open. These also had a reward from their
+Prince, as also had the rest of the captains, because they did valiantly
+round about the town.
+
+In this engagement several of the officers of Diabolus were slain, and
+some of the townsmen wounded. For the officers, there was one Captain
+Boasting slain. This Boasting thought that nobody could have shaken the
+posts of Ear-gate, nor have shaken the heart of Diabolus. Next to him
+there was one Captain Secure slain: this Secure used to say that the
+blind and lame in Mansoul were able to keep the gates of the town against
+Emmanuel’s army. This Captain Secure did Captain Conviction cleave down
+the head with a two-handed sword, when he received himself three wounds
+in his mouth.
+
+Besides these there was one Captain Bragman, a very desperate fellow, and
+he was captain over a band of those that threw firebrands, arrows, and
+death: he also received, by the hand of Captain Good-Hope at Eye-gate, a
+mortal wound in the breast.
+
+There was, moreover, one Mr. Feeling; but he was no captain, but a great
+stickler to encourage Mansoul to rebellion. He received a wound in the
+eye by the hand of one of Boanerges’ soldiers, and had by the captain
+himself been slain, but that he made a sudden retreat.
+
+But I never saw Willbewill so daunted in all my life; he was not able to
+do as he was wont, and some say that he also received a wound in the leg,
+and that some of the men in the Prince’s army have certainly seen him
+limp as he afterwards walked on the wall.
+
+I shall not give you a particular account of the names of the soldiers
+that were slain in the town, for many were maimed, and wounded, and
+slain; for when they saw that the posts of Ear-gate did shake, and
+Eye-gate was well-nigh broken quite open, and also that their captains
+were slain, this took away the hearts of many of the Diabolonians; they
+fell also by the force of the shot that were sent by the golden slings
+into the midst of the town of Mansoul.
+
+Of the townsmen, there was one Love-no-Good; he was a townsman, but a
+Diabolonian; he also received his mortal wound in Mansoul, but he died
+not very soon.
+
+Mr. Ill-Pause also, who was the man that came along with Diabolus when at
+first he attempted the taking of Mansoul, he also received a grievous
+wound in the head; some say that his brain-pan was cracked. This I have
+taken notice of, that he was never after this able to do that mischief to
+Mansoul as he had done in times past. Also old Prejudice and Mr.
+Anything fled.
+
+Now, when the battle was over, the Prince commanded that yet once more
+the white flag should be set upon Mount Gracious in sight of the town of
+Mansoul, to show that yet Emmanuel had grace for the wretched town of
+Mansoul.
+
+When Diabolus saw the white flag hung out again, and knowing that it was
+not for him, but Mansoul, he cast in his mind to play another prank, to
+wit, to see if Emmanuel would raise his siege and begone, upon promise of
+reformation. So he comes down to the gate one evening, a good while
+after the sun was gone down, and calls to speak with Emmanuel, who
+presently came down to the gate, and Diabolus saith unto him:
+
+‘Forasmuch as thou makest it appear by thy white flag that thou art
+wholly given to peace and quiet, I thought meet to acquaint thee that we
+are ready to accept thereof upon terms which thou mayest admit.
+
+‘I know that thou art given to devotion, and that holiness pleaseth thee;
+yea, that thy great end in making a war upon Mansoul is, that it may be a
+holy habitation. Well, draw off thy forces from the town, and I will
+bend Mansoul to thy bow.
+
+‘First, I will lay down all acts of hostility against thee, and will be
+willing to become thy deputy, and will, as I have formerly been against
+thee, now serve thee in the town of Mansoul. And more particularly,
+
+‘1. I will persuade Mansoul to receive thee for their Lord; and I know
+that they will do it the sooner when they shall understand that I am thy
+deputy.
+
+‘2. I will show them wherein they have erred, and that transgression
+stands in the way to life.
+
+‘3. I will show them the holy law unto which they must conform, even that
+which they have broken.
+
+‘4. I will press upon them the necessity of a reformation according to
+thy law.
+
+‘5. And, moreover, that none of these things may fail, I myself, at my
+own proper cost and charge, will set up and maintain a sufficient
+ministry, besides lectures, in Mansoul.
+
+‘6. Thou shalt receive, as a token of our subjection to thee, year by
+year, what thou shalt think fit to lay and levy upon us in token of our
+subjection to thee.’
+
+Then said Emmanuel to him, ‘O full of deceit, how movable are thy ways!
+How often hast thou changed and rechanged, if so be thou mightest still
+keep possession of my Mansoul, though, as has been plainly declared
+before, I am the right heir thereof! Often hast thou made thy proposals
+already, nor is this last a whit better than they. And failing to
+deceive when thou showedst thyself in thy black, thou hast now
+transformed thyself into an angel of light, and wouldst, to deceive, be
+now as a minister of righteousness.
+
+‘But know thou, O Diabolus, that nothing must be regarded that thou canst
+propound, for nothing is done by thee but to deceive. Thou neither hast
+conscience to God, nor love to the town of Mansoul; whence, then, should
+these thy sayings arise but from sinful craft and deceit? He that can of
+list and will propound what he pleases, and that wherewith he may destroy
+them that believe him, is to be abandoned, with all that he shall say.
+But if righteousness be such a beauty-spot in thine eyes now, how is it
+that wickedness was so closely stuck to by thee before? But this is
+by-the-bye.
+
+‘Thou talkest now of a reformation in Mansoul, and that thou thyself, if
+I will please, wilt be at the head of that reformation; all the while
+knowing that the greatest proficiency that man can make in the law, and
+the righteousness thereof, will amount to no more, for the taking away of
+the curse from Mansoul, than just nothing at all; for a law being broken
+by Mansoul, that had before, upon a supposition of the breach thereof, a
+curse pronounced against him for it of God, can never, by his obeying of
+the law, deliver himself therefrom (to say nothing of what a reformation
+is like to be set up in Mansoul when the devil is become corrector of
+vice). Thou knowest that all that thou hast now said in this matter is
+nothing but guile and deceit; and is, as it was the first, so is it the
+last card that thou hast to play. Many there be that do soon discern
+thee when thou showest them thy cloven foot; but in thy white, thy light,
+and in thy transformation, thou art seen but of a few. But thou shalt
+not do thus with my Mansoul, O Diabolus; for I do still love my Mansoul.
+
+‘Besides, I am not come to put Mansoul upon works to live thereby; should
+I do so, I should be like unto thee: but I am come that by me, and by
+what I have and shall do for Mansoul, they may to my Father be
+reconciled, though by their sin they have provoked him to anger, and
+though by the law they cannot obtain mercy.
+
+‘Thou talkest of subjecting of this town to good, when none desireth it
+at thy hands. I am sent by my Father to possess it myself, and to guide
+it by the skilfulness of my hands into such a conformity to him as shall
+be pleasing in his sight. I will therefore possess it myself; I will
+dispossess and cast thee out; I will set up mine own standard in the
+midst of them; I will also govern them by new laws, new officers, new
+motives, and new ways; yea, I will pull down this town, and build it
+again; and it shall be as though it had not been, and it shall then be
+the glory of the whole universe.’
+
+When Diabolus heard this, and perceived that he was discovered in all his
+deceits, he was confounded, and utterly put to a nonplus; but having in
+himself the fountain of iniquity, rage, and malice against both Shaddai
+and his Son, and the beloved town of Mansoul, what doth he but strengthen
+himself what he could to give fresh battle to the noble Prince Emmanuel?
+So, then, now we must have another fight before the town of Mansoul is
+taken. Come up, then, to the mountains, you that love to see military
+actions, and behold by both sides how the fatal blow is given, while one
+seeks to hold, and the other seeks to make himself master of the famous
+town of Mansoul.
+
+Diabolus, therefore, having withdrawn himself from the wall to his force
+that was in the heart of the town of Mansoul, Emmanuel also returned to
+the camp; and both of them, after their divers ways, put themselves into
+a posture fit to give battle one to another.
+
+Diabolus, as filled with despair of retaining in his hands the famous
+town of Mansoul, resolved to do what mischief he could (if, indeed, he
+could do any) to the army of the Prince and to the famous town of
+Mansoul; for, alas! it was not the happiness of the silly town of Mansoul
+that was designed by Diabolus, but the utter ruin and overthrow thereof,
+as now is enough in view. Wherefore, he commands his officers that they
+should then, when they see that they could hold the town no longer, do it
+what harm and mischief they could, rendering and tearing men, women, and
+children. ‘For,’ said he, ‘we had better quite demolish the place, and
+leave it like a ruinous heap, than so leave it that it may be an
+habitation for Emmanuel.’
+
+Emmanuel again, knowing that the next battle would issue in his being
+made master of the place, gave out a royal commandment to all his
+officers, high captains, and men of war, to be sure to show themselves
+men of war against Diabolus and all Diabolonians; but favourable,
+merciful, and meek to the old inhabitants of Mansoul. ‘Bend, therefore,’
+said the noble Prince, ‘the hottest front of the battle against Diabolus
+and his men.’
+
+So the day being come, the command was given, and the Prince’s men did
+bravely stand to their arms, and did, as before, bend their main force
+against Ear-gate and Eye-gate. The word was then, ‘Mansoul is won!’ so
+they made their assault upon the town. Diabolus also, as fast as he
+could, with the main of his power, made resistance from within; and his
+high lords and chief captains for a time fought very cruelly against the
+Prince’s army.
+
+But after three or four notable charges by the Prince and his noble
+captains, Ear-gate was broken open, and the bars and bolts wherewith it
+was used to be fast shut up against the Prince, were broken into a
+thousand pieces. Then did the Prince’s trumpets sound, the captains
+shout, the town shake, and Diabolus retreat to his hold. Well, when the
+Prince’s forces had broken open the gate, himself came up and did set his
+throne in it; also he set his standard thereby, upon a mount that before
+by his men was cast up to place the mighty slings thereon. The mount was
+called Mount Hear-well. There, therefore, the Prince abode, to wit, hard
+by the going in at the gate. He commanded also that the golden slings
+should yet be played upon the town, especially against the castle,
+because for shelter thither was Diabolus retreated. Now, from Ear-gate
+the street was straight even to the house of Mr. Recorder that so was
+before Diabolus took the town; and hard by his house stood the castle,
+which Diabolus for a long time had made his irksome den. The captains,
+therefore, did quickly clear that street by the use of their slings, so
+that way was made up to the heart of the town. Then did the Prince
+command that Captain Boanerges, Captain Conviction, and Captain Judgment,
+should forthwith march up the town to the old gentleman’s gate. Then did
+the captains in the most warlike manner enter into the town of Mansoul,
+and marching in with flying colours, they came up to the Recorder’s
+house, and that was almost as strong as was the castle. Battering-rams
+they took also with them, to plant against the castle gates. When they
+were come to the house of Mr. Conscience, they knocked, and demanded
+entrance. Now, the old gentleman, not knowing as yet fully their design,
+kept his gates shut all the time of this fight. Wherefore Boanerges
+demanded entrance at his gates; and no man making answer, he gave it one
+stroke with the head of a ram, and this made the old gentleman shake, and
+his house to tremble and totter. Then came Mr. Recorder down to the
+gates, and, as he could, with quivering lips he asked who was there?
+Boanerges answered, ‘We are the captains and commanders of the great
+Shaddai and of the blessed Emmanuel, his Son, and we demand possession of
+your house for the use of our noble Prince.’ And with that the
+battering-ram gave the gate another shake. This made the old gentleman
+tremble the more, yet durst he not but open the gate: then the King’s
+forces marched in, namely, the three brave captains mentioned before.
+Now, the Recorder’s house was a place of much convenience for Emmanuel,
+not only because it was near to the castle and strong, but also because
+it was large, and fronted the castle, the den where now Diabolus was, for
+he was now afraid to come out of his hold. As for Mr. Recorder, the
+captains carried it very reservedly to him; as yet he knew nothing of the
+great designs of Emmanuel, so that he did not know what judgment to make,
+nor what would be the end of such thundering beginnings. It was also
+presently noised in the town how the Recorder’s house was possessed, his
+rooms taken up, and his palace made the seat of the war; and no sooner
+was it noised abroad, but they took the alarm as warmly, and gave it out
+to others of his friends, and you know, as a snowball loses nothing by
+rolling, so in little time the whole town was possessed that they must
+expect nothing from the Prince but destruction; and the ground of the
+business was this, the Recorder was afraid, the Recorder trembled, and
+the captains carried it strangely to the Recorder. So many came to see,
+but when they with their own eyes did behold the captains in the palace,
+and their battering-rams ever playing at the castle gates to beat them
+down, they were riveted in their fears, and it made them all in amaze.
+And, as I said, the man of the house would increase all this; for whoever
+came to him, or discoursed with him, nothing would he talk of, tell them,
+or hear, but that death and destruction now attended Mansoul.
+
+‘For,’ quoth the old gentleman, ‘you are all of you sensible that we all
+have been traitors to that once despised, but now famously victorious and
+glorious Prince Emmanuel; for he now, as you see, doth not only lie in
+close siege about us, but hath forced his entrance in at our gates.
+Moreover, Diabolus flees before him; and he hath, as you behold, made of
+my house a garrison against the castle where he is. I, for my part, have
+transgressed greatly, and he that is clean, it is well for him. But I
+say I have transgressed greatly in keeping silence when I should have
+spoken, and in perverting justice when I should have executed the same.
+True, I have suffered something at the hand of Diabolus for taking part
+with the laws of King Shaddai; but that, alas! what will that do? Will
+that make compensation for the rebellions and treasons that I have done,
+and have suffered without gainsaying to be committed in the town of
+Mansoul? Oh! I tremble to think what will be the end of this so dreadful
+and so ireful a beginning!’
+
+Now, while these brave captains were thus busy in the house of the old
+Recorder, Captain Execution was as busy in other parts of the town, in
+securing the back streets and the walls. He also hunted the Lord
+Willbewill sorely; he suffered him not to rest in any corner; he pursued
+him so hard that he drove his men from him, and made him glad to thrust
+his head into a hole. Also this mighty warrior did cut three of the Lord
+Willbewill’s officers down to the ground: one was old Mr. Prejudice, he
+that had his crown cracked in the mutiny. This man was made by Lord
+Willbewill keeper of the Ear-gate, and fell by the hand of Captain
+Execution. There was also one Mr. Backward-to-all-but-naught, and he
+also was one of Lord Willbewill’s officers, and was the captain of the
+two guns that once were mounted on the top of Ear-gate; he also was cut
+down to the ground by the hands of Captain Execution. Besides these two
+there was another, a third, and his name was Captain Treacherous; a vile
+man this was, but one that Willbewill did put a great deal of confidence
+in; but him also did this Captain Execution cut down to the ground with
+the rest.
+
+He also made a very great slaughter among my Lord Willbewill’s soldiers,
+killing many that were stout and sturdy, and wounding many that for
+Diabolus were nimble and active. But all these were Diabolonians; there
+was not a man, a native of Mansoul, hurt.
+
+Other feats of war were also likewise performed by other of the captains,
+as at Eye-gate, where Captain Good-Hope and Captain Charity had a charge,
+was great execution done; for the Captain Good-Hope, with his own hands,
+slew one Captain Blindfold, the keeper of that gate. This Blindfold was
+captain of a thousand men, and they were they that fought with mauls; he
+also pursued his men, slew many, and wounded more, and made the rest hide
+their heads in corners.
+
+There was also at that gate Mr. Ill-Pause, of whom you have heard before.
+He was an old man, and had a beard that reached down to his girdle: the
+same was he that was orator to Diabolus: he did much mischief in the town
+of Mansoul, and fell by the hand of Captain Good-Hope.
+
+What shall I say? The Diabolonians in these days lay dead in every
+corner, though too many yet were alive in Mansoul.
+
+Now, the old Recorder and my Lord Understanding, with some others of the
+chief of the town, to wit, such as knew they must stand and fall with the
+famous town of Mansoul, came together upon a day, and after consultation
+had, did jointly agree to draw up a petition, and to send it to Emmanuel,
+now while he sat in the gate of Mansoul. So they drew up their petition
+to Emmanuel, the contents whereof were these: That they, the old
+inhabitants of the now deplorable town of Mansoul, confessed their sin,
+and were sorry that they had offended his princely Majesty, and prayed
+that he would spare their lives.
+
+Unto this petition he gave no answer at all, and that did trouble them
+yet so much the more. Now, all this while the captains that were in the
+Recorder’s house were playing with the battering-rams at the gates of the
+castle, to beat them down. So after some time, labour, and travail, the
+gate of the castle that was called Impregnable was beaten open, and
+broken into several splinters, and so a way made to go up to the hold in
+which Diabolus had hid himself. Then were tidings sent down to Ear-gate,
+for Emmanuel still abode there, to let him know that a way was made in at
+the gates of the castle of Mansoul. But, oh! how the trumpets at the
+tidings sounded throughout the Prince’s camp, for that now the war was so
+near an end, and Mansoul itself of being set free.
+
+Then the Prince arose from the place where he was, and took with him such
+of his men of war as were fittest for that expedition, and marched up the
+street of Mansoul to the old Recorder’s house.
+
+Now, the Prince himself was clad all in armour of gold, and so he marched
+up the town with his standard borne before him; but he kept his
+countenance much reserved all the way as he went, so that the people
+could not tell how to gather to themselves love or hatred by his looks.
+Now, as he marched up the street, the townsfolk came out at every door to
+see, and could not but be taken with his person and the glory thereof,
+but wondered at the reservedness of his countenance; for as yet he spake
+more to them by his actions and works than he did by words or smiles.
+But also poor Mansoul, (as in such cases all are apt to do,) they
+interpreted the carriage of Emmanuel to them as did Joseph’s brethren his
+to them, even all the quite contrary way. ‘For,’ thought they, ‘if
+Emmanuel loved us, he would show it to us by word of carriage; but none
+of these he doth, therefore Emmanuel hates us. Now, if Emmanuel hates
+us, then Mansoul shall be slain, then Mansoul shall become a dunghill.’
+They knew that they had transgressed his Father’s law, and that against
+him they had been in with Diabolus, his enemy. They also knew that the
+Prince Emmanuel knew all this; for they were convinced that he was an
+angel of God, to know all things that are done in the earth; and this
+made them think that their condition was miserable, and that the good
+Prince would make them desolate.
+
+‘And,’ thought they, ‘what time so fit to do this in as now, when he has
+the bridle of Mansoul in his hand?’ And this I took special notice of,
+that the inhabitants, notwithstanding all this, could not—no, they could
+not, when they see him march through the town, but cringe, bow, bend, and
+were ready to lick the dust of his feet. They also wished a thousand
+times over that he would become their Prince and Captain, and would
+become their protection. They would also one to another talk of the
+comeliness of his person, and how much for glory and valour he
+outstripped the great ones of the world. But, poor hearts, as to
+themselves, their thoughts would chance, and go upon all manner of
+extremes. Yea, through the working of them backward and forward, Mansoul
+became as a ball tossed, and as a rolling thing before the whirlwind.
+
+Now, when he was come to the castle gates, he commanded Diabolus to
+appear, and to surrender himself into his hands. But, oh! how loath was
+the beast to appear! how he stuck at it! how he shrank! how he cringed!
+yet out he came to the Prince. Then Emmanuel commanded, and they took
+Diabolus and bound him fast in chains, the better to reserve him to the
+judgment that he had appointed for him. But Diabolus stood up to entreat
+for himself that Emmanuel would not send him into the deep, but suffer
+him to depart out of Mansoul in peace.
+
+When Emmanuel had taken him and bound him in chains, he led him into the
+marketplace, and there, before Mansoul, stripped him of his armour in
+which he boasted so much before. This now was one of the acts of triumph
+of Emmanuel over his enemy; and all the while that the giant was
+stripping, the trumpets of the golden Prince did sound amain; the
+captains also shouted, and the soldiers did sing for joy.
+
+Then was Mansoul called upon to behold the beginning of Emmanuel’s
+triumph over him in whom they so much had trusted, and of whom they so
+much had boasted in the days when he flattered them.
+
+Thus having made Diabolus naked in the eyes of Mansoul, and before the
+commanders of the Prince, in the next place, he commands that Diabolus
+should be bound with chains to his chariot wheels. Then leaving some of
+his forces, to wit, Captain Boanerges and Captain Conviction, as a guard
+for the castle-gates, that resistance might be made on his behalf, (if
+any that heretofore followed Diabolus should make an attempt to possess
+it,) he did ride in triumph over him quite through the town of Mansoul,
+and so out at and before the gate called Eye-gate, to the plain where his
+camp did lie.
+
+But you cannot think, unless you had been there, as I was, what a shout
+there was in Emmanuel’s camp when they saw the tyrant bound by the hand
+of their noble Prince, and tied to his chariot wheels!
+
+And they said, ‘He hath led captivity captive, he hath spoiled
+principalities and powers. Diabolus is subjected to the power of his
+sword, and made the object of all derision.’
+
+Those also that rode reformades, and that came down to see the battle,
+they shouted with that greatness of voice, and sung with such melodious
+notes, that they caused them that dwell in the highest orbs to open their
+windows, put out their heads, and look to see the cause of that glory.
+
+The townsmen also, so many of them as saw this sight, were, as it were,
+while they looked, betwixt the earth and the heavens. True, they could
+not tell what would be the issue of things as to them; but all things
+were done in such excellent methods, and I cannot tell how, but things in
+the management of them seemed to cast a smile towards the town, so that
+their eyes, their heads, their hearts, and their minds, and all that they
+had, were taken and held while they observed Emmanuel’s order.
+
+So, when the brave Prince had finished this part of his triumph over
+Diabolus his foe, he turned him up in the midst of his contempt and
+shame, having given him a charge no more to be a possessor of Mansoul.
+Then went he from Emmanuel, and out of the midst of his camp, to inherit
+the parched places in a salt land, seeking rest, but finding none.
+
+Now, Captain Boanerges and Captain Conviction were, both of them, men of
+very great majesty; their faces were like the faces of lions, and their
+words like the roaring of the sea; and they still quartered in Mr.
+Conscience’s house, of whom mention was made before. When, therefore,
+the high and mighty Prince had thus far finished his triumph over
+Diabolus, the townsmen had more leisure to view and to behold the actions
+of these noble captains. But the captains carried it with that terror
+and dread in all that they did, (and you may be sure that they had
+private instructions so to do,) that they kept the town under continual
+heart-aching, and caused (in their apprehension) the well-being of
+Mansoul for the future to hang in doubt before them, so that for some
+considerable time they neither knew what rest, or ease, or peace, or hope
+meant.
+
+Nor did the Prince himself as yet abide in the town of Mansoul, but in
+his royal pavilion in the camp, and in the midst of his Father’s forces.
+So, at a time convenient, he sent special orders to Captain Boanerges to
+summons Mansoul, the whole of the townsmen, into the castle-yard, and
+then and there, before their faces, to take my Lord Understanding, Mr.
+Conscience, and that notable one, the Lord Willbewill, and put them all
+three in ward, and that they should set a strong guard upon them there,
+until his pleasure concerning them was further known: the which orders,
+when the captains had put them in execution, made no small addition to
+the fears of the town of Mansoul; for now, to their thinking, were their
+former fears of the ruin of Mansoul confirmed. Now, what death they
+should die, and how long they should be in dying, was that which most
+perplexed their heads and hearts; yea, they were afraid that Emmanuel
+would command them all into the deep, the place that the prince Diabolus
+was afraid of, for they knew that they had deserved it. Also to die by
+the sword in the face of the town, and in the open way of disgrace, from
+the hand of so good and so holy a prince, that, too, troubled them sore.
+The town was also greatly troubled for the men that were committed to
+ward, for that they were their stay and their guide, and for that they
+believed that, if those men were cut off, their execution would be but
+the beginning of the ruin of the town of Mansoul. Wherefore, what do
+they, but, together with the men in prison, draw up a petition to the
+Prince, and sent it to Emmanuel by the hand of Mr. Would-live. So he
+went, and came to the Prince’s quarters, and presented the petition, the
+sum of which was this:
+
+‘Great and wonderful Potentate, victor over Diabolus, and conqueror of
+the town of Mansoul, We, the miserable inhabitants of that most woful
+corporation, do humbly beg that we may find favour in thy sight, and
+remember not against us former transgressions, nor yet the sins of the
+chief of our town: but spare us according to the greatness of thy mercy,
+and let us not die, but live in thy sight. So shall we be willing to be
+thy servants, and, if thou shalt think fit, to gather our meat under thy
+table. Amen.’
+
+So the petitioner went, as was said, with his petition to the Prince; and
+the Prince took it at his hand, but sent him away with silence. This
+still afflicted the town of Mansoul; but yet, considering that now they
+must either petition or die, for now they could not do anything else,
+therefore they consulted again, and sent another petition; and this
+petition was much after the form and method of the former.
+
+But when the petition was drawn up, By whom should they send it? was the
+next question; for they would not send this by him by whom they sent the
+first, for they thought that the Prince had taken some offence at the
+manner of his deportment before him: so they attempted to make Captain
+Conviction their messenger with it; but he said that he neither durst nor
+would petition Emmanuel for traitors, nor be to the Prince an advocate
+for rebels. ‘Yet withal,’ said he, ‘our Prince is good, and you may
+adventure to send it by the hand of one of your town, provided he went
+with a rope about his head, and pleaded nothing but mercy.’
+
+Well, they made, through fear, their delays as long as they could, and
+longer than delays were good; but fearing at last the dangerousness of
+them, they thought, but with many a fainting in their minds, to send
+their petition by Mr. Desires-awake; so they sent for Mr. Desires-awake.
+Now he dwelt in a very mean cottage in Mansoul, and he came at his
+neighbour’s request. So they told him what they had done, and what they
+would do, concerning petitioning, and that they did desire of him that he
+would go therewith to the Prince.
+
+Then said Mr. Desires-awake, ‘Why should not I do the best I can to save
+so famous a town as Mansoul from deserved destruction?’ They therefore
+delivered the petition to him, and told him how he must address himself
+to the Prince, and wished him ten thousand good speeds. So he comes to
+the Prince’s pavilion, as the first, and asked to speak with his Majesty.
+So word was carried to Emmanuel, and the Prince came out to the man.
+When Mr. Desires-awake saw the Prince, he fell flat with his face to the
+ground, and cried out, ‘Oh that Mansoul might live before thee!’ and with
+that he presented the petition; the which when the Prince had read, he
+turned away for a while and wept; but refraining himself, he turned again
+to the man, who all this while lay crying at his feet, as at the first,
+and said to him, ‘Go thy way to thy place, and I will consider of thy
+requests.’
+
+Now, you may think that they of Mansoul that had sent him, what with
+guilt, and what with fear lest their petition should be rejected, could
+not but look with many a long look, and that, too, with strange workings
+of heart, to see what would become of their petition. At last they saw
+their messenger coming back. So, when he was come, they asked him how he
+fared, what Emmanuel said, and what was become of the petition. But he
+told them that he would be silent till he came to the prison to my Lord
+Mayor, my Lord Willbewill, and Mr. Recorder. So he went forwards towards
+the prison-house, where the men of Mansoul lay bound. But, oh! what a
+multitude flocked after, to hear what the messenger said. So, when he
+was come, and had shown himself at the gate of the prison, my Lord Mayor
+himself looked as white as a clout; the Recorder also did quake. But
+they asked and said, ‘Come, good sir, what did the great Prince say to
+you?’ Then said Mr. Desires-awake, ‘When I came to my Lord’s pavilion, I
+called, and he came forth. So I fell prostrate at his feet, and
+delivered to him my petition; for the greatness of his person, and the
+glory of his countenance, would not suffer me to stand upon my legs.
+Now, as he received the petition, I cried, “Oh that Mansoul might live
+before thee!” So, when for a while he had looked thereon, he turned him
+about, and said to his servant, “Go thy way to thy place again, and I
+will consider of thy requests.”’ The messenger added, moreover, and
+said, ‘The Prince to whom you sent me is such a one for beauty and glory,
+that whoso sees him must both love and fear him. I, for my part, can do
+no less; but I know not what will be the end of these things.’
+
+At this answer they were all at a stand, both they in prison, and they
+that followed the messenger thither to hear the news; nor knew they what,
+or what manner of interpretation to put upon what the Prince had said.
+Now, when the prison was cleared of the throng, the prisoners among
+themselves began to comment upon Emmanuel’s words. My Lord Mayor said,
+that the answer did not look with a rugged face; but Willbewill said that
+it betokened evil; and the Recorder, that it was a messenger of death.
+Now, they that were left, and that stood behind, and so could not so well
+hear what the prisoners said, some of them catched hold of one piece of a
+sentence, and some on a bit of another; some took hold of what the
+messenger said, and some of the prisoners’ judgment thereon; so none had
+the right understanding of things. But you cannot imagine what work
+these people made, and what a confusion there was in Mansoul now.
+
+For presently they that had heard what was said flew about the town, one
+crying one thing, and another the quite contrary; and both were sure
+enough they told true; for they did hear, they said, with their ears what
+was said, and therefore could not be deceived. One would say, ‘We must
+all be killed;’ another would say, ‘We must all be saved;’ and a third
+would say that the Prince would not be concerned with Mansoul; and a
+fourth, that the prisoners must be suddenly put to death. And, as I
+said, every one stood to it that he told his tale the rightest, and that
+all others but he were out. Wherefore Mansoul had now molestation upon
+molestation, nor could any man know on what to rest the sole of his foot;
+for one would go by now, and as he went, if he heard his neighbour tell
+his tale, to be sure he would tell the quite contrary, and both would
+stand in it that he told the truth. Nay, some of them had got this story
+by the end, that the Prince did intend to put Mansoul to the sword. And
+now it began to be dark, wherefore poor Mansoul was in sad perplexity all
+that night until the morning.
+
+But, so far as I could gather by the best information that I could get,
+all this hubbub came through the words that the Recorder said when he
+told them that, in his judgment, the Prince’s answer was a messenger of
+death. It was this that fired the town, and that began the fright in
+Mansoul; for Mansoul in former times did use to count that Mr. Recorder
+was a seer, and that his sentence was equal to the best of orators; and
+thus was Mansoul a terror to itself.
+
+And now did they begin to feel what were the effects of stubborn
+rebellion, and unlawful resistance against their Prince. I say, they now
+began to feel the effects thereof by guilt and fear, that now had
+swallowed them up; and who more involved in the one but they that were
+most in the other, to wit, the chief of the town of Mansoul?
+
+To be brief: when the fame of the fright was out of the town, and the
+prisoners had a little recovered themselves, they take to themselves some
+heart, and think to petition the Prince for life again. So they did draw
+up a third petition, the contents whereof were these:—
+
+‘Prince Emmanuel the Great, Lord of all worlds, and Master of mercy, we,
+thy poor, wretched, miserable, dying town of Mansoul, do confess unto thy
+great and glorious Majesty that we have sinned against thy Father and
+thee, and are no more worthy to be called thy Mansoul, but rather to be
+cast into the pit. If thou wilt slay us, we have deserved it. If thou
+wilt condemn us to the deep, we cannot but say thou art righteous. We
+cannot complain whatever thou dost, or however thou carriest it towards
+us. But, oh! let mercy reign, and let it be extended to us! Oh! let
+mercy take hold upon us, and free us from our transgressions, and we will
+sing of thy mercy and of thy judgment. Amen.’
+
+This petition, when drawn up, was designed to be sent to the Prince as
+the first. But who should carry it?—that was the question. Some said,
+‘Let him do it that went with the first,’ but others thought not good to
+do that, and that because he sped no better. Now, there was an old man
+in the town, and his name was Mr. Good-Deed; a man that bare only the
+name, but had nothing of the nature of the thing. Now, some were for
+sending him; but the Recorder was by no means for that. ‘For,’ said he,
+‘we now stand in need of, and are pleading for mercy: wherefore, to send
+our petition by a man of this name, will seem to cross the petition
+itself. Should we make Mr. Good-Deed our messenger, when our petition
+cries for mercy?
+
+‘Besides,’ quoth the old gentleman, ‘should the Prince now, as he
+receives the petition, ask him, and say, “What is thy name?” as nobody
+knows but he will, and he should say, “Old Good-Deed,” what, think you,
+would Emmanuel say but this? “Ay! is old Good-Deed yet alive in Mansoul?
+then let old Good-Deed save you from your distresses.” And if he says
+so, I am sure we are lost; nor can a thousand of old Good-Deeds save
+Mansoul.’
+
+After the Recorder had given in his reasons why old Good-Deed should not
+go with this petition to Emmanuel, the rest of the prisoners and chief of
+Mansoul opposed it also, and so old Good-Deed was laid aside, and they
+agreed to send Mr. Desires-awake again. So they sent for him, and
+desired him that he would a second time go with their petition to the
+Prince, and he readily told them he would. But they bid him that in
+anywise he should take heed that in no word or carriage he gave offence
+to the Prince; ‘For by doing so, for ought we can tell, you may bring
+Mansoul into utter destruction,’ said they.
+
+Now Mr. Desires-awake, when he saw that he must go on this errand,
+besought that they would grant that Mr. Wet-Eyes might go with him. Now
+this Mr. Wet-Eyes was a near neighbour of Mr. Desires, a poor man, a man
+of a broken spirit, yet one that could speak well to a petition; so they
+granted that he should go with him. Wherefore, they address themselves
+to their business: Mr. Desires put a rope upon his head, and Mr. Wet-Eyes
+went with his hands wringing together. Thus they went to the Prince’s
+pavilion.
+
+Now, when they went to petition this third time, they were not without
+thoughts that, by often coming, they might be a burden to the Prince.
+Wherefore, when they were come to the door of his pavilion, they first
+made their apology for themselves, and for their coming to trouble
+Emmanuel so often; and they said, that they came not hither to-day for
+that they delighted in being troublesome, or for that they delighted to
+hear themselves talk, but for that necessity caused them to come to his
+Majesty. They could, they said, have no rest day nor night because of
+their transgressions against Shaddai and against Emmanuel, his Son. They
+also thought that some misbehaviour of Mr. Desires-awake the last time
+might give distaste to his Highness, and so cause that he returned from
+so merciful a Prince empty, and without countenance. So, when they had
+made this apology, Mr. Desires-awake cast himself prostrate upon the
+ground, as at the first, at the feet of the mighty Prince, saying, ‘Oh!
+that Mansoul might live before thee!’ and so he delivered his petition.
+The Prince then, having read the petition, turned aside awhile as before,
+and coming again to the place where the petitioner lay on the ground, he
+demanded what his name was, and of what esteem in the account of Mansoul,
+for that he, above all the multitude in Mansoul, should be sent to him
+upon such an errand. Then said the man to the Prince, ‘Oh let not my
+Lord be angry; and why inquirest thou after the name of such a dead do—as
+I am? Pass by, I pray thee, and take not notice of who I am, because
+there is, as thou very well knowest, so great a disproportion between me
+and thee. Why the townsmen chose to send me on this errand to my Lord is
+best known to themselves, but it could not be for that they thought that
+I had favour with my Lord. For my part, I am out of charity with myself;
+who, then, should be in love with me? Yet live I would, and so would I
+that my townsmen should; and because both they and myself are guilty of
+great transgressions, therefore they have sent me, and I am come in their
+names to beg of my Lord for mercy. Let it please thee, therefore, to
+incline to mercy; but ask not what thy servants are.’
+
+Then said the Prince, ‘And what is he that is become thy companion in
+this so weighty a matter?’ So Mr. Desires told Emmanuel that he was a
+poor neighbour of his, and one of his most intimate associates. ‘And his
+name,’ said he, ‘may it please your most excellent Majesty, is Wet-Eyes,
+of the town of Mansoul, I know that there are many of that name that are
+naught; but I hope it will be no offence to my Lord that I have brought
+my poor neighbour with me.’
+
+Then Mr. Wet-Eyes fell on his face to the ground, and made this apology
+for his coming with his neighbour to his Lord:—
+
+‘O, my Lord,’ quoth he, ‘what I am I know not myself, nor whether my name
+be feigned or true, especially when I begin to think what some have said,
+namely, That this name was given me because Mr. Repentance was my father.
+Good men have bad children, and the sincere do oftentimes beget
+hypocrites. My mother also called me by this name from the cradle; but
+whether because of the moistness of my brain, or because of the softness
+of my heart, I cannot tell. I see dirt in mine own tears, and filthiness
+in the bottom of my prayers. But I pray thee (and all this while the
+gentleman wept) that thou wouldest not remember against us our
+transgressions, nor take offence at the unqualifiedness of thy servants,
+but mercifully pass by the sin of Mansoul, and refrain from the
+glorifying of thy grace no longer.’
+
+So at his bidding they arose, and both stood trembling before him, and he
+spake to them to this purpose:—
+
+‘The town of Mansoul hath grievously rebelled against my Father, in that
+they have rejected him from being their King, and did choose to
+themselves for their captain a liar, a murderer, and a runagate slave.
+For this Diabolus, your pretended prince, though once so highly accounted
+of by you, made rebellion against my Father and me, even in our palace
+and highest court there, thinking to become a prince and king. But being
+there timely discovered and apprehended, and for his wickedness bound in
+chains, and separated to the pit with those that were his companions, he
+offered himself to you, and you have received him.
+
+‘Now this is, and for a long time hath been, a high affront to my Father;
+wherefore my Father sent to you a powerful army to reduce you to your
+obedience. But you know how these men, their captains and their
+counsels, were esteemed of you, and what they received at your hand. You
+rebelled against them, you shut your gates upon them, you bid them
+battle, you fought them, and fought for Diabolus against them. So they
+sent to my Father for more power, and I, with my men, are come to subdue
+you. But as you treated the servants, so you treated their Lord. You
+stood up in hostile manner against me, you shut up your gates against me,
+you turned the deaf ear to me, and resisted as long as you could; but now
+I have made a conquest of you. Did you cry me mercy so long as you had
+hopes that you might prevail against me? But now I have taken the town,
+you cry; but why did you not cry before, when the white flag of my mercy,
+the red flag of justice, and the black flag that threatened execution,
+were set up to cite you to it? Now I have conquered your Diabolus, you
+come to me for favour; but why did you not help me against the mighty?
+Yet I will consider your petition, and will answer it so as will be for
+my glory.
+
+‘Go, bid Captain Boanerges and Captain Conviction bring the prisoners out
+to me into the camp to-morrow, and say you to Captain Judgment and
+Captain Execution, “Stay you in the castle, and take good heed to
+yourselves that you keep all quiet in Mansoul until you shall hear
+further from me.”’ And with that he turned himself from them, and went
+into his royal pavilion again.
+
+So the petitioners, having received this answer from the Prince,
+returned, as at the first, to go to their companions again. But they had
+not gone far, but thoughts began to work in their minds that no mercy as
+yet was intended by the Prince to Mansoul. So they went to the place
+where the prisoners lay bound; but these workings of mind about what
+would become of Mansoul had such strong power over them, that by that
+they were come unto them that sent them, they were scarce able to deliver
+their message.
+
+But they came at length to the gates of the town, (now the townsmen with
+earnestness were waiting for their return,) where many met them, to know
+what answer was made to the petition. Then they cried out to those that
+were sent, ‘What news from the Prince? and what hath Emmanuel said?’ But
+they said that they must, as afore, go up to the prison, and there
+deliver their message. So away they went to the prison, with a multitude
+at their heels. Now, when they were come to the gates of the prison,
+they told the first part of Emmanuel’s speech to the prisoners, to wit,
+how he reflected upon their disloyalty to his Father and himself, and how
+they had chosen and closed with Diabolus, had fought for him, hearkened
+to him, and been ruled by him; but had despised him and his men. This
+made the prisoners look pale; but the messengers proceeded and said, ‘He,
+the Prince, said, moreover, that yet he would consider your petition, and
+give such answer thereto as would stand with his glory.’ And as these
+words were spoken, Mr. Wet-Eyes gave a great sigh. At this they were all
+of them struck into their dumps, and could not tell what to say: fear
+also possessed them in a marvellous manner, and death seemed to sit upon
+some of their eyebrows. Now, there was in the company a notable,
+sharp-witted fellow, a mean man of estate, and his name was old
+Inquisitive. This man asked the petitioners if they had told out every
+whit of what Emmanuel said, and they answered, ‘Verily, no.’ Then said
+Inquisitive, ‘I thought so, indeed. Pray, what was it more that he said
+unto you?’ Then they paused awhile; but at last they brought out all,
+saying, ‘The Prince bade us bid Captain Boanerges and Captain Conviction
+bring the prisoners down to him to-morrow; and that Captain Judgment and
+Captain Execution should take charge of the castle and town till they
+should hear further from him. They said also that when the Prince had
+commanded them thus to do, he immediately turned his back upon them, and
+went into his royal pavilion.
+
+But, oh! how this return, and specially this last clause of it, that the
+prisoners must go out to the Prince into the camp, brake all their loins
+in pieces! Wherefore, with one voice they set up a cry that reached up
+to the heavens. This done, each of the three prepared himself to die;
+(and the Recorder said unto them, ‘This was the thing that I feared;’)
+for they concluded that to-morrow, by that the sun went down, they should
+be tumbled out of the world. The whole town also counted of no other,
+but that, in their time and order, they must all drink of the same cup.
+Wherefore the town of Mansoul spent that night in mourning, and sackcloth
+and ashes. The prisoners also, when the time was come for them to go
+down before the Prince, dressed themselves in mourning attire, with ropes
+upon their heads. The whole town of Mansoul also showed themselves upon
+the wall, all clad in mourning weeds, if, perhaps, the Prince with the
+sight thereof might be moved with compassion. But, oh! how the
+busy-bodies that were in the town of Mansoul did now concern themselves!
+They did run here and there through the streets of the town by companies,
+crying out as they ran in tumultuous wise, one after one manner, and
+another the quite contrary, to the almost utter distraction of Mansoul.
+
+Well, the time is come that the prisoners must go down to the camp, and
+appear before the Prince. And thus was the manner of their going down:
+Captain Boanerges went with a guard before them, and Captain Conviction
+came behind, and the prisoners went down, bound in chains, in the midst.
+So I say, the prisoners went in the midst, and the guard went with flying
+colours behind and before, but the prisoners went with drooping spirits.
+
+Or, more particularly, thus: The prisoners went down all in mourning:
+they put ropes upon themselves; they went on, smiting themselves on the
+breasts, but durst not lift up their eyes to heaven. Thus they went out
+at the gate of Mansoul, till they came into the midst of the Prince’s
+army, the sight and glory of which did greatly heighten their affliction.
+Nor could they now longer forbear, but cry out aloud, ‘O unhappy men! O
+wretched men of Mansoul!’ Their chains, still mixing their dolorous
+notes with the cries of the prisoners, made the noise more lamentable.
+
+So, when they were come to the door of the Prince’s pavilion, they cast
+themselves prostrate upon the place; then one went in and told his Lord
+that the prisoners were come down. The Prince then ascended a throne of
+state, and sent for the prisoners in; who, when they came, did tremble
+before him, also they covered their faces with shame. Now, as they drew
+near to the place where he sat, they threw themselves down before him.
+Then said the Prince to the Captain Boanerges, ‘Bid the prisoners stand
+upon their feet.’ Then they stood trembling before him, and he said,
+‘Are you the men that heretofore were the servants of Shaddai?’ And they
+said, ‘Yes, Lord, yes.’ Then said the Prince again, ‘Are you the men
+that did suffer yourselves to be corrupted and defiled by that abominable
+one, Diabolus?’ And they said, ‘We did more than suffer it, Lord; for we
+chose it of our own mind.’ The Prince asked further, saying, ‘Could you
+have been content that your slavery should have continued under his
+tyranny as long as you had lived?’ Then said the prisoners, ‘Yes, Lord,
+yes; for his ways were pleasing to our flesh, and we were grown aliens to
+a better state.’—‘And did you,’ said he, ‘when I came up against this
+town of Mansoul, heartily wish that I might not have the victory over
+you?’—‘Yes, Lord, yes,’ said they. Then said the Prince, ‘And what
+punishment is it, think you, that you deserve at my hand, for these and
+other your high and mighty sins?’—And they said, ‘Both death and the
+deep, Lord; for we have deserved no less.’ He asked again if they had
+aught to say for themselves why the sentence, that they confessed that
+they had deserved, should not be passed upon them? And they said, ‘We
+can say nothing, Lord: thou art just, for we have sinned.’ Then said the
+Prince, ‘And for what are those ropes on your heads?’ The prisoners
+answered, ‘These ropes are to bind us withal to the place of execution,
+if mercy be not pleasing in thy sight.’ So he further asked if all the
+men in the town of Mansoul were in this confession, as they? And they
+answered, ‘All the natives, Lord; but for the Diabolonians that came into
+our town when the tyrant got possession of us, we can say nothing for
+them.’
+
+Then the Prince commanded that a herald should be called, and that he
+should, in the midst and throughout the camp of Emmanuel, proclaim, and
+that with sound of trumpet, that the Prince, the Son of Shaddai, had, in
+his Father’s name, and for his Father’s glory, gotten a perfect conquest
+and victory over Mansoul; and that the prisoners should follow him, and
+say Amen. So, this was done as he had commanded. And presently the
+music that was in the upper region sounded melodiously, the captains that
+were in the camp shouted, and the soldiers did sing songs of triumph to
+the Prince; the colours waved in the wind, and great joy was everywhere,
+only it was wanting as yet in the hearts of the men of Mansoul.
+
+Then the Prince called for the prisoners to come and to stand again
+before him, and they came and stood trembling. And he said unto them,
+‘The sins, trespasses, iniquities, that you, with the whole town of
+Mansoul, have from time to time committed against my Father and me, I
+have power and commandment from my Father to forgive to the town of
+Mansoul, and do forgive you accordingly.’ And having so said, he gave
+them, written in parchment, and sealed with seven seals, a large and
+general pardon, commanding my Lord Mayor, my Lord Willbewill, and Mr.
+Recorder, to proclaim and cause it to be proclaimed to-morrow, by that
+the sun is up, throughout the whole town of Mansoul.
+
+Moreover, the Prince stripped the prisoners of their mourning weeds, and
+gave them beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for mourning, and the garment
+of praise for the spirit of heaviness.
+
+Then he gave to each of the three jewels of gold and precious stones, and
+took away their ropes, and put chains of gold about their necks, and
+ear-rings in their ears. Now, the prisoners, when they did hear the
+gracious words of Prince Emmanuel, and had beheld all that was done unto
+them, fainted almost quite away; for the grace, the benefit, the pardon,
+was sudden, glorious, and so big, that they were not able, without
+staggering, to stand up under it. Yea, my Lord Willbewill swooned
+outright; but the Prince stepped to him, put his everlasting arms under
+him, embraced him, kissed him, and bid him be of good cheer, for all
+should be performed according to his word. He also did kiss, and
+embrace, and smile upon the other two that were Willbewill’s companions,
+saying, ‘Take these as further tokens of my love, favour, and compassions
+to you; and I charge you that you, Mr. Recorder, tell in the town of
+Mansoul what you have heard and seen.’
+
+Then were their fetters broken to pieces before their faces, and cast
+into the air, and their steps were enlarged under them. Then they fell
+down at the feet of the Prince, and kissed his feet, and wetted them with
+tears: also they cried out with a mighty strong voice, saying, ‘Blessed
+be the glory of the Lord from this place.’ So they were bid rise up, and
+go to the town, and tell to Mansoul what the Prince had done. He
+commanded also that one with a pipe and tabor should go and play before
+them all the way into the town of Mansoul. Then was fulfilled what they
+never looked for, and they were made to possess that which they never
+dreamed of.
+
+The Prince also called for the noble Captain Credence, and commanded that
+he and some of his officers should march before the noble men of Mansoul
+with flying colours into the town. He gave also unto Captain Credence a
+charge, that about that time that the Recorder did read the general
+pardon in the town of Mansoul, that at that very time he should with
+flying colours march in at Eye-gate with his ten thousands at his feet
+and that he should so go until he came by the high street of the town, up
+to the castle gates, and that himself should take possession thereof
+against his Lord came thither. He commanded, moreover, that he should
+bid Captain Judgment and Captain Execution to leave the stronghold to
+him, and to withdraw from Mansoul, and to return into the camp with speed
+unto the Prince.
+
+And now was the town of Mansoul also delivered from the terror of the
+first four captains and their men.
+
+Well, I told you before how the prisoners were entertained by the noble
+Prince Emmanuel, and how they behaved themselves before him, and how he
+sent them away to their home with pipe and tabor going before them. And
+now you must think that those of the town that had all this while waited
+to hear of their death, could not but be exercised with sadness of mind,
+and with thoughts that pricked like thorns. Nor could their thoughts be
+kept to any one point; the wind blew with them all this while at great
+uncertainties; yea, their hearts were like a balance that had been
+disquieted with a shaking hand. But at last, as they with many a long
+look looked over the wall of Mansoul, they thought that they saw some
+returning to the town; and thought again, Who should they be, too? Who
+should they be? At last they discerned that they were the prisoners: but
+can you imagine how their hearts were surprised with wonder, specially
+when they perceived also in what equipage and with what honour they were
+sent home. They went down to the camp in black, but they came back to
+the town in white; they went down to the camp in ropes, they came back in
+chains of gold; they went down to the camp with their feet in fetters,
+but came back with their steps enlarged under them; they went also to the
+camp looking for death, but they came back from thence with assurance of
+life; they went down to the camp with heavy hearts, but came back again
+with pipe and tabor playing before them. So as soon as they were come to
+Eye-gate, the poor and tottering town of Mansoul adventured to give a
+shout; and they gave such a shout as made the captains in the Prince’s
+army leap at the sound thereof. Alas! for them, poor hearts! who could
+blame them? since their dead friends were come to life again; for it was
+to them as life from the dead to see the ancients of the town of Mansoul
+shine in such splendour. They looked for nothing but the axe and the
+block; but, behold, joy and gladness, comfort and consolation, and such
+melodious notes attending them that was sufficient to make a sick man
+well.
+
+So, when they came up, they saluted each other with, ‘Welcome, welcome!
+and blessed be he that has spared you!’ They added also, ‘We see it is
+well with you; but how must it go with the town of Mansoul? And will it
+go well with the town of Mansoul?’ said they. Then answered them the
+Recorder and my Lord Mayor, ‘Oh! tidings! glad tidings! good tidings of
+good, and of great joy to poor Mansoul!’ Then they gave another shout,
+that made the earth to ring again. After this, they inquired yet more
+particularly how things went in the camp, and what message they had from
+Emmanuel to the town. So they told them all passages that had happened
+to them at the camp, and everything that the Prince did to them. This
+made Mansoul wonder at the wisdom and grace of the Prince Emmanuel. Then
+they told them what they had received at his hands for the whole town of
+Mansoul, and the Recorder delivered it in these words: ‘PARDON, PARDON,
+PARDON for Mansoul! and this shall Mansoul know to-morrow!’ Then he
+commanded, and they went and summoned Mansoul to meet together in the
+market-place to-morrow, then to hear their general pardon read.
+
+But who can think what a turn, what a change, what an alteration this
+hint of things did make in the countenance of the town of Mansoul! No
+man of Mansoul could sleep that night for joy; in every house there was
+joy and music, singing and making merry: telling and hearing of Mansoul’s
+happiness was then all that Mansoul had to do; and this was the burden of
+all their song: ‘Oh! more of this at the rising of the sun! more of this
+to-morrow!’ ‘Who thought yesterday,’ would one say, ‘that this day would
+have been such a day to us? And who thought, that saw our prisoners go
+down in irons, that they would have returned in chains of gold? Yea,
+they that judged themselves as they went to be judged of their judge,
+were by his mouth acquitted, not for that they were innocent, but of the
+Prince’s mercy, and sent home with pipe and tabor. But is this the
+common custom of princes? Do they use to show such kind of favours to
+traitors? No; this is only peculiar to Shaddai, and unto Emmanuel, his
+Son!’
+
+Now morning drew on apace; wherefore the Lord Mayor, the Lord Willbewill,
+and Mr. Recorder came down to the market-place at the time that the
+Prince had appointed, where the townsfolk were waiting for them: and when
+they came, they came in that attire, and in that glory that the Prince
+had put them into the day before, and the street was lightened with their
+glory. So the Mayor, Recorder, and my Lord Willbewill drew down to
+Mouth-gate, which was at the lower end of the market-place, because that
+of old time was the place where they used to read public matters.
+Thither, therefore, they came in their robes, and their tabrets went
+before them. Now, the eagerness of the people to know the full of the
+matter was great.
+
+Then the Recorder stood up upon his feet, and, first beckoning with his
+hand for silence, he read out with a loud voice the pardon. But when he
+came to these words: ‘The Lord, the Lord God, merciful and gracious,
+pardoning iniquity, transgressions, and sins, and to them all manner of
+sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven,’ etc., they could not forbear
+leaping for joy. For this you must know, that there was conjoined
+herewith every man’s name in Mansoul; also the seals of the pardon made a
+brave show.
+
+When the Recorder had made an end of reading the pardon, the townsmen ran
+up upon the walls of the town, and leaped and skipped thereon for joy,
+and bowed themselves seven times with their faces toward Emmanuel’s
+pavilion, and shouted out aloud for joy, and said, ‘Let Emmanuel live for
+ever!’ Then order was given to the young men in Mansoul that they should
+ring the bells for joy. So the bells did ring, and the people sing, and
+the music go in every house in Mansoul.
+
+When the Prince had sent home the three prisoners of Mansoul with joy,
+and pipe and tabor, he commanded his captains, with all the field
+officers and soldiers throughout his army, to be ready in that morning,
+that the Recorder should read the pardon in Mansoul, to do his further
+pleasure. So the morning, as I have showed, being come, just as the
+Recorder had made an end of reading the pardon, Emmanuel commanded that
+all the trumpets in the camp should sound, that the colours should be
+displayed, half of them upon Mount Gracious, and half of them upon Mount
+Justice. He commanded also that all the captains should show themselves
+in all their harness, and that the soldiers should shout for joy. Nor
+was Captain Credence, though in the castle, silent in such a day; but he,
+from the top of the hold, showed himself with sound of trumpet to Mansoul
+and to the Prince’s camp.
+
+Thus have I showed you the manner and way that Emmanuel took to recover
+the town of Mansoul from under the hand and power of the tyrant Diabolus.
+
+Now, when the Prince had completed these, the outward ceremonies of his
+joy, he again commanded that his captains and soldiers should show unto
+Mansoul some feats of war: so they presently addressed themselves to this
+work. But oh! with what agility, nimbleness, dexterity, and bravery did
+these military men discover their skill in feats of war to the now gazing
+town of Mansoul!
+
+They marched, they counter-marched; they opened to the right and left;
+they divided and subdivided; they closed, they wheeled, made good their
+front and rear with their right and left wings, and twenty things more,
+with that aptness, and then were all as the were again, that they
+took—yea, ravished, the hearts that were in Mansoul to behold it. But
+add to this, the handling of their arms, the managing of their weapons of
+war, were marvellously taking to Mansoul and me.
+
+When this action was over, the whole town of Mansoul came out as one man
+to the Prince in the camp to thank him, and praise him for his abundant
+favour, and to beg that it would please his grace to come unto Mansoul
+with his men, and there to take up their quarters for ever: and this they
+did in most humble manner, bowing themselves seven times to the ground
+before him. Then said he, ‘All peace be to you.’ So the town came nigh,
+and touched with the hand the top of his golden sceptre; and they said,
+‘Oh! that the Prince Emmanuel, with his captains and men of war, would
+dwell in Mansoul for ever; and that his battering-rams and slings might
+be lodged in her for the use and service of the Prince, and for the help
+and strength of Mansoul. For,’ said they, ‘we have room for thee, we
+have room for thy men, we have also room for thy weapons of war, and a
+place to make a magazine for thy carriages. Do it, Emmanuel, and thou
+shalt be King and Captain in Mansoul for ever. Yea, govern thou also
+according to all the desire of thy soul, and make thou governors and
+princes under thee of thy captains and men of war, and we will become thy
+servants, and thy laws shall be our direction.’
+
+They added, moreover, and prayed his Majesty to consider thereof; ‘for,’
+said they, ‘if now, after all this grace bestowed upon us, thy miserable
+town of Mansoul, thou shouldest withdraw, thou and thy captains, from us,
+the town of Mansoul will die. Yea,’ said they, ‘our blessed Emmanuel, if
+thou shouldest depart from us now, now thou hast done so much good for
+us, and showed so much mercy unto us, what will follow but that our joy
+will be as if it had not been, and our enemies will a second time come
+upon us with more rage than at the first? Wherefore, we beseech thee, O
+thou, the desire of our eyes, and the strength and life of our poor town,
+accept of this motion that now we have made unto our Lord, and come and
+dwell in the midst of us, and let us be thy people. Besides, Lord, we do
+not know but that to this day many Diabolonians may be yet lurking in the
+town of Mansoul, and they will betray us, when thou shalt leave us, into
+the hand of Diabolus again; and who knows what designs, plots, or
+contrivances have passed betwixt them about these things already? Loath
+we are to fall again into his horrible hands. Wherefore, let it please
+thee to accept of our palace for thy place of residence, and of the
+houses of the best men in our town for the reception of thy soldiers and
+their furniture.’
+
+Then said the Prince, ‘If I come to your town, will you suffer me further
+to prosecute that which is in mine heart against mine enemies and
+yours?—yea, will you help me in such undertakings?’
+
+They answered, ‘We know not what we shall do; we did not think once that
+we should have been such traitors to Shaddai as we have proved to be.
+What, then, shall we say to our Lord? Let him put no trust in his
+saints; let the Prince dwell in our castle, and make of our town a
+garrison; let him set his noble captains and his warlike soldiers over
+us; yea, let him conquer us with his love, and overcome us with his
+grace, and then surely shall he be but with us, and help us, as he was
+and did that morning that our pardon was read unto us. We shall comply
+with this our Lord, and with his ways, and fall in with his word against
+the mighty.
+
+‘One word more, and thy servants have done, and in this will trouble our
+Lord no more. We know not the depth of the wisdom of thee, our Prince.
+Who could have thought, that had been ruled by his reason, that so much
+sweet as we do now enjoy should have come out of those bitter trials
+wherewith we were tried at the first! But, Lord, let light go before,
+and let love come after: yea, take us by the hand, and lead us by thy
+counsels, and let this always abide upon us, that all things shall be the
+best for thy servants, and come to our Mansoul, and do as it pleaseth
+thee. Or, Lord, come to our Mansoul, do what thou wilt, so thou keepest
+us from sinning, and makest us serviceable to thy Majesty.’
+
+Then said the Prince to the town of Mansoul again, ‘Go, return to your
+houses in peace. I will willingly in this comply with your desires; I
+will remove my royal pavilion, I will draw up my forces before Eye-gate
+to-morrow, and so will march forwards into the town of Mansoul. I will
+possess myself of your castle of Mansoul, and will set my soldiers over
+you: yea, I will yet do things in Mansoul that cannot be paralleled in
+any nation, country, or kingdom under heaven.’ Then did the men of
+Mansoul give a shout, and returned unto their houses in peace; they also
+told to their kindred and friends the good that Emmanuel had promised to
+Mansoul. ‘And to-morrow,’ said they, ‘he will march into our town, and
+take up his dwelling, he and his men, in Mansoul.’
+
+Then went out the inhabitants of the town of Mansoul with haste to the
+green trees and to the meadows, to gather boughs and flowers, therewith
+to strew the streets against their Prince, the Son of Shaddai, should
+come; they also made garlands and other fine works to betoken how joyful
+they were, and should be to receive their Emmanuel into Mansoul; yea,
+they strewed the street quite from Eye-gate to the castle-gate, the place
+where the Prince should be. They also prepared for his coming what music
+the town of Mansoul would afford, that they might play before him to the
+palace, his habitation.
+
+So, at the time appointed he makes his approach to Mansoul, and the gates
+were set open for him; there also the ancients and elders of Mansoul met
+him to salute him with a thousand welcomes. Then he arose and entered
+Mansoul, he and all his servants. The elders of Mansoul did also go
+dancing before him till he came to the castle gates. And this was the
+manner of his going up thither:—He was clad in his golden armour, he rode
+in his royal chariot, the trumpets sounded about him, the colours were
+displayed, his ten thousands went up at his feet, and the elders of
+Mansoul danced before him. And now were the walls of the famous town of
+Mansoul filled with the tramplings of the inhabitants thereof, who went
+up thither to view the approach of the blessed Prince and his royal army.
+Also the casements, windows, balconies, and tops of the houses, were all
+now filled with persons of all sorts, to behold how their town was to be
+filled with good.
+
+Now, when he was come so far into the town as to the Recorder’s house, he
+commanded that one should go to Captain Credence, to know whether the
+castle of Mansoul was prepared to entertain his royal presence (for the
+preparation of that was left to that captain), and word was brought that
+it was. Then was Captain Credence commanded also to come forth with his
+power to meet the Prince, the which was, as he had commanded, done; and
+he conducted him into the castle. This done, the Prince that night did
+lodge in the castle with his mighty captains and men of war, to the joy
+of the town of Mansoul.
+
+Now, the next care of the townsfolk was, how the captains and soldiers of
+the Prince’s army should be quartered among them; and the care was not
+how they should shut their hands of them, but how they should fill their
+houses with them; for every man in Mansoul now had that esteem of
+Emmanuel and his men that nothing grieved them more than because they
+were not enlarged enough, every one of them to receive the whole army of
+the Prince; yea, they counted it their glory to be waiting upon them, and
+would, in those days, run at their bidding like lackeys.
+
+At last they came to this result:—
+
+1. That Captain Innocency should quarter at Mr. Reason’s.
+
+2. That Captain Patience should quarter at Mr. Mind’s. This Mr. Mind was
+formerly the Lord Willbewill’s clerk in time of the late rebellion.
+
+3. It was ordered that Captain Charity should quarter at Mr. Affection’s
+house.
+
+4. That Captain Good-Hope should quarter at my Lord Mayor’s. Now, for
+the house of the Recorder, himself desired, because his house was next to
+the castle, and because from him it was ordered by the Prince that, if
+need be, the alarm should be given to Mansoul,—it was, I say, desired by
+him that Captain Boanerges and Captain Conviction should take up their
+quarters with him, even they and all their men.
+
+5. As for Captain Judgment and Captain Execution, my Lord Willbewill took
+them and their men to him, because he was to rule under the Prince for
+the good of the town of Mansoul now, as he had before under the tyrant
+Diabolus for the hurt and damage thereof.
+
+6. And throughout the rest of the town were quartered Emmanuel’s forces;
+but Captain Credence, with his men, abode still in the castle. So the
+Prince, his captains, and his soldiers, were lodged in the town of
+Mansoul.
+
+Now, the ancients and elders of the town of Mansoul thought that they
+never should have enough of the Prince Emmanuel; his person, his actions,
+his words, and behaviour, were so pleasing, so taking, so desirable to
+them. Wherefore they prayed him, that though the castle of Mansoul was
+his place of residence, (and they desired that he might dwell there for
+ever,) yet that he would often visit the streets, houses, and people of
+Mansoul. ‘For,’ said they, ‘dread Sovereign, thy presence, thy looks,
+thy smiles, thy words, are the life, and strength, and sinews of the town
+of Mansoul.’
+
+Besides this, they craved that they might have, without difficulty or
+interruption, continual access unto him, (so for that very purpose he
+commanded that the gates should stand open,) that they might there see
+the manner of his doings, the fortifications of the place, and the royal
+mansion-house of the Prince.
+
+When he spake, they all stopped their mouths and gave audience; and when
+he walked, it was their delight to imitate him in his goings.
+
+Now, upon a time, Emmanuel made a feast for the town of Mansoul; and upon
+the feasting-day the townsfolk were come to the castle to partake of his
+banquet; and he feasted them with all manner of outlandish food;—food
+that grew not in the fields of Mansoul; nor in all the whole Kingdom of
+Universe; it was food that came from his Father’s court. And so there
+was dish after dish set before them, and they were commanded freely to
+eat. But still, when a fresh dish was set before them, they would
+whisperingly say to each other, ‘What is it?’ for they wist not what to
+call it. They drank also of the water that was made wine, and were very
+merry with him. There was music also all the while at the table; and man
+did eat angels’ food, and had honey given him out of the rock. So
+Mansoul did eat the food that was peculiar to the court; yea, they had
+now thereof to the full.
+
+I must not forget to tell you, that as at this table there were
+musicians, so they were not those of the country, nor yet of the town of
+Mansoul; but they were the masters of the songs that were sung at the
+court of Shaddai.
+
+Now, after the feast was over, Emmanuel was for entertaining the town of
+Mansoul with some curious riddles of secrets drawn up by his Father’s
+secretary, by the skill and wisdom of Shaddai; the like to these there is
+not in any kingdom. These riddles were made upon the King Shaddai
+himself, and upon Emmanuel his Son, and upon his wars and doings with
+Mansoul.
+
+Emmanuel also expounded unto them some of those riddles himself; but, oh!
+how they were lightened! They saw what they never saw; they could not
+have thought that such rarities could have been couched in so few and
+such ordinary words. I told you before, whom these riddles did concern;
+and as they were opened, the people did evidently see it was so. Yea,
+they did gather that the things themselves were a kind of a portraiture,
+and that of Emmanuel himself; for when they read in the scheme where the
+riddles were writ, and looked in the face of the Prince, things looked so
+like the one to the other, that Mansoul could not forbear but say, ‘This
+is the lamb! this is the sacrifice! this is the rock! this is the red
+cow! this is the door! and this is the way!’ with a great many other
+things more.
+
+And thus he dismissed the town of Mansoul. But can you imagine how the
+people of the corporation were taken with this entertainment! Oh! they
+were transported with joy, they were drowned with wonderment, while they
+saw and understood, and considered what their Emmanuel entertained them
+withal, and what mysteries he opened to them. And when they were at home
+in their houses, and in their most retired places, they could not but
+sing of him and of his actions. Yea, so taken were the townsmen now with
+their Prince, that they would sing of him in their sleep.
+
+Now, it was in the heart of the Prince Emmanuel to new-model the town of
+Mansoul, and to put it into such a condition as might be most pleasing to
+him, and that might best stand with the profit and security of the now
+flourishing town of Mansoul. He provided also against insurrections at
+home, and invasions from abroad, such love had he for the famous town of
+Mansoul.
+
+Wherefore he first of all commanded that the great slings that were
+brought from his Father’s court, when he came to the war of Mansoul,
+should be mounted, some upon the battlements of the castle, some upon the
+towers; for there were towers in the town of Mansoul, towers, new-built
+by Emmanuel since he came hither. There was also an instrument, invented
+by Emmanuel, that was to throw stones from the castle of Mansoul, out at
+Mouth-gate; an instrument that could not be resisted, nor that would miss
+of execution. Wherefore, for the wonderful exploits that it did when
+used, it went without a name; and it was committed to the care of, and to
+be managed by the brave captain, the Captain Credence, in case of war.
+
+This done, Emmanuel called the Lord Willbewill to him, and gave him in
+commandment to take care of the gates, the wall, and towers in Mansoul;
+also the Prince gave him the militia into his hand, and a special charge
+to withstand all insurrections and tumults that might be made in Mansoul
+against the peace of our Lord the King, and the peace and tranquillity of
+the town of Mansoul. He also gave him in commission, that if he found
+any of the Diabolonians lurking in any corner of the famous town of
+Mansoul, he should forthwith apprehend them, and stay them, or commit
+them to safe custody, that they may be proceeded against according to
+law.
+
+Then he called unto him the Lord Understanding, who was the old Lord
+Mayor, he that was put out of place when Diabolus took the town, and put
+him into his former office again, and it became his place for his
+lifetime. He bid him also that he should build him a palace near
+Eye-gate; and that he should build it in fashion like a tower for
+defence. He bid him also that he should read in the Revelation of
+Mysteries all the days of his life, that he might know how to perform his
+office aright.
+
+He also made Mr. Knowledge the Recorder, not of contempt to old Mr.
+Conscience, who had been Recorder before, but for that it was in his
+princely mind to confer upon Mr. Conscience another employ, of which he
+told the old gentleman he should know more hereafter.
+
+Then he commanded that the image of Diabolus should be taken down from
+the place where it was set up, and that they should destroy it utterly,
+beating it into powder, and casting it into the wind without the town
+wall; and that the image of Shaddai, his Father, should be set up again,
+with his own, upon the castle gates; and that it should be more fairly
+drawn than ever, forasmuch as both his Father and himself were come to
+Mansoul in more grace and mercy than heretofore. He would also that his
+name should be fairly engraven upon the front of the town, and that it
+should be done in the best of gold, for the honour of the town of
+Mansoul.
+
+After this was done, Emmanuel gave out a commandment that those three
+great Diabolonians should be apprehended, namely, the two late Lord
+Mayors, to wit, Mr. Incredulity, Mr. Lustings, and Mr. Forget-Good, the
+Recorder. Besides these, there were some of them that Diabolus made
+burgesses and aldermen in Mansoul, that were committed to ward by the
+hand of the now valiant and now right noble, the brave Lord Willbewill.
+
+And these were their names: Alderman Atheism, Alderman Hard-Heart, and
+Alderman False-Peace. The burgesses were, Mr. No-Truth, Mr. Pitiless,
+Mr. Haughty, with the like. These were committed to close custody, and
+the gaoler’s name was Mr. True-Man. This True-Man was one of those that
+Emmanuel brought with him from his Father’s court when at the first he
+made a war upon Diabolus in the town or Mansoul.
+
+After this, the Prince gave a charge that the three strongholds that, at
+the command of Diabolus, the Diabolonians built in Mansoul, should be
+demolished and utterly pulled down; of which holds and their names, with
+their captains and governors, you read a little before. But this was
+long in doing, because of the largeness of the places, and because the
+stones, the timber, the iron, and all rubbish, was to be carried without
+the town.
+
+When this was done, the Prince gave order that the Lord Mayor and
+aldermen of Mansoul should call a court of judicature for the trial and
+execution of the Diabolonians in the corporation now under the charge of
+Mr. True-Man, the gaoler.
+
+Now, when the time was come, and the court set, commandment was sent to
+Mr. True-Man, the gaoler, to bring the prisoners down to the bar. Then
+were the prisoners brought down, pinioned and chained together, as the
+custom of the town of Mansoul was. So, when they were presented before
+the Lord Mayor, the Recorder, and the rest of the honourable bench,
+first, the jury was empannelled, and then the witnesses sworn. The names
+of the jury were these: Mr. Belief, Mr. True-Heart, Mr. Upright, Mr.
+Hate-Bad, Mr. Love-God, Mr. See-Truth, Mr. Heavenly-Mind, Mr. Moderate,
+Mr. Thankful, Mr. Good-Work, Mr. Zeal-for-God, and Mr. Humble.
+
+The names of the witnesses were—Mr. Know-All, Mr. Tell-True, Mr.
+Hate-Lies, with my Lord Willbewill and his man, if need were.
+
+So the prisoners were set to the bar. Then said Mr. Do-Right, (for he
+was the Town-Clerk,) ‘Set Atheism to the bar, gaoler.’ So he was set to
+the bar. Then said the Clerk, ‘Atheism, hold up thy hand. Thou art here
+indicted by the name of Atheism, (an intruder upon the town of Mansoul,)
+for that thou hast perniciously and doltishly taught and maintained that
+there is no God, and so no heed to be taken to religion. This thou hast
+done against the being, honour, and glory of the King, and against the
+peace and safety of the town of Mansoul. What sayest thou? Art thou
+guilty of this indictment, or not?
+
+_Atheism_. Not guilty.
+
+_Crier_. Call Mr. Know-All, Mr. Tell-True, and Mr. Hate-Lies into the
+court.
+
+So they were called, and they appeared.
+
+Then said the Clerk, ‘You, the witnesses for the King, look upon the
+prisoner at the bar; do you know him?’
+
+Then said Mr. Know-All, ‘Yes, my lord, we know him; his name is Atheism;
+he has been a very pestilent fellow for many years in the miserable town
+of Mansoul.’
+
+_Clerk_. You are sure you know him?
+
+_Know_. Know him! Yes my lord; I have heretofore too often been in his
+company to be at this time ignorant of him. He is a Diabolonian, the son
+of a Diabolonian: I knew his grandfather and his father.
+
+_Clerk_. Well said. He standeth here indicted by the name of Atheism,
+etc., and is charged that he hath maintained and taught that there is no
+God, and so no heed need be taken to any religion. What say you, the
+King’s witnesses, to this? Is he guilty or not?
+
+_Know_. My lord, I and he were once in Villain’s Lane together, and he
+at that time did briskly talk of divers opinions; and then and there I
+heard him say, that, for his part, he did believe that there was no God.
+‘But,’ said he, ‘I can profess one, and be as religious too, if the
+company I am in, and the circumstances of other things,’ said he, ‘shall
+put me upon it.’
+
+_Clerk_. You are sure you heard him say thus?
+
+_Know_. Upon mine oath, I heard him say thus.
+
+Then said the Clerk, ‘Mr. Tell-True, what say you to the King’s judges
+touching the prisoner at the bar?’
+
+_Tell_. My lord, I formerly was a great companion of his, for the which
+I now repent me, and I have often heard him say, and that with very great
+stomachfulness, that he believed there was neither God, angel, nor
+spirit.
+
+_Clerk_. Where did you hear him say so?
+
+_Tell_. In Blackmouth Lane and in Blasphemer’s Row, and in many other
+places besides.
+
+_Clerk_. Have you much knowledge of him?
+
+_Tell_. I know him to be a Diabolonian, the son of a Diabolonian, and a
+horrible man to deny a Deity. His father’s name was Never-be-good, and
+he had more children than this Atheism. I have no more to say.
+
+_Clerk_. Mr. Hate-Lies, look upon the prisoner at the bar; do you know
+him?
+
+_Hate_. My lord, this Atheism is one of the vilest wretches that ever I
+came near, or had to do with in my life. I have heard him say that there
+is no God; I have heard him say that there is no world to come, no sin,
+nor punishment hereafter, and, moreover, I have heard him say that it was
+as good to go to a whore-house as to go to hear a sermon.
+
+_Clerk_. Where did you hear him say these things?
+
+_Hate_. In Drunkard’s Row, just at Rascal-Lane’s End, at a house in
+which Mr. Impiety lived.
+
+_Clerk_. Set him by, gaoler, and set Mr. Lustings to the bar. Mr.
+Lustings, thou art here indicted by the name of Lustings, (an intruder
+upon the town of Mansoul,) for that thou hast devilishly and traitorously
+taught, by practice and filthy words, that it is lawful and profitable to
+man to give way to his carnal desires; and that thou, for thy part, hast
+not, nor never wilt, deny thyself of any sinful delight as long as thy
+name is Lustings. How sayest thou? Art thou guilty of this indictment,
+or not?
+
+Then said Mr. Lustings, ‘My lord, I am a man of high birth, and have been
+used to pleasures and pastimes of greatness. I have not been wont to be
+snubbed for my doings, but have been left to follow my will as if it were
+law. And it seems strange to me that I should this day be called into
+question for that, that not only I, but almost all men, do either
+secretly or openly countenance, love, and approve of.’
+
+_Clerk_. Sir, we concern not ourselves with your greatness; (though the
+higher, the better you should have been;) but we are concerned, and so
+are you now, about an indictment preferred against you. How say you?
+Are you guilty of it, or not?
+
+_Lust_. Not guilty.
+
+_Clerk_. Crier, call upon the witnesses to stand forth and give their
+evidence.
+
+_Crier_. Gentlemen, you, the witnesses for the King, come in and give in
+your evidence for our Lord the King against the prisoner at the bar.
+
+_Clerk_. Come, Mr. Know-All, look upon the prisoner at the bar; do you
+know him?
+
+_Know_. Yes, my lord, I know him.
+
+_Clerk_. What is his name?
+
+_Know_. His name is Lustings; he was the son of one Beastly, and his
+mother bare him in Flesh Street: she was one Evil-Concupiscence’s
+daughter. I knew all the generation of them.
+
+_Clerk_. Well said. You have heard his indictment; what say you to it?
+Is he guilty of the things charged against him, or not?
+
+_Know_. My lord, he has, as he saith, been a great man indeed, and
+greater in wickedness than by pedigree more than a thousandfold.
+
+_Clerk_. But what do you know of his particular actions, and especially
+with reference to his indictment?
+
+_Know_. I know him to be a swearer, a liar, a Sabbath-breaker; I know
+him to be a fornicator and an unclean person; I know him to be guilty of
+abundance of evils. He has been, to my knowledge, a very filthy man.
+
+_Clerk_. But where did he use to commit his wickedness? in some private
+corners, or more open and shamelessly?
+
+_Know_. All the town over, my lord.
+
+_Clerk_. Come, Mr. Tell-True, what have you to say for our Lord the King
+against the prisoner at the bar?
+
+_Tell_. My lord, all that the first witness has said I know to be true,
+and a great deal more besides.
+
+_Clerk_. Mr. Lustings, do you hear what these gentlemen say?
+
+_Lust_. I was ever of opinion that the happiest life that a man could
+live on earth was to keep himself back from nothing that he desired in
+the world; nor have I been false at any time to this opinion of mine, but
+have lived in the love of my notions all my days. Nor was I ever so
+churlish, having found such sweetness in them myself, as to keep the
+commendations of them from others.
+
+Then said the Court, ‘There hath proceeded enough from his own mouth to
+lay him open to condemnation; wherefore, set him by, gaoler, and set Mr.
+Incredulity to the bar.’
+
+Incredulity set to the bar.
+
+_Clerk_. Mr. Incredulity, thou art here indicted by the name of
+Incredulity, (an intruder upon the town of Mansoul,) for that thou hast
+feloniously and wickedly, and that when thou wert an officer in the town
+of Mansoul, made head against the captains of the great King Shaddai when
+they came and demanded possession of Mansoul; yea, thou didst bid
+defiance to the name, forces, and cause of the King, and didst also, as
+did Diabolus thy captain, stir up and encourage the town of Mansoul to
+make head against and resist the said force of the King. What sayest
+thou to this indictment? Art thou guilty of it, or not?
+
+Then said Incredulity, ‘I know not Shaddai; I love my old prince; I
+thought it my duty to be true to my trust, and to do what I could to
+possess the minds of the men of Mansoul to do their utmost to resist
+strangers and foreigners, and with might to fight against them. Nor have
+I, nor shall I, change mine opinion for fear of trouble, though you at
+present are possessed of place and power.’
+
+Then said the Court, ‘The man, as you see, is incorrigible; he is for
+maintaining his villainies by stoutness of words, and his rebellion with
+impudent confidence; and therefore set him by, gaoler, and set Mr.
+Forget-Good to the bar.
+
+Forget-Good set to the bar.
+
+_Clerk_. Mr. Forget-Good, thou art here indicted by the name of
+Forget-Good, (an intruder upon the town of Mansoul,) for that thou, when
+the whole affairs of the town of Mansoul were in thy hand, didst utterly
+forget to serve them in what was good, and didst fall in with the tyrant
+Diabolus against Shaddai the King, against his captains, and all his
+host, to the dishonour of Shaddai, the breach of his law, and the
+endangering of the destruction of the famous town of Mansoul. What
+sayest thou to this indictment? Art thou guilty or not guilty?
+
+Then said Forget-Good: ‘Gentlemen, and at this time my judges, as to the
+indictment by which I stand of several crimes accused before you, pray
+attribute my forgetfulness to mine age, and not to my wilfulness; to the
+craziness of my brain, and not to the carelessness of my mind; and then I
+hope I may be by your charity excused from great punishment, though I be
+guilty.’
+
+Then said the Court, ‘Forget-Good, Forget-Good, thy forgetfulness of good
+was not simply of frailty, but of purpose, and for that thou didst loathe
+to keep virtuous things in thy mind. What was bad thou couldst retain,
+but what was good thou couldst not abide to think of; thy age, therefore,
+and thy pretended craziness, thou makest use of to blind the court
+withal, and as a cloak to cover thy knavery. But let us hear what the
+witnesses have to say for the King against the prisoner at the bar. Is
+he guilty of this indictment, or not?’
+
+_Hate_. My lord, I have heard this Forget-Good say, that he could never
+abide to think of goodness, no, not for a quarter of an hour.
+
+_Clerk_. Where did you hear him say so?
+
+_Hate_. In All-base Lane, at a house next door to the sign of the
+Conscience seared with a hot iron.
+
+_Clerk_. Mr. Know-All, what can you say for our Lord the King against
+the prisoner at the bar?
+
+_Know_. My lord, I know this man well. He is a Diabolonian, the son of
+a Diabolonian: his father’s name was Love-Naught; and for him, I have
+often heard him say, that he counted the very thoughts of goodness the
+most burdensome thing in the world.
+
+_Clerk_. Where have you heard him say these words?
+
+_Know_. In Flesh Lane, right opposite to the church.
+
+Then said the Clerk, ‘Come, Mr. Tell-True, give in your evidence
+concerning the prisoner at the bar, about that for which he stands here,
+as you see, indicted by this honourable Court.’
+
+_Tell_. My lord, I have heard him often say he had rather think of the
+vilest thing than of what is contained in the Holy Scriptures.
+
+_Clerk_. Where did you hear him say such grievous words?
+
+_Tell_. Where?—in a great many places, particularly in Nauseous Street,
+in the house of one Shameless, and in Filth Lane, at the sign of the
+Reprobate, next door to the Descent into the Pit.
+
+_Court_. Gentlemen, you have heard the indictment, his plea, and the
+testimony of the witnesses. Gaoler, set Mr. Hard-Heart to the bar.
+
+He is set to the bar.
+
+_Clerk_. Mr. Hard-Heart, thou art here indicted by the name of
+Hard-Heart, (an intruder upon the town of Mansoul,) for that thou didst
+most desperately and wickedly possess the town of Mansoul with
+impenitency and obdurateness; and didst keep them from remorse and sorrow
+for their evils, all the time of their apostacy from and rebellion
+against the blessed King Shaddai. What sayest thou to this indictment?
+Art thou guilty, or not guilty?
+
+_Hard_. My lord, I never knew what remorse or sorrow meant in all my
+life. I am impenetrable. I care for no man; nor can I be pierced with
+men’s griefs; their groans will not enter into my heart. Whomsoever I
+mischief, whomsoever I wrong, to me it is music, when to others mourning.
+
+_Court_. You see the man is a right Diabolonian, and has convicted
+himself. Set him by, gaoler, and set Mr. False-Peace to the bar.
+
+False-Peace set to the bar.
+
+‘Mr. False-Peace, thou art here indicted by the name of False-Peace, (an
+intruder upon the town of Mansoul,) for that thou didst most wickedly and
+satanically bring, hold, and keep the town of Mansoul, both in her
+apostacy and in her hellish rebellion, in a false, groundless, and
+dangerous peace, and damnable security, to the dishonour of the King, the
+transgression of his law, and the great damage of the town of Mansoul.
+What sayest thou? Art thou guilty of this indictment, or not?
+
+Then said Mr. False-Peace: ‘Gentlemen, and you now appointed to be my
+judges, I acknowledge that my name is Mr. Peace; but that my name is
+False-Peace I utterly deny. If your honours shall please to send for any
+that do intimately know me, or for the midwife that laid my mother of me,
+or for the gossips that were at my christening, they will, any or all of
+them, prove that my name is not False-Peace, but Peace. Wherefore I
+cannot plead to this indictment, forasmuch as my name is not inserted
+therein; and as is my true name, so are also my conditions. I was always
+a man that loved to live at quiet, and what I loved myself, that I
+thought others might love also. Wherefore, when I saw any of my
+neighbours to labour under a disquieted mind, I endeavoured to help them
+what I could; and instances of this good temper of mine many I could
+give; as,
+
+‘1. When, at the beginning, our town of Mansoul did decline the ways of
+Shaddai, they, some of them, afterwards began to have disquieting
+reflections upon themselves for what they had done; but I, as one
+troubled to see them disquieted, presently sought out means to get them
+quiet again.
+
+‘2. When the ways of the old world, and of Sodom, were in fashion, if
+anything happened to molest those that were for the customs of the
+present times, I laboured to make them quiet again, and to cause them to
+act without molestation.
+
+‘3. To come nearer home: when the wars fell out between Shaddai and
+Diabolus, if at any time I saw any of the town of Mansoul afraid of
+destruction, I often used, by some way, device, invention, or other, to
+labour to bring them to peace again. Wherefore, since I have been always
+a man of so virtuous a temper as some say a peace-maker is, and if a
+peace-maker be so deserving a man as some have been bold to attest he is,
+then let me, gentlemen, be accounted by you, who have a great name for
+justice and equity in Mansoul, for a man that deserveth not this inhuman
+way of treatment, but liberty, and also a license to seek damage of those
+that have been my accusers.’
+
+Then said the clerk, ‘Crier, make a proclamation.’
+
+_Crier_. Oyes! Forasmuch as the prisoner at the bar hath denied his
+name to be that which is mentioned in the indictment, the Court requireth
+that if there be any in this place that can give information to the Court
+of the original and right name of the prisoner, they would come forth and
+give in their evidence; for the prisoner stands upon his own innocency.
+
+Then came two into the court, and desired that they might have leave to
+speak what they knew concerning the prisoner at the bar: the name of the
+one was Search-Truth, and the name of the other Vouch-Truth. So the
+Court demanded of these men if they knew the prisoner, and what they
+could say concerning him, ‘for he stands,’ said they, ‘upon his own
+vindication.’
+
+Then said Mr. Search-Truth, ‘My Lord, I—’
+
+_Court_. Hold! give him his oath.
+
+Then they sware him. So he proceeded.
+
+_Search_. My lord, I know and have known this man from a child, and can
+attest that his name is False-Peace. I know his father; his name was Mr.
+Flatter: and his mother, before she was married, was called by the name
+of Mrs. Sooth-Up: and these two, when they came together, lived not long
+without this son; and when he was born, they called his name False-Peace.
+I was his play-fellow, only I was somewhat older than he; and when his
+mother did use to call him home from his play, she used to say,
+‘False-Peace, False-Peace, come home quick, or I’ll fetch you.’ Yea, I
+knew him when he sucked; and though I was then but little, yet I can
+remember that when his mother did use to sit at the door with him, or did
+play with him in her arms, she would call him, twenty times together, ‘My
+little False-Peace! my pretty False-Peace!’ and, ‘Oh! my sweet rogue,
+False-Peace!’ and again, ‘Oh! my little bird, False-Peace!’ and ‘How do I
+love my child!’ The gossips also know it is thus, though he has had the
+face to deny it in open court.
+
+Then Mr. Vouch-Truth was called upon to speak what he knew of him. So
+they sware him.
+
+Then said Mr. Vouch-Truth, ‘My lord, all that the former witness hath
+said is true. His name is False-Peace, the son of Mr. Flatter, and of
+Mrs. Sooth-Up, his mother: and I have in former times seen him angry with
+those that have called him anything else but False-Peace, for he would
+say that all such did mock and nickname him; but this was in the time
+when Mr. False-Peace was a great man, and when the Diabolonians were the
+brave men in Mansoul.
+
+_Court_. Gentlemen, you have heard what these two men have sworn against
+the prisoner at the bar. And now, Mr. False-Peace, to you: you have
+denied your name to be False-Peace, yet you see that these honest men
+have sworn that that is your name. As to your plea, in that you are
+quite besides the matter of your indictment, you are not by it charged
+for evil-doing because you are a man of peace, or a peace-maker among
+your neighbours; but for that you did wickedly and satanically bring,
+keep, and hold the town of Mansoul, both under its apostasy from, and in
+its rebellion against its King, in a false, lying, and damnable peace,
+contrary to the law of Shaddai, and to the hazard of the destruction of
+the then miserable town of Mansoul. All that you have pleaded for
+yourself is, that you have denied your name, etc.; but here, you see, we
+have witnesses to prove that you are the man. For the peace that you so
+much boast of making among your neighbours, know that peace that is not a
+companion of truth and holiness, but that which is without this
+foundation, is grounded upon a lie, and is both deceitful and damnable,
+as also the great Shaddai hath said. Thy plea, therefore, has not
+delivered thee from what by the indictment thou art charged with, but
+rather it doth fasten all upon thee. But thou shalt have very fair play.
+Let us call the witnesses that are to testify as to matter of fact, and
+see what they have to say for our Lord the King against the prisoner at
+the bar.
+
+_Clerk_. Mr. Know-All, what say you for our Lord the King against the
+prisoner at the bar?
+
+_Know_. My lord, this man hath of a long time made it, to my knowledge,
+his business to keep the town of Mansoul in a sinful quietness in the
+midst of all her lewdness, filthiness, and turmoils, and hath said, and
+that in my hearing, Come, come, let us fly from all trouble, on what
+ground soever it comes, and let us be for a quiet and peaceable life,
+though it wanteth a good foundation.
+
+_Clerk_. Come, Mr. Hate-Lies, what have you to say?
+
+_Hate_. My lord, I have heard him say, that peace, though in a way of
+unrighteousness, is better than trouble with truth.
+
+_Clerk_. Where did you hear him say this?
+
+_Hate_. I heard him say it in Folly-yard, at the house of one Mr.
+Simple, next door to the sign of the Self-deceiver. Yea, he hath said
+this to my knowledge twenty times in that place.
+
+_Clerk_. We may spare further witness; this evidence is plain and full.
+Set him by, gaoler, and set Mr. No-Truth to the bar. Mr. No-Truth, thou
+art here indicted by the name of No-Truth, (an intruder upon the town of
+Mansoul,) for that thou hast always, to the dishonour of Shaddai, and the
+endangering of the utter ruin of the famous town of Mansoul, set thyself
+to deface, and utterly to spoil, all the remainders of the law and image
+of Shaddai that have been found in Mansoul after her deep apostasy from
+her king to Diabolus, the envious tyrant. What sayest thou, art thou
+guilty of this indictment, or not?
+
+_No_. Not guilty, my lord.
+
+Then the witnesses were called, and Mr. Know-All did first give in his
+evidence against him.
+
+_Know_. My lord, this man was at the pulling down of the image of
+Shaddai; yea, this is he that did it with his own hands. I myself stood
+by and saw him do it, and he did it at the commandment of Diabolus. Yea,
+this Mr. No-Truth did more than this, he did also set up the horned image
+of the beast Diabolus in the same place. This also is he that, at the
+bidding of Diabolus, did rend and tear, and cause to be consumed, all
+that he could of the remainders of the law of the King, even whatever he
+could lay his hands on in Mansoul.
+
+_Clerk_. Who saw him do this besides yourself?
+
+_Hate_. I did, my lord, and so did many more besides; for this was not
+done by stealth, or in a corner, but in the open view of all; yea, he
+chose himself to do it publicly, for he delighted in the doing of it.
+
+_Clerk_. Mr. No-Truth, how could you have the face to plead not guilty,
+when you were so manifestly the doer of all this wickedness?
+
+_No_. Sir, I thought I must say something, and as my name is, so I
+speak. I have been advantaged thereby before now, and did not know but
+by speaking no truth, I might have reaped the same benefit now.
+
+_Clerk_. Set him by, gaoler, and set Mr. Pitiless to the bar. Mr.
+Pitiless, thou art here indicted by the name of Pitiless, (an intruder
+upon the town of Mansoul,) for that thou didst most traitorously and
+wickedly shut up all bowels of compassion, and wouldest not suffer poor
+Mansoul to condole her own misery when she had apostatised from her
+rightful King, but didst evade, and at all times turn her mind awry from
+those thoughts that had in them a tendency to lead her to repentance.
+What sayest thou to this indictment? Guilty or not guilty?
+
+‘Not guilty of pitilessness: all I did was to cheer up, according to my
+name, for my name is not Pitiless, but Cheer-up; and I could not abide to
+see Mansoul inclined to melancholy.’
+
+_Clerk_. How! do you deny your name, and say it is not Pitiless, but
+Cheer-up? Call for the witnesses. What say you, the witnesses, to this
+plea?
+
+_Know_. My lord, his name is Pitiless; so he hath written himself in all
+papers of concern wherein he has had to do. But these Diabolonians love
+to counterfeit their names: Mr. Covetousness covers himself with the name
+of Good-Husbandry, or the like; Mr. Pride can, when need is, call himself
+Mr. Neat, Mr. Handsome, or the like; and so of all the rest of them.
+
+_Clerk_. Mr. Tell-True, what say you?
+
+_Tell_. His name is Pitiless, my lord. I have known him from a child,
+and he hath done all that wickedness whereof he stands charged in the
+indictment; but there is a company of them that are not acquainted with
+the danger of damning, therefore they call all those melancholy that have
+serious thoughts how that state should be shunned by them.
+
+_Clerk_. Set Mr. Haughty to the bar, gaoler. Mr. Haughty, thou art here
+indicted by the name of Haughty, (an intruder upon the town of Mansoul,)
+for that thou didst most traitorously and devilishly teach the town of
+Mansoul to carry it loftily and stoutly against the summons that was
+given them by the captains of the King Shaddai. Thou didst also teach
+the town of Mansoul to speak contemptuously and vilifyingly of their
+great King Shaddai; and didst moreover encourage, both by words and
+examples, Mansoul, to take up arms both against the King and his son
+Emmanuel. How sayest thou, art thou guilty of this indictment, or not?
+
+_Haughty_. Gentlemen, I have always been a man of courage and valour,
+and have not used, when under the greatest clouds, to sneak or hang down
+the head like a bulrush; nor did it at all at any time please me to see
+men veil their bonnets to those that have opposed them; yea, though their
+adversaries seemed to have ten times the advantage of them. I did not
+use to consider who was my foe, nor what the cause was in which I was
+engaged. It was enough to me if I carried it bravely, fought like a man,
+and came off a victor.
+
+_Court_. Mr. Haughty, you are not here indicted for that you have been a
+valiant man, nor for your courage and stoutness in times of distress, but
+for that you have made use of this your pretended valour to draw the town
+of Mansoul into acts of rebellion both against the great King, and
+Emmanuel his Son. This is the crime and the thing wherewith thou art
+charged in and by the indictment.
+
+But he made no answer to that.
+
+Now when the Court had thus far proceeded against the prisoners at the
+bar, then they put them over to the verdict of their jury, to whom they
+did apply themselves after this manner:
+
+‘Gentlemen of the jury, you have been here, and have seen these men; you
+have heard their indictments, their pleas, and what the witnesses have
+testified against them: now what remains, is, that you do forthwith
+withdraw yourselves to some place, where without confusion you may
+consider of what verdict, in a way of truth and righteousness, you ought
+to bring in for the King against them, and so bring it in accordingly.’
+
+Then the jury, to wit, Mr. Belief, Mr. True-Heart, Mr. Upright, Mr.
+Hate-bad, Mr. Love-God, Mr. See-Truth, Mr. Heavenly-Mind, Mr. Moderate,
+Mr. Thankful, Mr. Humble, Mr. Good-Work, and Mr. Zeal-for-God, withdrew
+themselves in order to their work. Now when they were shut up by
+themselves, they fell to discourse among themselves in order to the
+drawing up of their verdict.
+
+And thus Mr. Belief (for he was the foreman) began: ‘Gentlemen,’ quoth
+he, ‘for the men, the prisoners at the bar, for my part I believe that
+they all deserve death.’ ‘Very right,’ said Mr. True-Heart; ‘I am wholly
+of your opinion.’ ‘Oh what a mercy is it,’ said Mr. Hate-Bad, ‘that such
+villains as these are apprehended!’ ‘Ay! ay!’ said Mr. Love-God, ‘this
+is one of the joyfullest days that ever I saw in my life.’ Then said Mr.
+See-Truth, ‘I know that if we judge them to death, our verdict shall
+stand before Shaddai himself’ ‘Nor do I at all question it,’ said Mr.
+Heavenly-Mind; he said, moreover, ‘When all such beasts as these are cast
+out of Mansoul, what a goodly town will it be then!’ ‘Then,’ said Mr.
+Moderate, ‘it is not my manner to pass my judgment with rashness; but for
+these their crimes are so notorious, and the witness so palpable, that
+that man must be wilfully blind who saith the prisoners ought not to
+die.’ ‘Blessed be God,’ said Mr. Thankful, ‘that the traitors are in
+safe custody.’ ‘And I join with you in this upon my bare knees,’ said
+Mr. Humble. ‘I am glad also,’ said Mr. Good-Work. Then said the warm
+man, and true-hearted Mr. Zeal-for-God, ‘Cut them off; they have been the
+plague, and have sought the destruction of Mansoul.’
+
+Thus, therefore, being all agreed in their verdict, they come instantly
+into the Court.
+
+_Clerk_. Gentlemen of the jury, answer all to your names: Mr. Belief,
+one; Mr. True-Heart, two; Mr. Upright, three; Mr. Hate-Bad, four; Mr.
+Love-God, five; Mr. See-Truth, six; Mr. Heavenly-mind, seven; Mr.
+Moderate, eight; Mr. Thankful, nine; Mr. Humble, ten; Mr. Good-Work,
+eleven; and Mr. Zeal-for-God, twelve. Good men and true, stand together
+in your verdict: are you all agreed?
+
+_Jury_. Yes, my lord.
+
+_Clerk_. Who shall speak for you?
+
+_Jury_. Our foreman.
+
+_Clerk_. You, the gentlemen of the jury, being empannelled for our Lord
+the King, to serve here in a matter of life and death, have heard the
+trials of each of these men, the prisoners at the bar: what say you? are
+they guilty of that, and those crimes for which they stand here indicted,
+or are they not guilty?
+
+_Foreman_. Guilty, my lord.
+
+_Clerk_. Look to your prisoners, gaoler.
+
+This was done in the morning, and in the afternoon they received the
+sentence of death according to the law.
+
+The gaoler, therefore, having received such a charge, put them all in the
+inward prison, to preserve them there till the day of execution, which
+was to be the next day in the morning.
+
+But now to see how it happened, one of the prisoners, Incredulity by
+name, in the interim betwixt the sentence and the time of execution,
+brake prison and made his escape, and gets him away quite out of the town
+of Mansoul, and lay lurking in such places and holes as he might, until
+he should again have opportunity to do the town of Mansoul a mischief for
+their thus handling of him as they did.
+
+Now when Mr. Trueman, the gaoler, perceived that he had lost his
+prisoner, he was in a heavy taking, because that prisoner was, to speak
+on, the very worst of all the gang: wherefore first he goes and acquaints
+my Lord Mayor, Mr. Recorder, and my Lord Willbewill, with the matter, and
+to get of them an order to make search for him throughout the town of
+Mansoul. So an order he got, and search was made, but no such man could
+now be found in all the town of Mansoul.
+
+All that could be gathered was, that he had lurked a while about the
+outside of the town, and that here and there one or other had a glimpse
+of him as he did make his escape out of Mansoul; one or two also did
+affirm that they saw him without the town, going apace quite over the
+plain. Now when he was quite gone, it was affirmed by one Mr. Did-see,
+that he ranged all over dry places, till he met with Diabolus, his
+friend, and where should they meet one another but just upon Hell-gate
+hill.
+
+But oh! what a lamentable story did the old gentleman tell to Diabolus
+concerning what sad alteration Emmanuel had made in Mansoul!
+
+As, first, how Mansoul had, after some delays, received a general pardon
+at the hands of Emmanuel, and that they had invited him into the town,
+and that they had given him the castle for his possession. He said,
+moreover, that they had called his soldiers into the town, coveted who
+should quarter the most of them; they also entertained him with the
+timbrel, song, and dance. ‘But that,’ said Incredulity, ‘which is the
+sorest vexation to me is, that he hath pulled down, O father, thy image,
+and set up his own; pulled down thy officers and set up his own. Yea,
+and Willbewill, that rebel, who, one would have thought, should never
+have turned from us, he is now in as great favour with Emmanuel as ever
+he was with thee. But, besides all this, this Willbewill has received a
+special commission from his master to search for, to apprehend, and to
+put to death all, and all manner of Diabolonians that he shall find in
+Mansoul: yea, and this Willbewill has taken and committed to prison
+already eight of my Lord’s most trusty friends in Mansoul. Nay, further,
+my Lord, with grief I speak it, they have been all arraigned, condemned,
+and, I doubt, before this executed in Mansoul. I told my Lord of eight,
+and myself was the ninth, who should assuredly have drunk of the same
+cup, but that through craft, I, as thou seest, have made mine escape from
+them.’
+
+When Diabolus had heard this lamentable story, he yelled and snuffed up
+the wind like a dragon, and made the sky to look dark with his roaring;
+he also sware that he would try to be revenged on Mansoul for this. So
+they, both he and his old friend Incredulity, concluded to enter into
+great consultation, how they might get the town of Mansoul again.
+
+Now, before this time, the day was come in which the prisoners in Mansoul
+were to be executed. So they were brought to the cross, and that by
+Mansoul, in most solemn manner; for the Prince said that this should be
+done by the hand of the town of Mansoul, ‘that I may see,’ said he, ‘the
+forwardness of my now redeemed Mansoul to keep my word, and to do my
+commandments; and that I may bless Mansoul in doing this deed. Proof of
+sincerity pleases me well; let Mansoul therefore first lay their hands
+upon these Diabolonians to destroy them.’
+
+So the town of Mansoul slew them, according to the word of their Prince;
+but when the prisoners were brought to the cross to die, you can hardly
+believe what troublesome work Mansoul had of it to put the Diabolonians
+to death; for the men, knowing that they must die, and every of them
+having implacable enmity in their hearts to Mansoul, what did they but
+took courage at the cross, and there resisted the men of the town of
+Mansoul? Wherefore the men of Mansoul were forced to cry out for help to
+the captains and men of war. Now the great Shaddai had a secretary in
+the town, and he was a great lover of the men of Mansoul, and he was at
+the place of execution also; so he, hearing the men of Mansoul cry out
+against the strugglings and unruliness of the prisoners, rose up from his
+place, and came and put his hands upon the hands of the men of Mansoul.
+So they crucified the Diabolonians that had been a plague, a grief, and
+an offence to the town of Mansoul.
+
+Now, when this good work was done, the Prince came down to see, to visit,
+and to speak comfortably to the men of Mansoul, and to strengthen their
+hands in such work. And he said to them that, by this act of theirs he
+had proved them, and found them to be lovers of his person, observers of
+his laws, and such as had also respect to his honour. He said, moreover,
+(to show them that they by this should not be losers, nor their town
+weakened by the loss of them,) that he would make them another captain,
+and that of one of themselves. And that this captain should be the ruler
+of a thousand, for the good and benefit of the now flourishing town of
+Mansoul.
+
+So he called one to him whose name was Waiting, and bid him, ‘Go quickly
+up to the castle gate, and inquire there for one Mr. Experience, that
+waiteth upon that noble captain, the Captain Credence, and bid him come
+hither to me.’ So the messenger that waited upon the good Prince
+Emmanuel went and said as he was commanded. Now the young gentleman was
+waiting to see the captain train and muster his men in the castle yard.
+Then said Mr. Waiting to him, ‘Sir, the Prince would that you should come
+down to his highness forthwith.’ So he brought him down to Emmanuel, and
+he came and made obeisance before him. Now the men of the town knew Mr.
+Experience well, for he was born and bred in Mansoul; they also knew him
+to be a man of conduct, of valour, and a person prudent in matters; he
+was also a comely person, well-spoken, and very successful in his
+undertakings.
+
+Wherefore the hearts of the townsmen were transported with joy when they
+saw that the Prince himself was so taken with Mr. Experience, that he
+would needs make him a captain over a band of men.
+
+So with one consent they bowed the knee before Emmanuel, and with a shout
+said, ‘Let Emmanuel live for ever!’ Then said the Prince to the young
+gentleman, whose name was Mr. Experience, ‘I have thought good to confer
+upon thee a place of trust and honour in this my town of Mansoul.’ Then
+the young man bowed his head and worshipped. ‘It is,’ said Emmanuel,
+‘that thou shouldest be a captain, a captain over a thousand men in my
+beloved town of Mansoul.’ Then said the captain, ‘Let the King live!’
+So the Prince gave out orders forthwith to the King’s secretary, that he
+should draw up for Mr. Experience a commission to make him a captain over
+a thousand men. ‘And let it be brought to me,’ said he, ‘that I may set
+to my seal.’ So it was done as it was commanded. The commission was
+drawn up, brought to Emmanuel, and he set his seal thereto. Then, by the
+hand of Mr. Waiting, he sent it away to the captain.
+
+Now as soon as the captain had received his commission, he sounded his
+trumpet for volunteers, and young men came to him apace; yea, the
+greatest and chief men in the town sent their sons, to be listed under
+his command. Thus Captain Experience came under command to Emmanuel, for
+the good of the town of Mansoul. He had for his lieutenant one Mr.
+Skilful, and for his cornet one Mr. Memory. His under officers I need
+not name. His colours were the white colours for the town of Mansoul;
+and his scutcheon was the dead lion and dead bear. So the Prince
+returned to his royal palace again.
+
+Now when he was returned thither, the elders of the town of Mansoul, to
+wit, the Lord Mayor, the Recorder, and the Lord Willbewill, went to
+congratulate him, and in special way to thank him for his love, care, and
+the tender compassion which he showed to his ever-obliged town of
+Mansoul. So after a while, and some sweet communion between them, the
+townsmen having solemnly ended their ceremony, returned to their place
+again.
+
+Emmanuel also at this time appointed them a day wherein he would renew
+their charter, yea, wherein he would renew and enlarge it, mending
+several faults therein, that Mansoul’s yoke might be yet more easy. And
+this he did without any desire of theirs, even of his own frankness and
+noble mind. So when he had sent for and seen their old one, he laid it
+by, and said, ‘Now that which decayeth and waxeth old is ready to vanish
+away.’ He said, moreover, ‘The town of Mansoul shall have another, a
+better, a new one, more steady and firm by far.’ An epitome hereof take
+as follows:—
+
+‘Emmanuel, Prince of Peace, and a great lover of the town of Mansoul, I
+do in the name of my Father, and of mine own clemency, give, grant, and
+bequeath to my beloved town of Mansoul.
+
+‘First. Free, full, and everlasting forgiveness of all wrongs, injuries,
+and offences done by them against my Father, me, their neighbour, or
+themselves.
+
+‘Second. I do give them the holy law and my testament, with all that
+therein is contained, for their everlasting comfort and consolation.
+
+‘Third. I do also give them a portion of the self-same grace and
+goodness that dwells in my Father’s heart and mine.
+
+‘Fourth. I do give, grant, and bestow upon them freely, the world and
+what is therein, for their good; and they shall have that power over
+them, as shall stand with the honour of my Father, my glory, and their
+comfort: yea, I grant them the benefits of life and death, and of things
+present, and things to come. This privilege no other city, town, or
+corporation, shall have, but my Mansoul only.
+
+‘Fifth. I do give and grant them leave, and free access to me in my
+palace at all seasons—to my palace above or below—there to make known
+their wants to me, and I give them, moreover, a promise that I will hear
+and redress all their grievances.
+
+‘Sixth. I do give, grant to, and invest the town of Mansoul with full
+power and authority to seek out, take, enslave, and destroy all, and all
+manner of Diabolonians that at any time, from whencesoever, shall be
+found straggling in or about the town of Mansoul.
+
+‘Seventh. I do further grant to my beloved town of Mansoul, that they
+shall have authority not to suffer any foreigner, or stranger, or their
+seed, to be free in, and of the blessed town of Mansoul, nor to share in
+the excellent privileges thereof. But that all the grants, privileges,
+and immunities that I bestow upon the famous town of Mansoul, shall be
+for those the old natives, and true inhabitants thereof; to them, I say,
+and to their right seed after them.
+
+‘But all Diabolonians, of what sort, birth, country, or kingdom soever,
+shall be debarred a share therein.’
+
+So when the town of Mansoul had received at the hand of Emmanuel their
+gracious charter, (which in itself is infinitely more large than by this
+lean epitome is set before you,) they carried it to audience, that is, to
+the market place, and there Mr. Recorder read it in the presence of all
+the people. This being done, it was had back to the castle gates, and
+there fairly engraven upon the doors thereof, and laid in letters of
+gold, to the end that the town of Mansoul, with all the people thereof,
+might have it always in their view, or might go where they might see what
+a blessed freedom their Prince had bestowed upon them, that their joy
+might be increased in themselves, and their love renewed to their great
+and good Emmanuel.
+
+But what joy, what comfort, what consolation, think you, did now possess
+the hearts of the men of Mansoul! The bells rung, the minstrels played,
+the people danced, the captains shouted, the colours waved in the wind,
+and the silver trumpets sounded; and the Diabolonians now were glad to
+hide their heads, for they looked like them that had been long dead.
+
+When this was over, the Prince sent again for the elders of the town of
+Mansoul, and communed with them about a ministry that he intended to
+establish among them; such a ministry that might open unto them, and that
+might instruct them in the things that did concern their present and
+future state.
+
+‘For,’ said he, ‘you, of yourselves, unless you have teachers and guides,
+will not be able to know, and, if not to know, to be sure not to do the
+will of my Father.’
+
+At this news, when the elders of Mansoul brought it to the people, the
+whole town came running together, (for it pleased them well, as whatever
+the Prince now did pleased the people,) and all with one consent implored
+his Majesty that he would forthwith establish such a ministry among them
+as might teach them both law and judgment, statute and commandment; that
+they might be documented in all good and wholesome things. So he told
+them that he would grant them their requests, and would establish two
+among them; one that was of his Father’s court, and one that was a native
+of Mansoul.
+
+‘He that is from the court,’ said he, ‘is a person of no less quality and
+dignity than my Father and I; and he is the Lord Chief Secretary of my
+Father’s house: for he is, and always has been, the chief dictator of all
+my Father’s laws, a person altogether well skilled in all mysteries, and
+knowledge of mysteries, as is my Father, or as myself is. Indeed he is
+one with us in nature, and also as to loving of, and being faithful to,
+and in the eternal concerns of the town of Mansoul.
+
+‘And this is he,’ said the Prince, ‘that must be your chief teacher; for
+it is he, and he only, that can teach you clearly in all high and
+supernatural things. He, and he only, it is that knows the ways and
+methods of my Father at court, nor can any like him show how the heart of
+my Father is at all times, in all things, upon all occasions, towards
+Mansoul; for as no man knows the things of a man but that spirit of a man
+which is in him, so the things of my Father knows no man but this his
+high and mighty Secretary. Nor can any, as he, tell Mansoul how and what
+they shall do to keep themselves in the love of my Father. He also it is
+that can bring lost things to your remembrance, and that can tell you
+things to come. This teacher, therefore, must of necessity have the
+pre-eminence, both in your affections and judgment, before your other
+teacher; his personal dignity, the excellency of his teaching, also the
+great dexterity that he hath to help you to make and draw up petitions to
+my Father for your help, and to his pleasing, must lay obligations upon
+you to love him, fear him, and to take heed that you grieve him not.
+
+‘This person can put life and vigour into all he says; yea, and can also
+put it into your heart. This person can make seers of you, and can make
+you tell what shall be hereafter. By this person you must frame all your
+petitions to my Father and me; and without his advice and counsel first
+obtained, let nothing enter into the town or castle of Mansoul, for that
+may disgust and grieve this noble person.
+
+‘Take heed, I say, that you do not grieve this minister; for if you do,
+he may fight against you; and should he once be moved by you to set
+himself against you in battle array, that will distress you more than if
+twelve legions should from my Father’s court be sent to make war upon
+you.
+
+‘But, as I said, if you shall hearken unto him, and shall love him; if
+you shall devote yourselves to his teaching, and shall seek to have
+converse, and to maintain communion with him, you shall find him ten
+times better than is the whole world to any; yea, he will shed abroad the
+love of my Father in your hearts, and Mansoul will be the wisest, and
+most blessed of all people.’
+
+Then did the Prince call unto him the old gentleman, who before had been
+the Recorder of Mansoul, Mr. Conscience by name, and told him, That,
+forasmuch as he was well skilled in the law and government of the town of
+Mansoul, and was also well-spoken, and could pertinently deliver to them
+his Master’s will in all terrene and domestic matters, therefore he would
+also make him a minister for, in, and to the goodly town of Mansoul, in
+all the laws, statutes, and judgments of the famous town of Mansoul.
+‘And thou must,’ said the Prince, ‘confine thyself to the teaching of
+moral virtues, to civil and natural duties; but thou must not attempt to
+presume to be a revealer of those high and supernatural mysteries that
+are kept close in the bosom of Shaddai, my Father: for those things knows
+no man, nor can any reveal them but my Father’s Secretary only.
+
+‘Thou art a native of the town of Mansoul, but the Lord Secretary is a
+native with my Father; wherefore, as thou hast knowledge of the laws and
+customs of the corporation, so he of the things and will of my Father.
+
+‘Wherefore, O Mr. Conscience, although I have made thee a minister and a
+preacher to the town of Mansoul, yet as to the things which the Lord
+Secretary knoweth, and shall teach to this people, there thou must be his
+scholar and a learner, even as the rest of Mansoul are.
+
+‘Thou must therefore, in all high and supernatural things, go to him for
+information and knowledge; for though there be a spirit in man, this
+person’s inspiration must give him understanding. Wherefore, O thou Mr.
+Recorder, keep low and be humble, and remember that the Diabolonians that
+kept not their first charge, but left their own standing, are now made
+prisoners in the pit. Be therefore content with thy station.
+
+‘I have made thee my Father’s vicegerent on earth, in such things of
+which I have made mention before: and thou, take thou power to teach them
+to Mansoul, yea, and to impose them with whips and chastisements, if they
+shall not willingly hearken to do thy commandments.
+
+‘And, Mr. Recorder, because thou art old, and through many abuses made
+feeble; therefore I give thee leave and license to go when thou wilt to
+my fountain, my conduit, and there to drink freely of the blood of my
+grape, for my conduit doth always run wine. Thus doing, thou shalt drive
+from thine heart and stomach all foul, gross, and hurtful humours. It
+will also lighten thine eyes, and will strengthen thy memory for the
+reception and keeping of all that the King’s most noble Secretary
+teacheth.’
+
+When the Prince had thus put Mr. Recorder (that once so was) into the
+place and office of a minister to Mansoul, and the man had thankfully
+accepted thereof, then did Emmanuel address himself in a particular
+speech to the townsmen themselves.
+
+‘Behold,’ said the Prince to Mansoul, ‘my love and care towards you; I
+have added to all that is past, this mercy, to appoint you preachers; the
+most noble Secretary to teach you in all high and sublime mysteries; and
+this gentleman,’ pointing to Mr. Conscience, ‘is to teach you in all
+things human and domestic, for therein lieth his work. He is not, by
+what I have said, debarred of telling to Mansoul anything that he hath
+heard and received at the mouth of the lord high Secretary; only he shall
+not attempt to presume to pretend to be a revealer of those high
+mysteries himself; for the breaking of them up, and the discovery of them
+to Mansoul lieth only in the power, authority, and skill of the lord high
+Secretary himself. Talk of them he may, and so may the rest of the town
+of Mansoul; yea, and may, as occasion gives them opportunity, press them
+upon each other for the benefit of the whole. These things, therefore, I
+would have you observe and do, for it is for your life, and the
+lengthening of your days.
+
+‘And one thing more to my beloved Mr. Recorder, and to all the town of
+Mansoul: You must not dwell in, nor stay upon, anything of that which he
+hath in commission to teach you, as to your trust and expectation of the
+next world; (of the next world, I say, for I purpose to give another to
+Mansoul, when this with them is worn out;) but for that you must wholly
+and solely have recourse to, and make stay upon his doctrine that is your
+Teacher after the first order. Yea, Mr. Recorder himself must not look
+for life from that which he himself revealeth; his dependence for that
+must be founded in the doctrine of the other preacher. Let Mr. Recorder
+also take heed that he receive not any doctrine, or point of doctrine,
+that is not communicated to him by his Superior Teacher, nor yet within
+the precincts of his own formal knowledge.’
+
+Now, after the Prince had thus settled things in the famous town of
+Mansoul, he proceeded to give to the elders of the corporation a
+necessary caution, to wit, how they should carry it to the high and noble
+captains that he had, from his Father’s court, sent or brought with him,
+to the famous town of Mansoul.
+
+‘These captains,’ said he, ‘do love the town of Mansoul, and they are
+picked men, picked out of abundance, as men that best suit, and that will
+most faithfully serve in the wars of Shaddai against the Diabolonians,
+for the preservation of the town of Mansoul. ‘I charge you therefore,’
+said he, ‘O ye inhabitants of the now flourishing town of Mansoul, that
+you carry it not ruggedly or untowardly to my captains, or their men;
+since, as I said, they are picked and choice men—men chosen out of many
+for the good of the town of Mansoul. I say, I charge you, that you carry
+it not untowardly to them: for though they have the hearts and faces of
+lions, when at any time they shall be called forth to engage and fight
+with the King’s foes, and the enemies of the town of Mansoul; yet a
+little discountenance cast upon them from the town of Mansoul will deject
+and cast down their faces, will weaken and take away their courage. Do
+not, therefore, O my beloved, carry it unkindly to my valiant captains
+and courageous men of war, but love them, nourish them, succour them, and
+lay them in your bosoms; and they will not only fight for you, but cause
+to fly from you all those the Diabolonians that seek, and will, if
+possible, be, your utter destruction.
+
+‘If, therefore, any of them should at any time be sick or weak, and so
+not able to perform that office of love, which, with all their hearts,
+they are willing to do (and will do also when well and in health), slight
+them not, nor despise them, but rather strengthen them and encourage
+them, though weak and ready to die, for they are your fence, and your
+guard, your wall, your gates, your locks, and your bars. And although,
+when they are weak, they can do but little, but rather need to be helped
+by you, than that you should then expect great things from them, yet,
+when well, you know what exploits, what feats and warlike achievements
+they are able to do, and will perform for you.
+
+‘Besides, if they be weak, the town of Mansoul cannot be strong; if they
+be strong, then Mansoul cannot be weak; your safety, therefore, doth lie
+in their health, and in your countenancing them. Remember, also, that if
+they be sick, they catch that disease of the town of Mansoul itself.
+
+‘These things I have said unto you because I love your welfare and your
+honour: observe, therefore, O my Mansoul, to be punctual in all things
+that I have given in charge unto you, and that not only as a town
+corporate, and so to your officers and guard, and guides in chief, but to
+you as you are a people whose well-being, as single persons, depends on
+the observation of the orders and commandments of their Lord.
+
+‘Next, O my Mansoul, I do warn you of that, of which, notwithstanding
+that reformation that at present is wrought among you, you have need to
+be warned about: wherefore hearken diligently unto me. I am now sure,
+and you will know hereafter, that there are yet of the Diabolonians
+remaining in the town of Mansoul, Diabolonians that are sturdy and
+implacable, and that do already while I am with you, and that will yet
+more when I am from you, study, plot, contrive, invent, and jointly
+attempt to bring you to desolation, and so to a state far worse than that
+of the Egyptian bondage; they are the avowed friends of Diabolus,
+therefore look about you. They used heretofore to lodge with their
+Prince in the Castle, when Incredulity was the Lord Mayor of this town;
+but since my coming hither, they lie more in the outsides and walls, and
+have made themselves dens, and caves, and holes, and strongholds therein.
+Wherefore, O Mansoul! thy work, as to this, will be so much the more
+difficult and hard; that is, to take, mortify, and put them to death
+according to the will of my Father. Nor can you utterly rid yourselves
+of them, unless you should pull down the walls of your town, the which I
+am by no means willing you should. Do you ask me, What shall we do then?
+Why, be you diligent, and quit you like men; observe their holes; find
+out their haunts; assault them, and make no peace with them. Wherever
+they haunt, lurk, or abide, and what terms of peace soever they offer
+you, abhor, and all shall be well betwixt you and me. And that you may
+the better know them from those that are the natives of Mansoul, I will
+give you this brief schedule of the names of the chief of them; and they
+are these that follow:—The Lord Fornication, the Lord Adultery, the Lord
+Murder, the Lord Anger, the Lord Lasciviousness, the Lord Deceit, the
+Lord Evil-Eye, Mr. Drunkenness, Mr. Revelling, Mr. Idolatry, Mr.
+Witch-craft, Mr. Variance, Mr. Emulation, Mr. Wrath, Mr. Strife, Mr.
+Sedition, and Mr. Heresy. These are some of the chief, O Mansoul! of
+those that will seek to overthrow thee for ever. These, I say, are the
+skulkers in Mansoul; but look thou well into the law of thy King, and
+there thou shalt find their physiognomy, and such other characteristical
+notes of them, by which they certainly may be known.
+
+‘These, O my Mansoul, (and I would gladly that you should certainly know
+it,) if they be suffered to run and range about the town as they would,
+will quickly, like vipers, eat out your bowels; yea, poison your
+captains, cut the sinews of your soldiers, break the bars and bolts of
+your gates, and turn your now most flourishing Mansoul into a barren and
+desolate wilderness, and ruinous heap. Wherefore, that you may take
+courage to yourselves to apprehend these villains wherever you find them,
+I give to you, my Lord Mayor, my Lord Willbewill, and Mr. Recorder, with
+all the inhabitants of the town of Mansoul, full power and commission to
+seek out, to take, and to cause to be put to death by the cross, all, and
+all manner of Diabolonians, when and wherever you shall find them to lurk
+within, or to range without the walls of the town of Mansoul.
+
+‘I told you before that I had placed a standing ministry among you; not
+that you have but these with you, for my first four captains who came
+against the master and lord of the Diabolonians that was in Mansoul, they
+can, and if need be, and if they be required, will not only privately
+inform, but publicly preach to the corporation both good and wholesome
+doctrine, and such as shall lead you in the way. Yea, they will set up a
+weekly, yea, if need be, a daily lecture in thee, O Mansoul! and will
+instruct thee in such profitable lessons, that, if heeded, will do thee
+good at the end. And take good heed that you spare not the men that you
+have a commission to take and crucify.
+
+‘Now, as I have set before your eyes the vagrants and runagates by name,
+so I will tell you, that among yourselves, some of them shall creep in to
+beguile you, even such as would seem, and that in appearance are, very
+rife and hot for religion. And they, if you watch not, will do you a
+mischief, such an one as at present you cannot think of.
+
+‘These, as I said, will show themselves to you in another hue than those
+under description before. Wherefore, Mansoul, watch and be sober, and
+suffer not thyself to be betrayed.’
+
+When the Prince had thus far new modelled the town of Mansoul, and had
+instructed them in such matters as were profitable for them to know, then
+he appointed another day in which he intended, when the townsfolk came
+together, to bestow a further badge of honour upon the town of Mansoul,—a
+badge that should distinguish them from all the people, kindreds, and
+tongues that dwell in the kingdom of Universe. Now it was not long
+before the day appointed was come, and the Prince and his people met in
+the King’s palace, where first Emmanuel made a short speech unto them,
+and then did for them as he had said, and unto them as he had promised.
+
+‘My Mansoul,’ said he, ‘that which I now am about to do, is to make you
+known to the world to be mine, and to distinguish you also in your own
+eyes, from all false traitors that may creep in among you.’
+
+Then he commanded that those that waited upon him should go and bring
+forth out of his treasury those white and glistening robes ‘that I,’ said
+he, ‘have provided and laid up in store for my Mansoul.’ So the white
+garments were fetched out of his treasury, and laid forth to the eyes of
+the people. Moreover, it was granted to them that they should take them
+and put them on, ‘according,’ said he, ‘to your size and stature.’ So
+the people were put into white, into fine linen, white and clean.
+
+Then said the Prince unto them, ‘This, O Mansoul, is my livery, and the
+badge by which mine are known from the servants of others. Yea, it is
+that which I grant to all that are mine, and without which no man is
+permitted to see my face. Wear them, therefore, for my sake, who gave
+them unto you; and also if you would be known by the world to be mine.’
+
+But now! can you think how Mansoul shone? It was fair as the sun, clear
+as the moon, and terrible as an army with banners.
+
+The Prince added further, and said, ‘No prince, potentate, or mighty one
+of Universe, giveth this livery but myself: behold, therefore, as I said
+before, you shall be known by it to be mine.
+
+‘And now,’ said he, ‘I have given you my livery, let me give you also in
+commandment concerning them; and be sure that you take good heed to my
+words.
+
+‘First. Wear them daily, day by day, lest you should at sometimes appear
+to others as if you were none of mine.
+
+‘Second. Keep them always white; for if they be soiled, it is dishonour
+to me.
+
+‘Third. Wherefore gird them up from the ground, and let them not lag
+with dust and dirt.
+
+‘Fourth. Take heed that you lose them not, lest you walk naked, and they
+see your shame.
+
+‘Fifth. But if you should sully them, if you should defile them, the
+which I am greatly unwilling you should, and the prince Diabolus will be
+glad if you would, then speed you to do that which is written in my law,
+that yet you may stand, and befall before me, and before my throne.
+Also, this is the way to cause that I may not leave you, nor forsake you
+while here, but may dwell in this town of Mansoul for ever.’
+
+And now was Mansoul, and the inhabitants of it, as the signet upon
+Emmanuel’s right hand. Where was there now a town, a city, a
+corporation, that could compare with Mansoul! a town redeemed from the
+hand, and from the power of Diabolus! a town that the King Shaddai loved,
+and that he sent Emmanuel to regain from the Prince of the infernal cave;
+yea, a town that Emmanuel loved to dwell in, and that he chose for his
+royal habitation; a town that he fortified for himself, and made strong
+by the force of his army. What shall I say, Mansoul has now a most
+excellent Prince, golden captains and men of war, weapons proved, and
+garments as white as snow. Nor are these benefits to be counted little,
+but great; can the town of Mansoul esteem them so, and improve them to
+that end and purpose for which they are bestowed upon them?
+
+When the Prince had thus completed the modelling of the town, to show
+that he had great delight in the work of his hands and took pleasure in
+the good that he had wrought for the famous and flourishing Mansoul, he
+commanded, and they set his standard upon the battlements of the castle.
+And then,
+
+First. He gave them frequent visits; not a day now but the elders of
+Mansoul must come to him, or he to them, into his palace. Now they must
+walk and talk together of all the great things that he had done, and yet
+further promised to do, for the town of Mansoul. Thus would he often do
+with the Lord Mayor, my Lord Willbewill, and the honest subordinate
+preacher Mr. Conscience, and Mr. Recorder. But oh, how graciously, how
+lovingly, how courteously, and tenderly did this blessed Prince now carry
+it towards the town of Mansoul! In all the streets, gardens, orchards,
+and other places where he came, to be sure the poor should have his
+blessing and benediction; yea, he would kiss them, and if they were ill
+he would lay hands on them, and make them well. The captains, also, he
+would daily, yea, sometimes hourly, encourage with his presence and
+goodly words. For you must know that a smile from him upon them would
+put more vigour, more life, and stoutness into them, than would anything
+else under heaven.
+
+The Prince would now also feast them, and be with them continually:
+hardly a week would pass but a banquet must be had betwixt him and them.
+You may remember that, some pages before, we make mention of one feast
+that they had together; but now to feast them was a thing more common:
+every day with Mansoul was a feast-day now. Nor did he, when they
+returned to their places, send them empty away, either they must have a
+ring, a gold chain, a bracelet, a white stone, or something; so dear was
+Mansoul to him now; so lovely was Mansoul in his eyes.
+
+Second. When the elders and townsmen did not come to him, he would send
+in much plenty of provision unto them; meat that came from court, wine
+and bread that were prepared for his Father’s table; yea, such delicates
+would he send unto them, and therewith would so cover their table, that
+whoever saw it confessed that the like could not be seen in any kingdom.
+
+Third. If Mansoul did not frequently visit him as he desired they
+should, he would walk out to them, knock at their doors, and desire
+entrance, that amity might be maintained betwixt them and him; if they
+did hear and open to him, as commonly they would, if they were at home,
+then would he renew his former love, and confirm it too with some new
+tokens, and signs of continued favour.
+
+And was it not now amazing to behold, that in that very place where
+sometimes Diabolus had his abode, and entertained his Diabolonians to the
+almost utter destruction of Mansoul, the Prince of princes should sit
+eating and drinking with them, while all his mighty captains, men of war,
+trumpeters, with the singing-men and singing-women of his Father, stood
+round about to wait upon them! Now did Mansoul’s cup run over, now did
+her conduits run sweet wine, now did she eat the finest of the wheat, and
+drink milk and honey out of the rock! Now, she said, How great is his
+goodness! for since I found favour in his eyes, how honourable have I
+been!
+
+The blessed Prince did also ordain a new officer in the town, and a
+goodly person he was; his name was Mr. God’s-Peace: this man was set over
+my Lord Willbewill, my Lord Mayor, Mr. Recorder, the subordinate
+preacher, Mr. Mind, and over all the natives of the town of Mansoul.
+Himself was not a native of it, but came with the Prince Emmanuel from
+the court. He was a great acquaintance of Captain Credence and Captain
+Good-Hope; some say they were kin, and I am of that opinion too. This
+man, as I said, was made governor of the town in general, especially over
+the castle, and Captain Credence was to help him there. And I made great
+observation of it, that so long as all things went in Mansoul as this
+sweet-natured gentleman would, the town was in most happy condition. Now
+there were no jars, no chiding, no interferings, no unfaithful doings in
+all the town of Mansoul; every man in Mansoul kept close to his own
+employment. The gentry, the officers, the soldiers, and all in place
+observed their order. And as for the women and children of the town,
+they followed their business joyfully; they would work and sing, work and
+sing, from morning till night: so that quite through the town of Mansoul
+now nothing was to be found but harmony, quietness, joy, and health. And
+this lasted all that summer.
+
+But there was a man in the town of Mansoul, and his name was Mr.
+Carnal-Security; this man did, after all this mercy bestowed on this
+corporation, bring the town of Mansoul into great and grievous slavery
+and bondage. A brief account of him and of his doings take as
+followeth:—
+
+When Diabolus at first took possession of the town of Mansoul, he brought
+thither, with himself, a great number of Diabolonians, men of his own
+conditions. Now among these there was one whose name was Mr.
+Self-Conceit, and a notable brisk man he was, as any that in those days
+did possess the town of Mansoul. Diabolus, then, perceiving this man to
+be active and bold, sent him upon many desperate designs, the which he
+managed better, and more to the pleasing of his lord, than most that came
+with him from the dens could do. Wherefore, finding him so fit for his
+purpose, he preferred him, and made him next to the great Lord
+Willbewill, of whom we have written so much before. Now the Lord
+Willbewill being in those days very well pleased with him, and with his
+achievements, gave him his daughter, the Lady Fear-Nothing, to wife.
+Now, of my Lady Fear-nothing, did this Mr. Self-Conceit beget this
+gentleman, Mr. Carnal-Security. Wherefore, there being then in Mansoul
+those strange kinds of mixtures, it was hard for them, in some cases, to
+find out who were natives, who not, for Mr. Carnal-Security sprang from
+my Lord Willbewill by mother’s side, though he had for his father a
+Diabolonian by nature.
+
+Well, this Carnal-Security took much after his father and mother; he was
+self-conceited, he feared nothing, he was also a very busy man: nothing
+of news, nothing of doctrine, nothing of alteration, or talk of
+alteration, could at any time be on foot in Mansoul, but be sure Mr.
+Carnal-Security would be at the head or tail of it: but, to be sure, he
+would decline those that he deemed the weakest, and stood always with
+them in his way of standing, that he supposed was the strongest side.
+
+Now, when Shaddai the mighty, and Emmanuel his Son, made war upon
+Mansoul, to take it, this Mr. Carnal-Security was then in town, and was a
+great doer among the people, encouraging them in their rebellion, putting
+them upon hardening themselves in their resisting the King’s forces: but
+when he saw that the town of Mansoul was taken, and converted to the use
+of the glorious Prince Emmanuel; and when he also saw what was become of
+Diabolus, and how he was unroosted, and made to quit the castle in the
+greatest contempt and scorn; and that the town of Mansoul was well lined
+with captains, engines of war, and men, and also provision; what doth he
+but slyly wheel about also; and as he had served Diabolus against the
+good Prince, so he feigned that he would serve the Prince against his
+foes.
+
+And having got some little smattering of Emmanuel’s things by the end,
+being bold, he ventures himself into the company of the townsmen, any
+attempts also to chat among them. Now he knew that the power and
+strength of the town of Mansoul was great, and that it could not but be
+pleasing to the people, if he cried up their might and their glory.
+Wherefore he beginneth his tale with the power and strength of Mansoul,
+and affirmed that it was impregnable; now magnifying their captains and
+their slings, and their rams; then crying up their fortifications and
+strongholds; and, lastly, the assurances that they had from their Prince,
+that Mansoul should be happy for ever. But when he saw that some of the
+men of the town were tickled and taken with his discourse, he makes it
+his business, and walking from street to street, house to house, and man
+to man, he at last brought Mansoul to dance after his pipe, and to grow
+almost as carnally secure as himself; so from talking they went to
+feasting, and from feasting to sporting; and so to some other matters.
+Now Emmanuel was yet in the town of Mansoul, and he wisely observed their
+doings. My Lord Mayor, my Lord Willbewill, and Mr. Recorder were also
+all taken with the words of this tattling Diabolonian gentleman,
+forgetting that their Prince had given them warning before to take heed
+that they were not beguiled with any Diabolonian sleight; he had further
+told them that the security of the now flourishing town of Mansoul did
+not so much lie in her present fortifications and force, as in her so
+using of what she had, as might oblige her Emmanuel to abide within her
+castle. For the right doctrine of Emmanuel was, that the town of Mansoul
+should take heed that they forgot not his Father’s love and his; also,
+that they should so demean themselves as to continue to keep themselves
+therein. Now this was not the way to do it, namely, to fall in love with
+one of the Diabolonians, and with such an one too as Mr. Carnal-Security
+was, and to be led up and down by the nose by him; they should have heard
+their Prince, feared their Prince, loved their Prince, and have stoned
+this naughty pack to death, and took care to have walked in the ways of
+their Prince’s prescribing: for then should their peace have been as a
+river, when their righteousness had been like the waves of the sea.
+
+Now when Emmanuel perceived that through the policy of Mr.
+Carnal-Security the hearts of the men of Mansoul were chilled and abated
+in their practical love to him,
+
+First. He bemoans them, and, condoles their state with the Secretary,
+saying, ‘Oh that my people had hearkened unto me, and that Mansoul had
+walked in my ways! I would have fed them with the finest of the wheat;
+and with honey out of the rock would I have sustained them.’ This done,
+he said in his heart, ‘I will return to the court, and go to my place,
+till Mansoul shall consider and acknowledge their offence.’ And he did
+so, and the cause and manner of his going away from them was, that
+Mansoul declined him, as is manifest in these particulars.
+
+‘1. They left off their former way of visiting him, they came not to his
+royal palace as afore.
+
+‘2. They did not regard, nor yet take notice, that he came or came not to
+visit them.
+
+‘3. The love-feasts that had wont to be between their Prince and them,
+though he made them still, and called them to them, yet they neglected to
+come to them, or to be delighted with them.
+
+‘4. They waited not for his counsels, but began to be headstrong and
+confident in themselves, concluding that now they were strong and
+invincible, and that Mansoul was secure, and beyond all reach of the foe,
+and that her state must needs be unalterable for ever.’
+
+Now, as was said, Emmanuel perceiving that by the craft of Mr.
+Carnal-Security, the town of Mansoul was taken off from their dependence
+upon him, and upon his Father by him, and set upon what by them was
+bestowed upon it; he first, as I said, bemoaned their state, then he used
+means to make them understand that the way that they went on in was
+dangerous: for he sent my Lord High Secretary to them, to forbid them
+such ways; but twice when he came to them, he found them at dinner in Mr.
+Carnal-Security’s parlour; and perceiving also that they were not willing
+to reason about matters concerning their good, he took grief and went his
+way; the which when he had told to the Prince Emmanuel, he took offence,
+and was grieved also, and so made provision to return to his Father’s
+court.
+
+Now, the methods of his withdrawing, as I was saying before, were thus:—
+
+‘1. Even while he was yet with them in Mansoul, he kept himself close,
+and more retired than formerly.
+
+‘2. His speech was not now, if he came in their company, so pleasant and
+familiar as formerly.
+
+‘3. Nor did he, as in times past, send to Mansoul, from his table, those
+dainty bits which he was wont to do.
+
+‘4. Nor when they came to visit him, as now and then they would, would he
+be so easily spoken with as they found him to be in times past. They
+might now knock once, yea, twice, but he would seem not at all to regard
+them; whereas formerly at the sound of their feet he would up and run,
+and meet them halfway, and take them too, and lay them in his bosom.’
+
+But thus Emmanuel carried it now, and by this his carriage he sought to
+make them bethink themselves, and return to him. But, alas! they did not
+consider, they did not know his ways, they regarded not, they were not
+touched with these, nor with the true remembrance of former favours.
+Wherefore what does he but in private manner withdraw himself, first from
+his palace, then to the gate of the town, and so away from Mansoul he
+goes, till they should acknowledge their offence, and more earnestly seek
+his face. Mr. God’s-Peace also laid down his commission, and would for
+the present act no longer in the town of Mansoul.
+
+Thus they walked contrary to him, and he again, by way of retaliation,
+walked contrary to them. But, alas! by this time they were so hardened
+in their way, and had so drunk in the doctrine of Mr. Carnal-Security,
+that the departing of their Prince touched them not, nor was he
+remembered by them when gone; and so, of consequence, his absence not
+condoled by them.
+
+Now, there was a day wherein this old gentleman, Mr. Carnal-Security, did
+again make a feast for the town of Mansoul; and there was at that time in
+the town one Mr. Godly-Fear, one now but little set by, though formerly
+one of great request. This man, old Carnal-Security, had a mind, if
+possible, to gull, and debauch, and abuse, as he did the rest, and
+therefore he now bids him to the feast with his neighbours. So the day
+being come, they prepare, and he goes and appears with the rest of the
+guests; and being all set at the table, they did eat and drink, and were
+merry, even all but this one man: for Mr. Godly-Fear sat like a stranger,
+and did neither eat nor was merry. The which, when Mr. Carnal-Security
+perceived, he presently addressed himself in a speech thus to him:—
+
+‘Mr. Godly-Fear, are you not well? You seem to be ill of body or mind,
+or both. I have a cordial of Mr. Forget-Good’s making, the which, sir,
+if you will take a dram of, I hope it may make you bonny and blithe, and
+so make you more fit for us, feasting companions.’
+
+Unto whom the good old gentleman discreetly replied, ‘Sir, I thank you
+for all things courteous and civil; but for your cordial I have no list
+thereto. But a word to the natives of Mansoul: You, the elders and chief
+of Mansoul, to me it is strange to see you so jocund and merry, when the
+town of Mansoul is in such woeful case.’
+
+Then said Mr. Carnal-Security, ‘You want sleep, good air, I doubt. If
+you please, lie down, and take a nap, and we meanwhile will be merry.’
+
+Then said the good man as follows: ‘Sir, if you were not destitute of an
+honest heart, you could not do as you have done and do.’
+
+Then said Mr. Carnal-Security, ‘Why?’
+
+_Godly_. Nay, pray interrupt me not. It is true the town of Mansoul was
+strong, and, with a _proviso_, impregnable; but you, the townsmen, have
+weakened it, and it now lies obnoxious to its foes. Nor is it a time to
+flatter, or be silent; it is you, Mr. Carnal-Security, that have wilily
+stripped Mansoul, and driven her glory from her; you have pulled down her
+towers, you have broken down her gates, you have spoiled her locks and
+bars.
+
+And now, to explain myself: from that time that my lords of Mansoul, and
+you, sir, grew so great, from that time the Strength of Mansoul has been
+offended, and now he is arisen and is gone. If any shall question the
+truth of my words, I will answer him by this, and suchlike questions.
+‘Where is the Prince Emmanuel? When did a man or woman in Mansoul see
+him? When did you hear from him, or taste any of his dainty bits?’ You
+are now a feasting with this Diabolonian monster, but he is not your
+Prince. I say, therefore, though enemies from without, had you taken
+heed, could not have made a prey of you, yet since you have sinned
+against your Prince, your enemies within have been too hard for you.
+
+Then said Mr. Carnal-Security, ‘Fie! fie! Mr. Godly-Fear, fie!—will you
+never shake off your _timorousness_? Are you afraid of being
+sparrow-blasted? Who hath hurt you? Behold, I am on your side; only you
+are for doubting, and I am for being confident. Besides, is this a time
+to be sad in? A feast is made for mirth; why, then, do you now, to your
+shame, and our trouble, break out into such passionate melancholy
+language, when you should eat and drink, and be merry?’
+
+Then said Mr. Godly-Fear again, ‘I may well be sad, for Emmanuel is gone
+from Mansoul. I say again, he is gone, and you, sir, are the man that
+has driven him away; yea, he is gone without so much as acquainting the
+nobles of Mansoul with his going; and if that is not a sign of his anger,
+I am not acquainted with the methods of godliness.
+
+‘And now, my lords and gentlemen, for my speech is still to you, your
+gradual declining from him did provoke him gradually to depart from you,
+the which he did for some time, if perhaps you would have been made
+sensible thereby, and have been renewed by humbling yourselves; but when
+he saw that none would regard, nor lay these fearful beginnings of his
+anger and judgment to heart, he went away from this place; and this I saw
+with mine eye. Wherefore now, while you boast, your strength is gone;
+you are like the man that had lost his locks that before did wave about
+his shoulders. You may, with this lord of your feast, shake yourselves,
+and conclude to do as at other times; but since without him you can do
+nothing, and he is departed from you, turn your feast into a sigh, and
+your mirth into lamentation.’
+
+Then the subordinate preacher, old Mr. Conscience by name, he that of old
+was Recorder of Mansoul, being startled at what was said, began to second
+it thus:—
+
+‘Indeed, my brethren,’ quoth he, ‘I fear that Mr. Godly-Fear tells us
+true: I, for my part, have not seen my Prince a long season. I cannot
+remember the day, for my part; nor can I answer Mr. Godly-Fear’s
+question. I doubt, I am afraid that all is nought with Mansoul.’
+
+_Godly_. Nay, I know that you shall not find him in Mansoul, for he is
+departed and gone; yea, and gone for the faults of the elders, and for
+that they rewarded his grace with unsufferable unkindness.
+
+Then did the subordinate preacher look as if he would fall down dead at
+the table; also all there present, except the man of the house, began to
+look pale and wan. But having a little recovered themselves, and jointly
+agreeing to believe Mr. Godly-Fear and his sayings, they began to consult
+what was best to be done, (now Mr. Carnal-Security was gone into his
+withdrawing-room, for he liked not such dumpish doings,) both to the man
+of the house for drawing them into evil, and also to recover Emmanuel’s
+love.
+
+And, with that, that saying of their Prince came very hot into their
+minds, which he had bidden them do to such as were false prophets that
+should arise to delude the town of Mansoul. So they took Mr.
+Carnal-Security (concluding that he must be he) and burned his house upon
+him with fire; for he also was a Diabolonian by nature.
+
+So when this was passed and over, they bespeed themselves to look for
+Emmanuel their Prince; and they sought him, but they found him not. Then
+were they more confirmed in the truth of Mr. Godly-Fear’s sayings, and
+began also severely to reflect upon themselves for their so vile and
+ungodly doings; for they concluded now that it was through them that
+their Prince had left them.
+
+Then they agreed and went to my Lord Secretary, (him whom before they
+refused to hear—him whom they had grieved with their doings,) to know of
+him, for he was a seer, and could tell where Emmanuel was, and how they
+might direct a petition to him. But the Lord Secretary would not admit
+them to a conference about this matter, nor would admit them to his royal
+place of abode, nor come out to them to show them his face or
+intelligence.
+
+And now was it a day gloomy and dark, a day of clouds and of thick
+darkness with Mansoul. Now they saw that they had been foolish, and
+began to perceive what the company and prattle of Mr. Carnal-Security had
+done, and what desperate damage his swaggering words had brought poor
+Mansoul into. But what further it was likely to cost them they were
+ignorant of. Now Mr. Godly-Fear began again to be in repute with the men
+of the town; yea, they were ready to look upon him as a prophet.
+
+Well, when the Sabbath day was come, they went to hear their subordinate
+preacher; but oh, how he did thunder and lighten this day! His text was
+that in the prophet Jonah: ‘They that observe lying vanities forsake
+their own mercy.’ But there was then such power and authority in that
+sermon, and such a dejection seen in the countenances of the people that
+day, that the like hath seldom been heard or seen. The people, when
+sermon was done, were scarce able to go to their homes, or to betake
+themselves to their employs the week after; they were so sermon-smitten,
+and also so sermon-sick by being smitten, that they knew not what to do.
+
+He did not only show to Mansoul their sin, but did tremble before them,
+under the sense of his own, still crying out of himself, as he preached
+to them, ‘Unhappy man that I am! that I should do so wicked a thing!
+That I, a preacher! whom the Prince did set up to teach to Mansoul his
+law, should myself live senseless and sottishly here, and be one of the
+first found in transgression! This transgression also fell within my
+precincts; I should have cried out against the wickedness; but I let
+Mansoul lie wallowing in it, until it had driven Emmanuel from its
+borders!’ With these things he also charged all the lords and gentry of
+Mansoul, to the almost distracting of them.
+
+About this time, also, there was a great sickness in the town of Mansoul,
+and most of the inhabitants were greatly afflicted. Yea, the captains
+also, and men of war, were brought thereby to a languishing condition,
+and that for a long time together; so that in case of an invasion,
+nothing could to purpose now have been done, either by the townsmen or
+field officers. Oh, how many pale faces, weak hands, feeble knees, and
+staggering men were now seen to walk the streets of Mansoul! Here were
+groans, there pants, and yonder lay those that were ready to faint.
+
+The garments, too, which Emmanuel had given them were but in a sorry
+case; some were rent, some were torn, and all in a nasty condition; some
+also did hang so loosely upon them, that the next bush they came at was
+ready to pluck them off.
+
+After some time spent in this sad and desolate condition, the subordinate
+preacher called for a day of fasting, and to humble themselves for being
+so wicked against the great Shaddai and his Son. And he desired that
+Captain Boanerges would preach. So he consented to do it; and the day
+being come, and his text was this, ‘Cut it down, why cumbereth it the
+ground?’ And a very smart sermon he made upon the place. First, he
+showed what was the occasion of the words, namely, because the fig-tree
+was barren; then he showed what was contained in the sentence, namely,
+repentance, or utter desolation. He then showed, also, by whose
+authority this sentence was pronounced, and that was by Shaddai himself.
+And, lastly, he showed the reasons of the point, and then concluded his
+sermon. But he was very pertinent in the application, insomuch that he
+made poor Mansoul tremble. For this sermon, as well as the former,
+wrought much upon the hearts of the men of Mansoul; yea, it greatly
+helped to keep awake those that were roused by the preaching that went
+before. So that now throughout the whole town, there was little or
+nothing to be heard or seen but sorrow, and mourning, and woe.
+
+Now, after sermon, they got together and consulted what was best to be
+done. ‘But,’ said the subordinate preacher, ‘I will do nothing of mine
+own head, without advising with my neighbour Mr. Godly-Fear. For if he
+had aforehand understood more of the mind of our Prince than we, I do not
+know but he also may have it now, even now we are turning again to
+virtue.’
+
+So they called and sent for Mr. Godly-Fear, and he forthwith appeared.
+Then they desired that he would further show his opinion about what they
+had best to do. Then said the old gentleman as followeth: ‘It is my
+opinion that this town of Mansoul should, in this day of her distress,
+draw up and send an humble petition to their offended Prince Emmanuel,
+that he, in his favour and grace, will turn again unto you, and not keep
+anger for ever.’
+
+When the townsmen had heard this speech, they did, with one consent,
+agree to his advice; so they did presently draw up their request, and the
+next was, But who shall carry it? At last they did all agree to send it
+by my Lord Mayor. So he accepted of the service, and addressed himself
+to his journey; and went and came to the court of Shaddai, whither
+Emmanuel the Prince of Mansoul was gone. But the gate was shut, and a
+strict watch kept thereat; so that the petitioner was forced to stand
+without for a great while together. Then he desired that some would go
+into the Prince and tell him who stood at the gate, and what his business
+was. So one went and told to Shaddai, and to Emmanuel his Son, that the
+Lord Mayor of the town of Mansoul stood without at the gate of the King’s
+court, desiring to be admitted into the presence of the Prince, the
+King’s Son. He also told what was the Lord Mayor’s errand, both to the
+King and his Son Emmanuel. But the Prince would not come down, nor admit
+that the gate should be opened to him, but sent him an answer to this
+effect: ‘They have turned their back unto me, and not their face; but now
+in the time of their trouble they say to me, Arise, and save us. But can
+they not now go to Mr. Carnal-Security, to whom they went when they
+turned from me, and make him their leader, their lord, and their
+protection now in their trouble; why now in their trouble do they visit
+me, since in their prosperity they went astray?’
+
+The answer made my Lord Mayor look black in the face; it troubled, it
+perplexed, it rent him sore. And now he began again to see what it was
+to be familiar with Diabolonians, such as Mr. Carnal-Security was. When
+he saw that at court, as yet, there was little help to be expected,
+either for himself or friends in Mansoul, he smote upon his breast, and
+returned weeping, and all the way bewailing the lamentable state of
+Mansoul.
+
+Well, when he was come within sight of the town, the elders and chief of
+the people of Mansoul went out at the gate to meet him, and to salute
+him, and to know how he sped at court. But he told them his tale in so
+doleful a manner, that they all cried out, and mourned, and wept.
+Wherefore they threw ashes and dust upon their heads, and put sackcloth
+upon their loins, and went crying out through the town of Mansoul; the
+which, when the rest of the townsfolk saw, they all mourned and wept.
+This, therefore, was a day of rebuke and trouble, and of anguish to the
+town of Mansoul, and also of great distress.
+
+After some time, when they had somewhat refrained themselves, they came
+together to consult again what by them was yet to be done; and they asked
+advice, as they did before, of that reverend Mr. Godly-Fear, who told
+them that there was no way better than to do as they had done, nor would
+he that they should be discouraged at all with that they had met with at
+court; yea, though several of their petitions should be answered with
+nought but silence or rebuke: ‘For,’ said he, ‘it is the way of the wise
+Shaddai to make men wait and to exercise patience, and it should be the
+way of them in want, to be willing to stay his leisure.
+
+Then they took courage, and sent again and again, and again, and again;
+for there was not now one day, nor an hour that went over Mansoul’s head,
+wherein a man might not have met upon the road one or other riding post,
+sounding the horn from Mansoul to the court of the King Shaddai; and all
+with letters petitionary in behalf of, and for the Prince’s return to
+Mansoul. The road, I say, was now full of messengers, going and
+returning, and meeting one another; some from the court, and some from
+Mansoul; and this was the work of the miserable town of Mansoul, all that
+long, that sharp, that cold and tedious winter.
+
+Now if you have not forgot, you may yet remember that I told you before,
+that after Emmanuel had taken Mansoul, yea, and after that he had new
+modelled the town, there remained in several lurking places of the
+corporation many of the old Diabolonians, that either came with the
+tyrant when he invaded and took the town, or that had there, by reason of
+unlawful mixtures, their birth and breeding, and bringing up. And their
+holes, dens, and lurking places were in, under, or about the wall of the
+town. Some of their names are the Lord Fornication, the Lord Adultery,
+the Lord Murder, the Lord Anger, the Lord Lasciviousness, the Lord
+Deceit, the Lord Evil-eye, the Lord Blasphemy, and that horrible villain,
+the old and dangerous Lord Covetousness. These, as I told you, with many
+more, had yet their abode in the town of Mansoul, and that after that
+Emmanuel had driven their prince Diabolus out of the castle.
+
+Against these the good Prince did grant a commission to the Lord
+Willbewill and others, yea, to the whole town of Mansoul, to seek, take,
+secure, and destroy any or all that they could lay hands of, for that
+they were Diabolonians by nature, enemies to the Prince, and those that
+sought to ruin the blessed town of Mansoul. But the town of Mansoul did
+not pursue this warrant, but neglected to look after, to apprehend, to
+secure, and to destroy these Diabolonians. Wherefore what do these
+villains but by degrees take courage to put forth their heads, and to
+show themselves to the inhabitants of the town. Yea, and as I was told,
+some of the men of Mansoul grew too familiar with some of them, to the
+sorrow of the corporation, as you yet will hear more of in time and
+place.
+
+Well, when the Diabolonian lords that were left perceived that Mansoul
+had, through sinning, offended Emmanuel their Prince, and that he had
+withdrawn himself and was gone, what do they but plot the ruin of the
+town of Mansoul. So upon a time they met together at the hold of one Mr.
+Mischief, who was also a Diabolonian, and there consulted how they might
+deliver up Mansoul into the hands of Diabolus again. Now some advised
+one way, and some another, every man according to his own liking. At
+last my Lord Lasciviousness propounded, whether it might not be best, in
+the first place, for some of those that were Diabolonians in Mansoul, to
+adventure to offer themselves for servants to some of the natives of the
+town; ‘for,’ said he, ‘if they so do, and Mansoul shall accept of them,
+they may for us, and for Diabolus our Lord, make the taking of the town
+of Mansoul more easy than otherwise it will be.’ But then stood up the
+Lord Murder, and said, ‘This may not be done at this time; for Mansoul is
+now in a kind of a rage, because by our friend, Mr. Carnal-Security, she
+hath been once ensnared already, and made to offend against her Prince;
+and how shall she reconcile herself unto her lord again, but by the heads
+of these men? Besides, we know that they have in commission to take and
+slay us wherever they shall find us; let us, therefore, be wise as foxes:
+when we are dead, we can do them no hurt; but while we live, we may.’
+Thus, when they had tossed the matter to and fro, they jointly agreed
+that a letter should forthwith be sent away to Diabolus in their name, by
+which the state of the town of Mansoul should be showed him, and how much
+it is under the frowns of their Prince. ‘We may also,’ said some, ‘let
+him know our intentions, and ask of him his advice in the case.’
+
+So a letter was presently framed, the contents of which were these:—
+
+‘To our great lord, the Prince Diabolus, dwelling below in the infernal
+cave:
+
+‘O great father, and mighty Prince Diabolus, we, the true Diabolonians
+yet remaining in the rebellious town of Mansoul, having received our
+beings from thee, and our nourishment at thy hands, cannot with content
+and quiet endure to behold, as we do this day, how thou art dispraised,
+disgraced, and reproached among the inhabitants of this town; nor is thy
+long absence at all delightful to us, because greatly to our detriment.
+
+‘The reason of this our writing unto our lord, is for that we are not
+altogether without hope that this town may become thy habitation again;
+for it is greatly declined from its Prince Emmanuel; and he is uprisen,
+and is departed from them: yea, and though they send, and send, and send,
+and send after him to return to them, yet can they not prevail, nor get
+good words from him.
+
+‘There has been also of late, and is yet remaining, a very great sickness
+and fainting among them; and that not only upon the poorer sort of the
+town, but upon the lords, captains, and chief gentry of the place, (we
+only who are of the Diabolonians by nature remain well, lively, and
+strong,) so that through their great transgression on the one hand, and
+their dangerous sickness on the other, we judge they lie open to thy hand
+and power. If, therefore, it shall stand with thy horrible cunning, and
+with the cunning of the rest of the princes with thee, to come and make
+an attempt to take Mansoul again, send us word, and we shall to our
+utmost power be ready to deliver it into thy hand. Or if what we have
+said shall not by thy fatherhood be thought best and most meet to be
+done, send us thy mind in a few words, and we are all ready to follow thy
+counsel to the hazarding of our lives, and what else we have.
+
+‘Given under our hands the day and date above-written, after a close
+consultation at the house of Mr. Mischief, who yet is alive and hath his
+place in our desirable town of Mansoul.’
+
+When Mr. Profane (for he was the carrier) was come with his letter to
+Hell-Gate Hill, he knocked at the brazen gates for entrance. Then did
+Cerberus, the porter, for he is the keeper of that gate, open to Mr.
+Profane, to whom he delivered his letter, which he had brought from the
+Diabolonians in Mansoul. So he carried it in, and presented it to
+Diabolus his lord, and said, ‘Tidings, my lord, from Mansoul, from our
+trusty friends in Mansoul.’
+
+Then came together from all places of the den Beelzebub, Lucifer,
+Apollyon, with the rest of the rabblement there, to hear what news from
+Mansoul. So the letter was broken up and read, and Cerberus he stood by.
+When the letter was openly read, and the contents thereof spread into all
+the corners of the den, command was given that, without let or stop,
+dead-man’s bell should be rung for joy. So the bell was rung, and the
+princes rejoiced that Mansoul was likely to come to ruin. Now, the
+clapper of the bell went, ‘The town of Mansoul is coming to dwell with
+us: make room for the town of Mansoul.’ This bell therefore they did
+ring, because they did hope that they should have Mansoul again.
+
+Now, when they had performed this their horrible ceremony, they got
+together again to consult what answer to send to their friends in
+Mansoul; and some advised one thing, and some another: but at length,
+because the business required haste, they left the whole business to the
+prince Diabolus, judging him the most proper lord of the place. So he
+drew up a letter as he thought fit, in answer to what Mr. Profane had
+brought, and sent it to the Diabolonians that did dwell in Mansoul, by
+the same hand that had brought theirs to him; and these were the contents
+thereof:—
+
+‘To our offspring, the high and mighty Diabolonians that yet dwell in the
+town of Mansoul, Diabolus, the great prince of Mansoul, wisheth a
+prosperous issue and conclusion of those many brave enterprises,
+conspiracies, and designs, that you, of your love and respect to our
+honour, have in your hearts to attempt to do against Mansoul. Beloved
+children and disciples, my Lord Fornication, Adultery, and the rest, we
+have here, in our desolate den, received, to our highest joy and content,
+your welcome letter, by the hand of our trusty Mr. Profane; and to show
+how acceptable your tidings were, we rang out our bell for gladness; for
+we rejoiced as much as we could, when we perceived that yet we had
+friends in Mansoul, and such as sought our honour and revenge in the ruin
+of the town of Mansoul. We also rejoiced to hear that they are in a
+degenerated condition, and that they have offended their Prince, and that
+he is gone. Their sickness also pleaseth us, as does also your health,
+might, and strength. Glad also would we be, right horribly beloved,
+could we get this town into our clutches again. Nor will we be sparing
+of spending our wit, our cunning, our craft, and hellish inventions to
+bring to a wished conclusion this your brave beginning in order thereto.
+
+‘And take this for your comfort, (our birth, and our offspring,) that
+shall we again surprise it and take it, we will attempt to put all your
+foes to the sword, and will make you the great lords and captains of the
+place. Nor need you fear, if ever we get it again, that we after that
+shall be cast out any more; for we will come with more strength, and so
+lay far more fast hold than at the first we did. Besides, it is the law
+of that Prince that now they own, that if we get them a second time, they
+shall be ours for ever.
+
+‘Do you, therefore, our trusty Diabolonians, yet more pry into, and
+endeavour to spy out the weakness of the town of Mansoul. We also would
+that you yourselves do attempt to weaken them more and more. Send us
+word also by what means you think we had best to attempt the regaining
+thereof: namely, whether by persuasion to a vain and loose life; or,
+whether by tempting them to doubt and despair; or, whether by blowing up
+of the town by the gunpowder of pride, and self-conceit. Do you also, O
+ye brave Diabolonians, and true sons of the pit, be always in a readiness
+to make a most hideous assault within, when we shall be ready to storm it
+without. Now speed you in your project, and we in our desires, to the
+utmost power of our gates, which is the wish of your great Diabolus,
+Mansoul’s enemy, and him that trembles when he thinks of judgment to
+come. All the blessings of the pit be upon you, and so we close up our
+letter.
+
+‘Given at the pit’s mouth, by the joint consent of all the princes of
+darkness, to be sent, to the force and power that we have yet remaining
+in Mansoul, by the hand of Mr. Profane, by me, Diabolus.’
+
+This letter, as was said, was sent to Mansoul, to the Diabolonians that
+yet remained there, and that yet inhabited the wall, from the dark
+dungeon of Diabolus, by the hand of Mr. Profane, by whom they also in
+Mansoul sent theirs to the pit. Now, when this Mr. Profane had made his
+return, and was come to Mansoul again, he went and came as he was wont to
+the house of Mr. Mischief, for there was the conclave, and the place
+where the contrivers were met. Now, when they saw that their messenger
+was returned safe and sound, they were greatly gladded thereat. Then he
+presented them with his letter which he had brought from Diabolus for
+them; the which, when they had read and considered, did much augment
+their gladness. They asked him after the welfare of their friends, as
+how their Lord Diabolus, Lucifer, and Beelzebub did, with the rest of
+those of the den. To which this Profane made answer, ‘Well, well, my
+lords; they are well, even as well as can be in their place. They also,’
+said he, ‘did ring for joy at the reading of your letter, as you well
+perceived by this when you read it.’
+
+Now, as was said, when they had read their letter, and perceived that it
+encouraged them in their work, they fell to their way of contriving
+again, namely, how they might complete their Diabolonian design upon
+Mansoul. And the first thing that they agreed upon was to keep all
+things from Mansoul as close as they could. ‘Let it not be known, let
+not Mansoul be acquainted with what we design against it.’ The next
+thing was, how, or by what means, they should try to bring to pass the
+ruin and overthrow of Mansoul; and one said after this manner, and
+another said after that. Then stood up Mr. Deceit, and said, ‘My right
+Diabolonian friends, our lords, and the high ones of the deep dungeon, do
+propound unto us these three ways.
+
+‘1. Whether we had best to seek its ruin by making Mansoul loose and
+vain.
+
+‘2. Or whether by driving them to doubt and despair.
+
+‘3. Or whether by endeavouring to blow them up by the gunpowder of pride
+and self-conceit.
+
+‘Now, I think, if we shall tempt them to pride, that may do something;
+and if we tempt them to wantonness, that may help. But, in my mind, if
+we could drive them into desperation, that would knock the nail on the
+head; for then we should have them, in the first place, question the
+truth of the love of the heart of their Prince towards them, and that
+will disgust him much. This, if it works well, will make them leave off
+quickly their way of sending petitions to him; then farewell earnest
+solicitations for help and supply; for then this conclusion lies
+naturally before them, “As good do nothing, as do to no purpose.”’ So to
+Mr. Deceit they unanimously did consent.
+
+Then the next question was, But how shall we do to bring this our project
+to pass? and it was answered by the same gentleman—that this might be the
+best way to do it: ‘Even let,’ quoth he, ‘so many of our friends as are
+willing to venture themselves for the promoting of their prince’s cause,
+disguise themselves with apparel, change their names, and go into the
+market like far country-men, and proffer to let themselves for servants
+to the famous town of Mansoul, and let them pretend to do for their
+masters as beneficially as may be; for by so doing they may, if Mansoul
+shall hire them, in little time so corrupt and defile the corporation,
+that her now Prince shall be not only further offended with them, but in
+conclusion shall spue them out of his mouth. And when this is done, our
+prince Diabolus shall prey upon them with ease: yea, of themselves they
+shall fall into the mouth of the eater.’
+
+This project was no sooner propounded, but was as highly accepted, and
+forward were all Diabolonians now to engage in so delicate an enterprise:
+but it was not thought fit that all should do thus; wherefore they
+pitched upon two or three, namely, the Lord Covetousness, the Lord
+Lasciviousness, and the Lord Anger. The Lord Covetousness called himself
+by the name of Prudent-Thrifty; the Lord Lasciviousness called himself by
+the name of Harmless-Mirth; and the Lord Anger called himself by the name
+of Good-Zeal.
+
+So upon a market-day they came into the market-place, three lusty fellows
+they were to look on, and they were clothed in sheep’s russet, which was
+also now in a manner as white as were the white robes of the men of
+Mansoul. Now the men could speak the language of Mansoul well. So when
+they were come into the market-place, and had offered to let themselves
+to the townsmen, they were presently taken up; for they asked but little
+wages, and promised to do their masters great service.
+
+Mr. Mind hired Prudent-Thrifty, and Mr. Godly-Fear hired Good-Zeal.
+True, this fellow Harmless-Mirth did hang a little in hand, and could not
+so soon get him a master as the others did, because the town of Mansoul
+was now in Lent, but after a while, because Lent was almost out, the Lord
+Willbewill hired Harmless-Mirth to be both his waiting man and his
+lackey: and thus they got them masters.
+
+These villains now being got thus far into the houses of the men of
+Mansoul, quickly began to do great mischief therein; for, being filthy,
+arch, and sly, they quickly corrupted the families where they were; yea,
+they tainted their masters much, especially this Prudent-Thrifty, and him
+they call Harmless-Mirth. True, he that went under the visor of
+Good-Zeal, was not so well liked of his master; for he quickly found that
+he was but a counterfeit rascal; the which when the fellow perceived,
+with speed he made his escape from the house, or I doubt not but his
+master had hanged him.
+
+Well, when these vagabonds had thus far carried on their design, and had
+corrupted the town as much as they could, in the next place they
+considered with themselves at what time their prince Diabolus without,
+and themselves within the town, should make an attempt to seize upon
+Mansoul; and they all agreed upon this, that a market-day would be best
+for that work; for why? Then will the townsfolk be busy in their ways:
+and always take this for a rule, when people are most busy in the world,
+they least fear a surprise. ‘We also then,’ said they, ‘shall be able
+with less suspicion to gather ourselves together for the work of our
+friends and lords; yea, and in such a day, if we shall attempt our work,
+and miss it, we may, when they shall give us the rout, the better hide
+ourselves in the crowd, and escape.’
+
+These things being thus far agreed upon by them, they wrote another
+letter to Diabolus, and sent it by the hand to Mr. Profane, the contents
+of which were these:—
+
+‘The lords of Looseness send to the great and high Diabolus from our
+dens, caves, holes, and strongholds, in and about the wall of the town of
+Mansoul, greeting:
+
+‘Our great lord, and the nourisher of our lives, Diabolus—how glad we
+were when we heard of your fatherhood’s readiness to comply with us, and
+help forward our design in our attempts to ruin Mansoul, none can tell
+but those who, as we do, set themselves against all appearance of good,
+when and wheresoever we find it.
+
+‘Touching the encouragement that your greatness is pleased to give us to
+continue to devise, contrive, and study the utter desolation of Mansoul,
+that we are not solicitous about: for we know right well that it cannot
+but be pleasing and profitable to us to see our enemies, and them that
+seek our lives, die at our feet, or fly before us. We therefore are
+still contriving, and that to the best of our cunning, to make this work
+most facile and easy to your lordships, and to us.
+
+‘First, we considered of that most hellishly cunning, compacted,
+threefold project, that by you was propounded to us in your last; and
+have concluded, that though to blow them up with the gunpowder of pride
+would do well, and to do it by tempting them to be loose and vain will
+help on, yet to contrive to bring them into the gulf of desperation, we
+think will do best of all. Now we, who are at your beck, have thought or
+two ways to do this: first we, for our parts, will make them as vile as
+we can, and then you with us, at a time appointed, shall be ready to fall
+upon them with the utmost force. And of all the nations that are at your
+whistle, we think that an army of doubters may be the most likely to
+attack and overcome the town of Mansoul. Thus shall we overcome these
+enemies, else the pit shall open her mouth upon them, and desperation
+shall thrust them down into it. We have also, to effect this so much by
+us desired design, sent already three of our trusty Diabolonians among
+them; they are disguised in garb, they have changed their names, and are
+now accepted of them; namely, Covetousness, Lasciviousness, and Anger.
+The name of Covetousness is changed to Prudent-Thrifty, and him Mr. Mind
+has hired, and is almost become as bad as our friend. Lasciviousness has
+changed his name to Harmless-Mirth, and he is got to be the Lord
+Willbewill’s lackey; but he has made his master very wanton. Anger
+changed his name into Good-Zeal, and was entertained by Mr. Godly-Fear;
+but the peevish old gentleman took pepper in the nose, and turned our
+companion out of his house. Nay, he has informed us since that he ran
+away from him, or else his old master had hanged him up for his labour.
+
+‘Now these have much helped forward our work and design upon Mansoul; for
+notwithstanding the spite and quarrelsome temper of the old gentleman
+last mentioned, the other two ply their business well, and are likely to
+ripen the work apace.
+
+‘Our next project is, that it be concluded that you come upon the town
+upon a market-day, and that when they are upon the heat of their
+business; for then, to be sure, they will be most secure, and least think
+that an assault will be made upon them. They will also at such a time be
+less able to defend themselves, and to offend you in the prosecution of
+our design. And we your trusty (and we are sure your beloved) ones
+shall, when you shall make your furious assault without, be ready to
+second the business within. So shall we, in all likelihood, be able to
+put Mansoul to utter confusion, and to swallow them up before they can
+come to themselves. If your serpentine heads, most subtile dragons, and
+our highly esteemed lords can find out a better way than this, let us
+quickly know your minds.
+
+‘To the monsters of the infernal cave, from the house of Mr. Mischief in
+Mansoul, by the hand of Mr. Profane.’
+
+Now all the while that the raging runagates and hellish Diabolonians were
+thus contriving the ruin of the town of Mansoul, they (namely, the poor
+town itself) was in a sad and woeful case; partly because they had so
+grievously offended Shaddai and his Son, and partly because that the
+enemies thereby got strength within them afresh; and also because, though
+they had by many petitions made suit to the Prince Emmanuel, and to his
+Father Shaddai by him, for their pardon and favour, yet hitherto obtained
+they not one smile; but contrariwise, through the craft and subtilty of
+the domestic Diabolonians, their cloud was made to grow blacker and
+blacker, and their Emmanuel to stand at further distance.
+
+The sickness also did still greatly rage in Mansoul, both among the
+captains and the inhabitants of the town; and their enemies only were now
+lively and strong, and likely to become the head, whilst Mansoul was made
+the tail.
+
+By this time the letter last mentioned, that was written by the
+Diabolonians that yet lurked in the town of Mansoul, was conveyed to
+Diabolus in the black den, by the hand of Mr. Profane. He carried the
+letter by Hell-Gate Hill as afore, and conveyed it by Cerberus to his
+lord.
+
+But when Cerberus and Mr. Profane did meet, they were presently as great
+as beggars, and thus they fell into discourse about Mansoul, and about
+the project against her.
+
+‘Ah! old friend,’ quoth Cerberus, ‘art thou come to Hell-Gate Hill again?
+By St. Mary, I am glad to see thee!’
+
+_Prof._ Yes, my lord, I am come again about the concerns of the town of
+Mansoul.
+
+_Cerb._ Prithee, tell me what condition is that town of Mansoul in at
+present?
+
+_Prof._ In a brave condition, my lord, for us, and for my lords, the
+lords of this place, I trow for they are greatly decayed as to godliness,
+and that is as well as our heart can wish; their Lord is greatly out with
+them, and that doth also please us well. We have already also a foot in
+their dish, for our Diabolonian friends are laid in their bosoms, and
+what do we lack but to be masters of the place! Besides, our trusty
+friends in Mansoul are daily plotting to betray it to the lords of this
+town; also the sickness rages bitterly among them; and that which makes
+up all, we hope at last to prevail.’
+
+Then said the dog of Hell-Gate, ‘No time like this to assault them. I
+wish that the enterprise be followed close, and that the success desired
+may be soon effected: yea, I wish it for the poor Diabolonians’ sakes,
+that live in the continual fear of their lives in that traitorous town of
+Mansoul.’
+
+_Prof._ The contrivance is almost finished, the lords in Mansoul that
+are Diabolonians are at it day and night, and the other are like silly
+doves; they want heart to be concerned with their state and to consider
+that ruin is at hand. Besides you may, yea, must think, when you put all
+things together, that there are many reasons that prevail with Diabolus
+to make what haste he can.
+
+_Cerb._ Thou hast said as it is; I am glad things are at this pass. Go
+in, my brave Profane, to my lords, they will give thee for thy welcome as
+good a _coranto_ as the whole of this kingdom will afford. I have sent
+thy letter in already.
+
+Then Mr. Profane went into the den, and his lord Diabolus met him, and
+saluted him with, ‘Welcome, my trusty servant: I have been made glad with
+thy letter.’ The rest of the lords of the pit gave him also their
+salutations. Then Profane, after obeisance made to them all, said, ‘Let
+Mansoul be given to my lord Diabolus, and let him be her king for ever.’
+And with that, the hollow belly and yawning gorge of hell gave so loud
+and hideous a groan, (for that is the music of that place,) that it made
+the mountains about it totter, as if they would fall in pieces.
+
+Now, after they had read and considered the letter, they consulted what
+answer to return; and the first that did speak to it was Lucifer.
+
+Then said he, ‘The first project of the Diabolonians in Mansoul is likely
+to be lucky, and to take; namely, that they will, by all the ways and
+means they can, make Mansoul yet more vile and filthy: no way to destroy
+a soul like this. Our old friend Balaam went this way and prospered many
+years ago; let this therefore stand with us for a maxim, and be to
+Diabolonians for a general rule in all ages; for nothing can make this to
+fail but grace, in which I would hope that this town has no share. But
+whether to fall upon them on a market-day, because of their cumber in
+business, that I would should be under debate. And there is more reason
+why this head should be debated, than why some other should; because upon
+this will turn the whole of what we shall attempt. If we time not our
+business well, our whole project may fail. Our friends, the
+Diabolonians, say that a market-day is best; for then will Mansoul be
+most busy, and have fewest thoughts of a surprise. But what if also they
+should double their guards on those days? (and methinks nature and reason
+should teach them to do it;) and what if they should keep such a watch on
+those days as the necessity of their present case doth require? yea, what
+if their men should be always in arms on those days? then you may, my
+lords, be disappointed in your attempts, and may bring our friends in the
+town to utter danger of unavoidable ruin.’
+
+Then said the great Beelzebub, ‘There is something in what my lord hath
+said; but his conjecture may, or may not fall out. Nor hath my lord laid
+it down as that which must not be receded from; for I know that he said
+it only to provoke to a warm debate thereabout. Therefore we must
+understand, if we can, whether the town of Mansoul has such sense and
+knowledge of her decayed state, and of the design that we have on foot
+against her, as doth provoke her to set watch and ward at her gates, and
+to double them on market-days. But if, after inquiry made, it shall be
+found that they are asleep, then any day will do, but a market-day is
+best; and this is my judgment in this case.’
+
+Then quoth Diabolus, ‘How should we know this?’ and it was answered,
+‘Inquire about it at the mouth of Mr. Profane.’ So Profane was called
+in, and asked the question, and he made his answer as follows:—
+
+_Prof._ My lords, so far as I can gather, this is at present the
+condition of the town of Mansoul: they are decayed in their faith and
+love; Emmanuel, their Prince, has given them the back; they send often by
+petition to fetch him again, but he maketh not haste to answer their
+request, nor is there much reformation among them.
+
+_Diab._ I am glad that they are backward in a reformation, but yet I am
+afraid of their petitioning. However, their looseness of life is a sign
+that there is not much heart in what they do, and without the heart
+things are little worth. But go on, my masters; I will divert you, my
+lords, no longer.
+
+_Beel._ If the case be so with Mansoul, as Mr. Profane has described it
+to be, it will be no great matter what day we assault it; not their
+prayers, nor their power will do them much service.
+
+When Beelzebub had ended his oration, then Apollyon did begin. ‘My
+opinion,’ said he, ‘concerning this matter, is, that we go on fair and
+softly, not doing things in a hurry. Let our friends in Mansoul go on
+still to pollute and defile it, by seeking to draw it yet more into sin
+(for there is nothing like sin to devour Mansoul). If this be done, and
+it takes effect, Mansoul, of itself, will leave off to watch, to
+petition, or anything else that should tend to her security and safety;
+for she will forget her Emmanuel, she will not desire his company, and
+can she be gotten thus to live, her Prince will not come to her in haste.
+Our trusty friend, Mr. Carnal-Security, with one of his tricks did drive
+him out of the town; and why may not my Lord Covetousness, and my Lord
+Lasciviousness, by what they may do, keep him out of the town? And this
+I will tell you, (not because you know it not,) that two or three
+Diabolonians, if entertained and countenanced by the town of Mansoul,
+will do more to the keeping of Emmanuel from them, and towards making the
+town of Mansoul your own, than can an army of a legion that should be
+sent out from us to withstand him. Let, therefore, this first project
+that our friends in Mansoul have set on foot, be strongly and diligently
+carried on, with all cunning and craft imaginable; and let them send
+continually, under one guise or another, more and other of their men to
+play with the people of Mansoul; and then, perhaps, we shall not need to
+be at the charge of making a war upon them; or if that must of necessity
+be done, yet the more sinful they are, the more unable, to be sure, they
+will be to resist us, and then the more easily we shall overcome them.
+And besides, suppose (and that is the worst that can be supposed) that
+Emmanuel should come to them again, why may not the same means, or the
+like, drive him from them once more? Yea, why may he not, by their lapse
+into that sin again, be driven from them for ever, for the sake of which
+he was at the first driven from them for a season? And if this should
+happen, then away go with him his rams, his slings, his captains, his
+soldiers, and he leaveth Mansoul naked and bare. Yea, will not this
+town, when she sees herself utterly forsaken of her Prince, of her own
+accord open her gates again unto you, and make of you as in the days of
+old? But this must be done by time, a few days will not effect so great
+a work as this.’
+
+So soon as Apollyon had made an end of speaking, Diabolus began to blow
+out his own malice, and to plead his own cause; and he said, ‘My lords,
+and powers of the cave, my true and trusty friends, I have with much
+impatience, as becomes me, given ear to your long and tedious orations.
+But my furious gorge, and empty paunch, so lusteth after a repossession
+of my famous town of Mansoul, that whatever comes out, I can wait no
+longer to see the events of lingering projects. I must, and that without
+further delay, seek, by all means I can, to fill my insatiable gulf with
+the soul and body of the town of Mansoul. Therefore lend me your heads,
+your hearts, and your help, now I am going to recover my town of
+Mansoul.’
+
+When the lords and princes of the pit saw the flaming desire that was in
+Diabolus to devour the miserable town of Mansoul, they left off to raise
+any more objections, but consented to lend him what strength they could,
+though had Apollyon’s advice been taken, they had far more fearfully
+distressed the town of Mansoul. But, I say, they were willing to lend
+him what strength they could, not knowing what need they might have of
+him, when they should engage for themselves, as he. Wherefore they fell
+to advising about the next thing propounded, namely, what soldiers they
+were, and also how many, with whom Diabolus should go against the town of
+Mansoul to take it; and after some debate, it was concluded, according as
+in the letter the Diabolonians had suggested, that none were more fit for
+that expedition than an army of terrible doubters. They therefore
+concluded to send against Mansoul an army of sturdy doubters. The number
+thought fit to be employed in that service was between twenty and thirty
+thousand. So then the result of that great council of those high and
+mighty lords was—That Diabolus should even now, out of hand, beat up his
+drum for men in the land of Doubting, which land lieth upon the confines
+of the place called Hell-Gate Hill, for men that might be employed by him
+against the miserable town of Mansoul. It was also concluded, that these
+lords themselves should help him in the war, and that they would to that
+end head and manage his men. So they drew up a letter, and sent back to
+the Diabolonians that lurked in Mansoul, and that waited for the
+back-coming of Mr. Profane, to signify to them into what method and
+forwardness they at present had put their design. The contents whereof
+now follow:—
+
+‘From the dark and horrible dungeon of hell, Diabolus with all the
+society of the princes of darkness, sends to our trusty ones, in and
+about the walls of the town of Mansoul, now impatiently waiting for our
+most devilish answer to their venomous and most poisonous design against
+the town of Mansoul.
+
+‘Our native ones, in whom from day to day we boast, and in whose actions
+all the year long we do greatly delight ourselves, we received your
+welcome, because highly esteemed letter, at the hand of our trusty and
+greatly beloved, the old gentleman, Mr. Profane. And do give you to
+understand, that when we had broken it up, and had read the contents
+thereof, to your amazing memory be it spoken, our yawning hollow-bellied
+place, where we are, made so hideous and yelling a noise for joy, that
+the mountains that stand round about Hell-Gate Hill, had like to have
+been shaken to pieces at the sound thereof.
+
+‘We could also do no less than admire your faithfulness to us, with the
+greatness of that subtilty that now hath showed itself to be in your
+heads to serve us against the town of Mansoul. For you have invented for
+us so excellent a method for our proceeding against that rebellious
+people, a more effectual cannot be thought of by all the wits of hell.
+The proposals, therefore, which now, at last, you have sent us, since we
+saw them, we have done little else but highly approved and admired them.
+
+‘Nay, we shall, to encourage you in the profundity of your craft, let you
+know, that, at a full assembly and conclave of our princes and
+principalities of this place, your project was discoursed and tossed from
+one side of our cave to the other by their mightinesses; but a better,
+and as was by themselves judged, a more fit and proper way by all their
+wits, could not be invented, to surprise, take, and make our own, the
+rebellious town of Mansoul.
+
+‘Wherefore, in fine, all that was said that varied from what you had in
+your letter propounded, fell of itself to the ground, and yours only was
+stuck to by Diabolus, the prince; yea, his gaping gorge and yawning
+paunch was on fire to put your invention into execution.
+
+‘We therefore give you to understand that our stout, furious, and
+unmerciful Diabolus is raising, for your relief, and the ruin of the
+rebellious town of Mansoul, more than twenty thousand doubters to come
+against that people. They are all stout and sturdy men, and men that of
+old have been accustomed to war, and that can therefore well endure the
+drum. I say, he is doing this work of his with all the possible speed he
+can; for his heart and spirit is engaged in it. We desire, therefore,
+that, as you have hitherto stuck to us, and given us both advice and
+encouragement thus far, you still will prosecute our design; nor shall
+you lose, but be gainers thereby; yea, we intend to make you the lords of
+Mansoul.
+
+‘One thing may not by any means be omitted, that is, those with us do
+desire that every one of you that are in Mansoul would still use all your
+power, cunning, and skill, with delusive persuasions, yet to draw the
+town of Mansoul into more sin and wickedness, even that sin may be
+finished and bring forth death.
+
+‘For thus it is concluded with us, that the more vile, sinful, and
+debauched the town of Mansoul is, more backward will be their Emmanuel to
+come to their help, either by presence or other relief; yea, the more
+sinful, the more weak, and so the more unable will they be to make
+resistance when we shall make our assault upon them to swallow them up.
+Yea, that may cause that their mighty Shaddai himself may cast them out
+of his protection; yea, and send for his captains and soldiers home, with
+his slings and rams, and leave them naked and bare; and then the town of
+Mansoul will of itself open to us, and fall as the fig into the mouth of
+the eater. Yea, to be sure that we then with a great deal of ease shall
+come upon her and overcome her.
+
+‘As to the time of our coming upon Mansoul, we, as yet, have not fully
+resolved upon that, though at present some of us think as you, that a
+market-day, or a market-day at night, will certainly be the best.
+However, do you be ready, and when you shall hear our roaring drum
+without, do you be as busy to make the most horrible confusion within.
+So shall Mansoul certainly be distressed before and behind, and shall not
+know which way to betake herself for help. My Lord Lucifer, my Lord
+Beelzebub, my Lord Apollyon, my Lord Legion, with the rest, salute you,
+as does also my Lord Diabolus; and we wish both you, with all that you
+do, or shall possess, the very self-same fruit and success for their
+doing as we ourselves at present enjoy for ours.
+
+‘From our dreadful confines in the most fearful pit, we salute you, and
+so do those many legions here with us, wishing you may be as hellishly
+prosperous as we desire to be ourselves. By the letter-carrier, Mr.
+Profane.’
+
+Then Mr. Profane addressed himself for his return to Mansoul, with his
+errand from the horrible pit to the Diabolonians that dwelt in that town.
+So he came up the stairs from the deep to the mouth of the cave where
+Cerberus was. Now when Cerberus saw him, he asked how did matters go
+below, about and against the town of Mansoul.
+
+_Prof._ Things go as well as we can expect. The letter that I carried
+thither was highly approved, and well liked by all my lords, and I am
+returning to tell our Diabolonians so. I have an answer to it here in my
+bosom, that I am sure will make our masters that sent me glad; for the
+contents thereof are to encourage them to pursue their design to the
+utmost, and to be ready also to fall on within, when they shall see my
+Lord Diabolus beleaguering the town of Mansoul.
+
+_Cerb._ But does he intend to go against them himself?
+
+_Prof._ Does he! Ay! and he will take along with him more than twenty
+thousand, all sturdy Doubters, and men of war, picked men from the land
+of Doubting, to serve him in the expedition.
+
+Then was Cerberus glad, and said, ‘And is there such brave preparations
+a-making to go against the miserable town of Mansoul? And would I might
+be put at the head of a thousand of them, that I might also show my
+valour against the famous town of Mansoul.’
+
+_Prof._ Your wish may come to pass; you look like one that has mettle
+enough, and my lord will have with him those that are valiant and stout.
+But my business requires haste.
+
+_Cerb._ Ay, so it does. Speed thee to the town of Mansoul, with all the
+deepest mischiefs that this place can afford thee. And when thou shalt
+come to the house of Mr. Mischief, the place where the Diabolonians meet
+to plot, tell them that Cerberus doth wish them his service, and that if
+he may, he will with the army come up against the famous town of Mansoul.
+
+_Prof._ That I will. And I know that my lords that are there will be
+glad to hear it, and to see you also.
+
+So after a few more such kind of compliments, Mr. Profane took his leave
+of his friend Cerberus; and Cerberus again, with a thousand of their
+pit-wishes, bid him haste, with all speed, to his masters. The which
+when he had heard, he made obeisance, and began to gather up his heels to
+run.
+
+Thus, therefore, he returned, and went and came to Mansoul; and going, as
+afore, to the house of Mr. Mischief, there he found the Diabolonians
+assembled, and waiting for his return. Now when he was come, and had
+presented himself, he also delivered to them his letter, and adjoined
+this compliment to them therewith: ‘My lords, from the confines of the
+pit, the high and mighty principalities and powers of the den salute you
+here, the true Diabolonians of the town of Mansoul. Wishing you always
+the most proper of their benedictions, for the great service, high
+attempts, and brave achievements that you have put yourselves upon, for
+the restoring to our prince Diabolus the famous town of Mansoul.’
+
+This was therefore the present state of the miserable town of Mansoul:
+she had offended her Prince, and he was gone; she had encouraged the
+powers of hell, by her foolishness, to come against her to seek her utter
+destruction.
+
+True, the town of Mansoul was somewhat made sensible of her sin, but the
+Diabolonians were gotten into her bowels; she cried, but Emmanuel was
+gone, and her cries did not fetch him as yet again. Besides, she knew
+not now whether, ever or never, he would return and come to his Mansoul
+again; nor did they know the power and industry of the enemy, nor how
+forward they were to put in execution that plot of hell that they had
+devised against her.
+
+They did, indeed, still send petition after petition to the Prince, but
+he answered all with silence. They did neglect reformation, and that was
+as Diabolus would have it; for he knew, if they regarded iniquity in
+their heart, their King would not hear their prayer; they therefore did
+still grow weaker and weaker, and were as a rolling thing before the
+whirlwind. They cried to their King for help, and laid Diabolonians in
+their bosoms: what therefore should a King do to them? Yea, there seemed
+now to be a mixture in Mansoul; the Diabolonians and the Mansoulians
+would walk the streets together. Yea, they began to seek their peace;
+for they thought that, since the sickness had been so mortal in Mansoul,
+it was in vain to go to handygripes with them. Besides, the weakness of
+Mansoul was the strength of their enemies; and the sins of Mansoul, the
+advantage of the Diabolonians. The foes of Mansoul did also now begin to
+promise themselves the town for a possession: there was no great
+difference now betwixt Mansoulians and Diabolonians: both seemed to be
+masters of Mansoul. Yea, the Diabolonians increased and grew, but the
+town of Mansoul diminished greatly. There were more than eleven thousand
+men, women, and children that died by the sickness in Mansoul.
+
+But now, as Shaddai would have it, there was one whose name was Mr.
+Prywell, a great lover of the people of Mansoul. And he, as his manner
+was, did go listening up and down in Mansoul to see, and to hear, if at
+any time he might, whether there was any design against it or no. For he
+was always a jealous man, and feared some mischief sometime would befal
+it, either from the Diabolonians within, or from some power without. Now
+upon a time it so happened, as Mr. Prywell went listening here and there,
+that he lighted upon a place called Vilehill, in Mansoul, where
+Diabolonians used to meet; so hearing a muttering, (you must know that it
+was in the night,) he softly drew near to hear; nor had he stood long
+under the house-end, (for there stood a house there,) but he heard one
+confidently affirm, that it was not, or would not be long before Diabolus
+should possess himself again of Mansoul; and that then the Diabolonians
+did intend to put all Mansoulians to the sword, and would kill and
+destroy the King’s captains, and drive all his soldiers out of the town.
+He said, moreover, that he knew there were above twenty thousand fighting
+men prepared by Diabolus for the accomplishing of this design, and that
+it would not be months before they all should see it.
+
+When Mr. Prywell had heard this story, he did quickly believe it was
+true: wherefore he went forthwith to my Lord Mayor’s house, and
+acquainted him therewith; who, sending for the subordinate preacher,
+brake the business to him; and he as soon gave the alarm to the town; for
+he was now the chief preacher in Mansoul, because, as yet, my Lord
+Secretary was ill at ease. And this was the way that the subordinate
+preacher did take to alarm the town therewith. The same hour he caused
+the lecture bell to be rung; so the people came together: he gave them
+then a short exhortation to watchfulness, and made Mr. Prywell’s news the
+argument thereof. ‘For,’ said he, ‘an horrible plot is contrived against
+Mansoul, even to massacre us all in a day, nor is this story to be
+slighted; for Mr. Prywell is the author thereof. Mr. Prywell was always
+a lover of Mansoul, a sober and judicious man, a man that is no tattler,
+nor raiser of false reports, but one that loves to look into the very
+bottom of matters, and talks nothing of news, but by very solid
+arguments.
+
+‘I will call him, and you shall hear him your own selves;’ so he called
+him, and he came and told his tale so punctually, and affirmed its truth
+with such ample grounds, that Mansoul fell presently under a conviction
+of the truth of what he said. The preacher did also back him, saying,
+‘Sirs, it is not irrational for us to believe it, for we have provoked
+Shaddai to anger, and have sinned Emmanuel out of the town; we have had
+too much correspondence with Diabolonians, and have forsaken our former
+mercies: no marvel then, if the enemy both within and without should
+design and plot our ruin; and what time like this to do it? The sickness
+is now in the town, and we have been made weak thereby. Many a good
+meaning man is dead, and the Diabolonians of late grow stronger and
+stronger.
+
+‘Besides,’ quoth the subordinate preacher, ‘I have received from this
+good truth-teller this one inkling further, that he understood by those
+that he overheard, that several letters have lately passed between the
+furies and the Diabolonians in order to our destruction.’ When Mansoul
+heard all this, and not being able to gainsay it, they lift up their
+voice and wept. Mr. Prywell did also, in the presence of the townsmen,
+confirm all that their subordinate preacher had said. Wherefore they now
+set afresh to bewail their folly, and to a doubling of petitions to
+Shaddai and his Son. They also brake the business to the captains, high
+commanders, and men of war in the town of Mansoul, entreating them to use
+the means to be strong, and to take good courage; and that they would
+look after their harness, and make themselves ready to give Diabolus
+battle by night and by day, shall he come, as they are informed he will,
+to beleaguer the town of Mansoul.
+
+When the captains heard this, they being always true lovers of the town
+of Mansoul, what do they but like so many Samsons they shake themselves,
+and come together to consult and contrive how to defeat those bold and
+hellish contrivances that were upon the wheel by the means of Diabolus
+and his friends against the now sickly, weakly, and much impoverished
+town of Mansoul; and they agreed upon these following particulars:—
+
+1. That the gates of Mansoul should be kept shut, and made fast with bars
+and locks, and that all persons that went out, or came in, should be very
+strictly examined by the captains of the guards, ‘to the end,’ said they,
+‘that those that are managers of the plot amongst us, may, either coming
+or going, be taken; and that we may also find out who are the great
+contrivers, amongst us, of our ruin.’
+
+2. The next thing was, that a strict search should be made for all kind
+of Diabolonians throughout the whole town of Mansoul; and that every
+man’s house from top to bottom should be looked into, and that, too,
+house by house, that if possible a further discovery might be made of all
+such among them as had a hand in these designs.
+
+3. It was further concluded upon, that wheresoever or with whomsoever any
+of the Diabolonians were found, that even those of the town of Mansoul
+that had given them house and harbour, should to their shame, and the
+warning of others, take penance in the open place.
+
+4. It was, moreover, resolved by the famous town of Mansoul, that a
+public fast, and a day of humiliation, should be kept throughout the
+whole corporation, to the justifying of their Prince, the abasing of
+themselves before him for their transgressions against him, and against
+Shaddai, his Father. It was further resolved, that all such in Mansoul
+as did not on that day endeavour to keep that fast, and to humble
+themselves for their faults, but that should mind their worldly employs,
+or be found wandering up and down the streets, should be taken for
+Diabolonians, and should suffer as Diabolonians for such their wicked
+doings.
+
+5. It was further concluded then, that with what speed, and with what
+warmth of mind they could, they would renew their humiliation for sin,
+and their petitions to Shaddai for help; they also resolved, to send
+tidings to the court of all that Mr. Prywell had told them.
+
+6. It was also determined, that thanks should be given by the town of
+Mansoul to Mr. Prywell, for his diligent seeking of the welfare of their
+town: and further, that forasmuch as he was so naturally inclined to seek
+their good, and also to undermine their foes, they gave him a commission
+of scout-master-general, for the good of the town of Mansoul.
+
+When the corporation, with their captains, had thus concluded, they did
+as they had said; they shut up their gates, they made for Diabolonians
+strict search, they made those with whom any were found to take penance
+in the open place: they kept their fast, and renewed their petitions to
+their Prince, and Mr. Prywell managed his charge and the trust that
+Mansoul had put in his hands, with great conscience and good fidelity;
+for he gave himself wholly up to his employ, and that not only within the
+town, but he went out to pry, to see, and to hear.
+
+And not many days after he provided for his journey, and went towards
+Hell-Gate Hill, into the country where the Doubters were, where he heard
+of all that had been talked of in Mansoul, and he perceived also that
+Diabolus was almost ready for his march, etc. So he came back with
+speed, and, calling the captains and elders of Mansoul together, he told
+them where he had been, what he had heard, and what he had seen.
+Particularly, he told them that Diabolus was almost ready for his march,
+and that he had made old Mr. Incredulity, that once brake prison in
+Mansoul, the general of his army; that his army consisted all of
+Doubters, and that their number was above twenty thousand. He told,
+moreover, that Diabolus did intend to bring with him the chief princes of
+the infernal pit, and that he would make them chief captains over his
+Doubters. He told them, moreover, that it was certainly true that
+several of the black den would, with Diabolus, ride reformades to reduce
+the town of Mansoul to the obedience of Diabolus, their prince.
+
+He said, moreover, that he understood by the Doubters, among whom he had
+been, that the reason why old Incredulity was made general of the whole
+army, was because none truer than he to the tyrant; and because he had an
+implacable spite against the welfare of the town of Mansoul. Besides,
+said he, he remembers the affronts that Mansoul has given him, and he is
+resolved to be revenged of them.
+
+But the black princes shall be made high commanders, only Incredulity
+shall be over them all; because, which I had almost forgot, he can more
+easily, and more dexterously, beleaguer the town of Mansoul, than can any
+of the princes besides.
+
+Now, when the captains of Mansoul, with the elders of the town, had heard
+the tidings that Mr. Prywell did bring, they thought it expedient,
+without further delay, to put into execution the laws that against the
+Diabolonians their Prince had made for them, and given them in
+commandment to manage against them. Wherefore, forthwith a diligent and
+impartial search was made in all houses in Mansoul, for all and all
+manner of Diabolonians. Now, in the house of Mr. Mind, and in the house
+of the great Lord Willbewill, were two Diabolonians found. In Mr. Mind’s
+house was one Lord Covetousness found; but he had changed his name to
+Prudent-Thrifty. In my Lord Willbewill’s house, one Lasciviousness was
+found; but he had changed his name to Harmless-Mirth. These two the
+captains and elders of the town of Mansoul took, and committed them to
+custody under the hand of Mr. Trueman, the gaoler; and this man handled
+them so severely, and loaded them so well with irons, that in time they
+both fell into a very deep consumption, and died in the prison-house;
+their masters also, according to the agreement of the captains and
+elders, were brought to take penance in the open place to their shame,
+and for a warning to the rest of the town of Mansoul.
+
+Now, this was the manner of penance in those days: the persons offending
+being made sensible of the evil of their doings, were enjoined open
+confession of their faults, and a strict amendment of their lives.
+
+After this, the captains and elders of Mansoul sought yet to find out
+more Diabolonians, wherever they lurked, whether in dens, caves, holes,
+vaults, or where else they could, in or about the wall or town of
+Mansoul. But though they could plainly see their footing, and so follow
+them by their track and smell to their holds, even to the mouths of their
+caves and dens, yet take them, hold them, and do justice upon them, they
+could not; their ways were so crooked, their holds so strong, and they so
+quick to take sanctuary there.
+
+But Mansoul did now with so stiff an hand rule over the Diabolonians that
+were left, that they were glad to shrink into corners: time was when they
+durst walk openly, and in the day; but now they were forced to embrace
+privacy and the night: time was when a Mansoulian was their companion;
+but now they counted them deadly enemies. This good change did Mr.
+Prywell’s intelligence make in the famous town of Mansoul.
+
+By this time, Diabolus had finished his army which he intended to bring
+with him for the ruin of Mansoul; and had set over them captains, and
+other field officers, such as liked his furious stomach best: himself was
+lord paramount, Incredulity was general of his army, their highest
+captains shall be named afterwards; but now for their officers, colours,
+and scutcheons.
+
+1. Their first captain was Captain Rage: he was captain over the election
+doubters, his were the red colours; his standard-bearer was Mr.
+Destructive, and the great red dragon he had for his scutcheon.
+
+2. The second captain was Captain Fury: he was captain over the vocation
+doubters; his standard-bearer was Mr. Darkness, his colours were those
+that were pale, and he had for his scutcheon the fiery flying serpent.
+
+3. The third captain was Captain Damnation: he was captain over the grace
+doubters; his were the red colours, Mr. No-Life bare them, and he had for
+his scutcheon the black den.
+
+4. The fourth captain was Captain Insatiable; he was captain over the
+faith doubters: his were the red colours, Mr. Devourer bare them, and he
+had for a scutcheon the yawning jaws.
+
+5. The fifth captain was Captain Brimstone: he was captain over the
+perseverance doubters; his also were the red colours, Mr. Burning bare
+them, and his scutcheon was the blue and stinking flame.
+
+6. The sixth captain was Captain Torment: he was captain over the
+resurrection doubters; his colours were those that were pale; Mr. Gnaw
+was his standard-bearer, and he had the black worm for his scutcheon.
+
+7. The seventh captain was Captain No-Ease; he was captain over the
+salvation doubters; his were the red colours, Mr. Restless bare them, and
+his scutcheon was the ghastly picture of death.
+
+8. The eighth captain was the Captain Sepulchre: he was captain over the
+glory doubters; his also were the pale colours, Mr. Corruption was his
+standard-bearer, and he had for his scutcheon a skull, and dead men’s
+bones.
+
+9. The ninth captain was Captain Past-Hope; he was captain of those that
+are called the felicity doubters; his standard-bearer was Mr. Despair;
+his also were the red colours, and his scutcheon was a hot iron and the
+hard heart.
+
+These were his captains, and these were their forces, these were their
+standards, these were their colours, and these were their scutcheons.
+Now, over these did the great Diabolus make superior captains, and they
+were in number seven: as, namely, the Lord Beelzebub, the Lord Lucifer,
+the Lord Legion, the Lord Apollyon, the Lord Python, the Lord Cerberus,
+and the Lord Belial; these seven he set over the captains, and
+Incredulity was lord-general, and, Diabolus was king. The reformades
+also, such as were like themselves, were made some of them captains of
+hundreds, and some of them captains of more. And thus was the army of
+Incredulity completed.
+
+So they set out at Hell-Gate Hill, for there they had their rendezvous,
+from whence they came with a straight course upon their march toward the
+town of Mansoul. Now, as was hinted before, the town had, as Shaddai
+would have it, received from the mouth of Mr. Prywell the alarm of their
+coming before. Wherefore they set a strong watch at the gates, and had
+also doubled their guards: they also mounted their slings in good places,
+where they might conveniently cast out their great stones to the
+annoyance of their furious enemy.
+
+Nor could those Diabolonians that were in the town do that hurt as was
+designed they should; for Mansoul was now awake. But alas! poor people,
+they were sorely affrighted at the first appearance of their foes, and at
+their sitting down before the town, especially when they heard the
+roaring of their drum. This, to speak truth, was amazingly hideous to
+hear; it frighted all men seven miles round, if they were but awake and
+heard it. The streaming of their colours was also terrible and dejecting
+to behold.
+
+When Diabolus was come up against the town, first he made his approach to
+Ear-gate, and gave it a furious assault, supposing, as it seems, that his
+friends in Mansoul had been ready to do the work within; but care was
+taken of that before, by the vigilance of the captains. Wherefore,
+missing of the help that he expected from them, and finding his army
+warmly attended with the stones that the slingers did sling, (for that I
+will say for the captains, that considering the weakness that yet was
+upon them by reason of the long sickness that had annoyed the town of
+Mansoul, they did gallantly behave themselves,) he was forced to make
+some retreat from Mansoul, and to entrench himself and his men in the
+field without the reach of the slings of the town.
+
+Now having entrenched himself, he did cast up four mounts against the
+town: the first he called Mount Diabolus, putting his own name thereon,
+the more to affright the town of Mansoul; the other three he called
+thus—Mount Alecto, Mount Megara, and Mount Tisiphone; for these are the
+names of the dreadful furies of hell. Thus he began to play his game
+with Mansoul, and to serve it as doth the lion his prey, even to make it
+fall before his terror. But, as I said, the captains and soldiers
+resisted so stoutly, and did do such execution with their stones, that
+they made him, though against stomach, to retreat, wherefore Mansoul
+began to take courage.
+
+Now upon Mount Diabolus, which was raised on the north side of the town,
+there did the tyrant set up his standard, and a fearful thing it was to
+behold; for he had wrought in it by devilish art, after the manner of a
+scutcheon, a flaming flame fearful to behold, and the picture of Mansoul
+burning in it.
+
+When Diabolus had thus done, he commanded that his drummer should every
+night approach the walls of the town of Mansoul, and so to beat a parley;
+the command was to do it at nights, for in the daytime they annoyed him
+with their slings; for the tyrant said, that he had a mind to parley with
+the now trembling town of Mansoul, and he commanded that the drums should
+beat every night, that through weariness they might at last, if possible,
+(at the first they were unwilling yet,) be forced to do it.
+
+So this drummer did as commanded: he arose, and did beat his drum. But
+when his drum did go, if one looked toward the town of Mansoul, ‘Behold
+darkness and sorrow, and the light was darkened in the heaven thereof.’
+No noise was ever heard upon earth more terrible, except the voice of
+Shaddai when he speaketh. But how did Mansoul tremble! it now looked for
+nothing but forthwith to be swallowed up.
+
+When this drummer had beaten for a parley, he made this speech to
+Mansoul: ‘My master has bid me tell you, that if you will willingly
+submit, you shall have the good of the earth; but if you shall be
+stubborn, he is resolved to take you by force.’ But by that the fugitive
+had done beating his drum, the people of Mansoul had betaken themselves
+to the captains that were in the castle, so that there was none to
+regard, nor to give this drummer an answer; so he proceeded no further
+that night, but returned again to his master to the camp.
+
+When Diabolus saw that by drumming he could not work out Mansoul to his
+will, the next night he sendeth his drummer without his drum, still to
+let the townsmen know that he had a mind to parley with them. But when
+all came to all, his parley was turned into a summons to the town to
+deliver up themselves: but they gave him neither heed nor hearing: for
+they remembered what at first it cost them to hear him a few words.
+
+The next night he sends again, and then who should be his messenger to
+Mansoul but the terrible Captain Sepulchre; so Captain Sepulchre came up
+to the walls of Mansoul, and made this oration to the town:—
+
+‘O ye inhabitants of the rebellious town of Mansoul! I summon you in the
+name of the Prince Diabolus, that, without any more ado, you set open the
+gates of your town, and admit the great lord to come in. But if you
+shall still rebel, when we have taken to us the town by force, we will
+swallow you up as the grave; wherefore if you will hearken to my summons,
+say so, and if not then let me know.
+
+‘The reason of this my summons,’ quoth he, ‘is, for that my lord is your
+undoubted prince and lord, as you yourselves have formerly owned. Nor
+shall that assault that was given to my lord, when Emmanuel dealt so
+dishonourably by him, prevail with him to lose his right, and to forbear
+to attempt to recover his own. Consider, then, O Mansoul, with thyself,
+wilt thou show thyself peaceable, or no? If thou shalt quietly yield up
+thyself, then our old friendship shall be renewed; but if thou shalt yet
+refuse and rebel, then expect nothing but fire and sword.’
+
+When the languishing town of Mansoul had heard this summoner and his
+summons, they were yet more put to their dumps, but made to the captain
+no answer at all; so away he went as he came.
+
+But, after some consultation among themselves, as also with some of their
+captains, they applied themselves afresh to the Lord Secretary for
+counsel and advice from him; for this Lord Secretary was their chief
+preacher, (as also is mentioned some pages before,) only now he was ill
+at ease; and of him they begged favour in these two or three things—
+
+1. That he would look comfortably upon them, and not keep himself so much
+retired from them as formerly. Also, that he would be prevailed with to
+give them a hearing, while they should make known their miserable
+condition to him. But to this he told them as before, that ‘as yet he
+was but ill at ease, and therefore could not do as he had formerly done.’
+
+2. The second thing that they desired was, that he would be pleased to
+give them his advice about their now so important affairs, for that
+Diabolus was come and set down before the town with no less than twenty
+thousand doubters. They said, moreover, that both he and his captains
+were cruel men, and that they were afraid of them. But to this he said,
+‘You must look to the law of the Prince, and there see what is laid upon
+you to do.’
+
+3. Then they desired that his highness would help them to frame a
+petition to Shaddai, and unto Emmanuel his Son, and that he would set his
+own hand thereto as a token that he was one with them in it: ‘For,’ said
+they, ‘my Lord, many a one have we sent, but can get no answer of peace;
+but now, surely, one with thy hand unto it may obtain good for Mansoul.’
+
+But all the answer that he gave to this was, ‘that they had offended
+their Emmanuel, and had also grieved himself, and that therefore they
+must as yet partake of their own devices.’
+
+This answer of the Lord Secretary fell like a millstone upon them; yea,
+it crushed them so that they could not tell what to do; yet they durst
+not comply with the demands of Diabolus, nor with the demands of his
+captain. So then here were the straits that the town of Mansoul was
+betwixt, when the enemy came upon her: her foes were ready to swallow her
+up, and her friends did forbear to help her.
+
+Then stood up my Lord Mayor, whose name was my Lord Understanding, and he
+began to pick and pick, until he had picked comfort out of that seemingly
+bitter saying of the Lord Secretary; for thus he descanted upon it:
+‘First,’ said he, ‘this unavoidably follows upon the saying of my Lord,
+“that we must yet suffer for our sins.” Secondly, But,’ quoth he, ‘the
+words yet sound as if at last we should be saved from our enemies, and
+that after a few more sorrows, Emmanuel will come and be our help.’ Now
+the Lord Mayor was the more critical in his dealing with the Secretary’s
+words, because my lord was more than a prophet, and because none of his
+words were such, but that at all times they were most exactly
+significant; and the townsmen were allowed to pry into them, and to
+expound them to their best advantage.
+
+So they took their leaves of my lord, and returned, and went, and came to
+the captains, to whom they did tell what my Lord High Secretary had said;
+who, when they had heard it, were all of the same opinion as was my Lord
+Mayor himself. The captains, therefore, began to take some courage unto
+them, and to prepare to make some brave attempt upon the camp of the
+enemy, and to destroy all that were Diabolonians, with the roving
+doubters that the tyrant had brought with him to destroy the poor town of
+Mansoul.
+
+So all betook themselves forthwith to their places—the Captains to
+theirs, the Lord Mayor to his, the subordinate preacher to his, and my
+Lord Willbewill to his. The captains longed to be at some work for their
+prince; for they delighted in warlike achievements. The next day,
+therefore, they came together and consulted; and after consultation had,
+they resolved to give an answer to the captain of Diabolus with slings;
+and so they did at the rising of the sun on the morrow; for Diabolus had
+adventured to come nearer again, but the sling-stones were to him and his
+like hornets. For as there is nothing to the town of Mansoul so terrible
+as the roaring of Diabolus’s drum, so there is nothing to Diabolus so
+terrible as the well playing of Emmanuel’s slings. Wherefore Diabolus
+was forced to make another retreat, yet further off from the famous town
+of Mansoul. Then did the Lord Mayor of Mansoul cause the bells to be
+rung, ‘and that thanks should be sent to the Lord High Secretary by the
+mouth of the subordinate preacher; for that by his words the captains and
+elders of Mansoul had been strengthened against Diabolus.’
+
+When Diabolus saw that his captains and soldiers, high lords and
+renowned, were frightened, and beaten down by the stones that came from
+the golden slings of the Prince of the town of Mansoul, he bethought
+himself, and said, ‘I will try to catch them by fawning, I will try to
+flatter them into my net.’
+
+Wherefore, after a while, he came down again to the wall, not now with
+his drum, nor with Captain Sepulchre; but having all besugared his lips,
+he seemed to be a very sweet-mouthed, peaceable prince, designing nothing
+for humour’s sake, nor to be revenged on Mansoul for injuries by them
+done to him; but the welfare, and good, and advantage of the town and
+people therein was now, as he said, his only design. Wherefore, after he
+had called for audience, and desired that the townsfolk would give it to
+him, he proceeded in his oration, and said:—
+
+‘Oh, the desire of my heart, the famous town of Mansoul! how many nights
+have I watched, and how many weary steps have I taken, if perhaps I might
+do thee good! Far be it, far be it from me to desire to make a war upon
+you; if ye will but willingly and quietly deliver up yourselves unto me.
+You know that you were mine of old. Remember also, that so long as you
+enjoyed me for your lord, and that I enjoyed you for my subjects, you
+wanted for nothing of all the delights of the earth, that I, your lord
+and prince, could get for you, or that I could invent to make you bonny
+and blithe withal. Consider, you never had so many hard, dark,
+troublesome, and heart-afflicting hours, while you were mine, as you have
+had since you revolted from me; nor shall you ever have peace again,
+until you and I become one as before. But, be but prevailed with to
+embrace me again, and I will grant, yea, enlarge your old charter with
+abundance of privileges; so that your license and liberty shall be to
+take, hold, enjoy, and make your own all that is pleasant from the east
+to the west. Nor shall any of those incivilities, wherewith you have
+offended me, be ever charged upon you by me, so long as the sun and moon
+endure. Nor shall any of those dear friends of mine that now, for the
+fear of you, lie lurking in dens, and holes, and caves in Mansoul, be
+hurtful to you any more; yea, they shall be your servants, and shall
+minister unto you of their substance, and of whatever shall come to hand.
+I need speak no more; you know them, and have sometime since been much
+delighted in their company. Why, then, should we abide at such odds?
+Let us renew our old acquaintance and friendship again.
+
+‘Bear with your friend; I take the liberty at this time to speak thus
+freely unto you. The love that I have to you presses me to do it, as
+also does the zeal of my heart for my friends with you: put me not
+therefore to further trouble, nor yourselves to further fears and
+frights. Have you I will, in a way of peace or war; nor do you flatter
+yourselves with the power and force of your captains, or that your
+Emmanuel will shortly come in to your help; for such strength will do you
+no pleasure.
+
+‘I am come against you with a stout and valiant army, and all the chief
+princes of the den are even at the head of it. Besides, my captains are
+swifter than eagles, stronger than lions, and more greedy of prey than
+are the evening wolves. What is Og of Bashan! what is Goliath of Gath!
+and what are an hundred more of them, to one of the least of my captains!
+How, then, shall Mansoul think to escape my hand and force?’
+
+Diabolus having thus handed his flattering, fawning, deceitful, and lying
+speech to the famous town of Mansoul, the Lord Mayor replied to him as
+follows: ‘O Diabolus, prince of darkness, and master of all deceit; thy
+lying flatteries we have had and made sufficient probation of, and have
+tasted too deeply of that destructive cup already. Should we therefore
+again hearken unto thee, and so break the commandments of our great
+Shaddai, to join in affinity with thee, would not our Prince reject us,
+and cast us off for ever? And, being cast off by him, can the place that
+he has prepared for thee be a place of rest for us? Besides, O thou that
+art empty and void of all truth, we are rather ready to die by thy hand,
+than to fall in with thy flattering and lying deceits.’
+
+When the tyrant saw that there was little to be got by parleying with my
+Lord Mayor, he fell into an hellish rage, and resolved that again, with
+his army of doubters, he would another time assault the town of Mansoul.
+
+So he called for his drummer, who beat up for his men (and while he did
+beat, Mansoul did shake) to be in a readiness to give battle to the
+corporation: then Diabolus drew near with his army, and thus disposed of
+his men. Captain Cruel and Captain Torment, these he drew up and placed
+against Feel-gate, and commanded them to sit down there for the war. And
+he also appointed that, if need were, Captain No-Ease should come in to
+their relief. At Nose-gate he placed the Captain Brimstone and Captain
+Sepulchre, and bid them look well to their ward, on that side of the town
+of Mansoul. But at Eye-gate he placed that grim-faced one, the Captain
+Past-Hope, and there also now he did set up his terrible standard.
+
+Now Captain Insatiable, he was to look to the carriages of Diabolus, and
+was also appointed to take into custody that, or those persons and
+things, that should at any time as prey be taken from the enemy.
+
+Now Mouth-gate the inhabitants of Mansoul kept for a sally-port;
+wherefore that they kept strong; for that it was it by and out at which
+the townsfolk did send their petitions to Emmanuel their Prince. That
+also was the gate from the top of which the captains did play their
+slings at the enemies; for that gate stood somewhat ascending, so that
+the placing of them there, and the letting of them fly from that place,
+did much execution against the tyrant’s army. Wherefore, for these
+causes, with others, Diabolus sought, if possible, to land up Mouth-gate
+with dirt.
+
+Now, as Diabolus was busy and industrious in preparing to make his
+assault upon the town of Mansoul, without, so the captains and soldiers
+in the corporation were as busy in preparing within; they mounted their
+slings, they set up their banners, they sounded their trumpets, and put
+themselves in such order as was judged most for the annoyance of the
+enemy, and for the advantage of Mansoul, and gave to their soldiers
+orders to be ready at the sound of the trumpet for war. The Lord
+Willbewill also, he took the charge of watching against the rebels
+within, and to do what he could to take them while without, or to stifle
+them within their caves, dens, and holes in the town-wall of Mansoul.
+And, to speak the truth of him, ever since he took penance for his fault,
+he has showed as much honesty and bravery of spirit as any he in Mansoul;
+for he took one Jolly, and his brother Griggish, the two sons of his
+servant Harmless-Mirth, (for to that day, though the father was committed
+to ward, the sons had a dwelling in the house of my lord,)—I say, he took
+them, and with his own hands put them to the cross. And this was the
+reason why he hanged them up: after their father was put into the hands
+of Mr. True-Man the gaoler, they, his sons, began to play his pranks, and
+to be ticking and toying with the daughters of their lord; nay, it was
+jealoused that they were too familiar with them, the which was brought to
+his lordship’s ear. Now his lordship being unwilling unadvisedly to put
+any man to death, did not suddenly fall upon them, but set watch and
+spies to see if the thing was true; of the which he was soon informed,
+for his two servants, whose names were Find-Out and Tell-All, catched
+them together in uncivil manner more than once or twice, and went and
+told their lord. So when my Lord Willbewill had sufficient ground to
+believe the thing was true, he takes the two young Diabolonians, (for
+such they were, for their father was a Diabolonian born,) and has them to
+Eye-gate, where he raised a very high cross, just in the face of
+Diabolus, and of his army, and there he hanged the young villains, in
+defiance to Captain Past-Hope, and of the horrible standard of the
+tyrant.
+
+Now this Christian act of the brave Lord Willbewill did greatly abash
+Captain Past-Hope, discouraged the army of Diabolus, put fear into the
+Diabolonian runagates in Mansoul, and put strength and courage into the
+captains that belonged to Emmanuel, the Prince; for they without did
+gather, and that by this very act of my Lord, that Mansoul was resolved
+to fight, and that the Diabolonians within the town could not do such
+things as Diabolus had hopes they would. Nor was this the only proof of
+the brave Lord Willbewill’s honesty to the town, nor of his loyalty to
+his Prince, as will afterwards appear.
+
+Now, when the children of Prudent-Thrifty, who dwelt with Mr. Mind, (for
+Thrift left children with Mr. Mind, when he was also committed to prison,
+and their names were Gripe and Rake-All; these he begat of Mr. Mind’s
+bastard daughter, whose name was Mrs. Hold-fast-Bad;)—I say, when his
+children perceived how the Lord Willbewill had served them that dwelt
+with him, what do they but, lest they should drink of the same cup,
+endeavour to make their escape. But Mr. Mind, being wary of it, took
+them and put them in hold in his house till morning; (for this was done
+over night;) and remembering that by the law of Mansoul all Diabolonians
+were to die, (and to be sure they were at least by father’s side such,
+and some say by mother’s side too,) what does he but takes them and puts
+them in chains, and carries them to the selfsame place where my lord
+hanged his two before, and there he hanged them.
+
+The townsmen also took great encouragement at this act of Mr. Mind, and
+did what they could to have taken some more of these Diabolonian
+troublers of Mansoul; but at that time the rest lay so squat and close,
+that they could not be apprehended; so they set against them a diligent
+watch, and went every man to his place.
+
+I told you a little before, that Diabolus and his army were somewhat
+abashed and discouraged at the sight of what my Lord Willbewill did, when
+he hanged up those two young Diabolonians; but his discouragement quickly
+turned itself into furious madness and rage against the town of Mansoul,
+and fight it he would. Also the townsmen and captains within, they had
+their hopes and their expectations heightened, believing at last the day
+would be theirs; so they feared them the less. Their subordinate
+preacher, too, made a sermon about it; and he took that theme for his
+text, ‘Gad, a troop shall overcome him: but he shall overcome at the
+last.’ Whence he showed, that though Mansoul should be sorely put to it
+at the first, yet the victory should most certainly be Mansoul’s at the
+last.
+
+So Diabolus commanded that his drummer should beat a charge against the
+town; and the captains also that were in the town sounded a charge
+against them, but they had no drum: they were trumpets of silver with
+which they sounded against them. Then they which were of the camp of
+Diabolus came down to the town to take it, and the captains in the
+castle, with the slingers at Mouth-gate, played upon them amain. And now
+there was nothing heard in the camp of Diabolus but horrible rage and
+blasphemy; but in the town good words, prayer, and singing of psalms.
+The enemy replied with horrible objections, and the terribleness of their
+drum; but the town made answer with the slapping of their slings, and the
+melodious noise of their trumpets. And thus the fight lasted for several
+days together, only now and then they had some small intermission, in the
+which the townsmen refreshed themselves, and the captains made ready for
+another assault.
+
+The captains of Emmanuel were clad in silver armour, and the soldiers in
+that which was of proof; the soldiers of Diabolus were clad in iron which
+was made to give place to Emmanuel’s engine-shot. In the town, some were
+hurt, and some were greatly wounded. Now, the worst of it was, a
+chirurgeon was scarce in Mansoul, for that Emmanuel at present was
+absent. Howbeit, with the leaves of a tree the wounded were kept from
+dying; yet their wounds did greatly putrefy, and some did grievously
+stink. Of the townsmen, these were wounded, namely, my Lord Reason; he
+was wounded in the head. Another that was wounded was the brave Lord
+Mayor; he was wounded in the eye. Another that was wounded was Mr. Mind;
+he received his wound about the stomach. The honest subordinate preacher
+also, he received a shot not far off the heart but none of these were
+mortal.
+
+Many also of the inferior sort were not only wounded but slain outright.
+
+Now, in the camp of Diabolus were wounded and slain a considerable
+number; for instance, Captain Rage, he was wounded, and so was Captain
+Cruel. Captain Damnation was made to retreat, and to intrench himself
+further off of Mansoul. The standard also of Diabolus was beaten down,
+and his standard-bearer, Captain Much-Hurt, had his brains beat out with
+a sling-stone, to the no little grief and shame of his prince Diabolus.
+
+Many also of the doubters were slain outright, though enough of them were
+left alive to make Mansoul shake and totter. Now the victory that day
+being turned to Mansoul, did put great valour into the townsmen and
+captains, and did cover Diabolus’s camp with a cloud, but withal it made
+them far more furious. So the next day Mansoul rested, and commanded
+that the bells should be rung; the trumpets also joyfully sounded, and
+the captains shouted round the town.
+
+My Lord Willbewill also was not idle, but did notable service within
+against the domestics, or the Diabolonians that were in the town, not
+only by keeping them in awe, for he lighted on one at last whose name was
+Mr. Anything, a fellow of whom mention was made before; for it was he, if
+you remember, that brought the three fellows to Diabolus, whom the
+Diabolonians took out of Captain Boanerges’s companies, and that
+persuaded them to list themselves under the tyrant, to fight against the
+army of Shaddai. My Lord Willbewill did also take a notable Diabolonian,
+whose name was Loose-Foot: this Loose-Foot was a scout to the vagabonds
+in Mansoul, and that did use to carry tidings out of Mansoul to the camp,
+and out of the camp to those of the enemies in Mansoul. Both these my
+lord sent away safe to Mr. True-Man, the gaoler, with a commandment to
+keep them in irons; for he intended then to have them out to be
+crucified, when it would be for the best to the corporation, and most for
+the discouragement of the camp of the enemies.
+
+My Lord Mayor also, though he could not stir about so much as formerly,
+because of the wound that he lately received, yet gave he out orders to
+all that were the natives of Mansoul, to look to their watch, and stand
+upon their guard, and, as occasion should offer, to prove themselves men.
+
+Mr. Conscience, the preacher, he also did his utmost to keep all his good
+documents alive upon the hearts of the people of Mansoul.
+
+Well, awhile after, the captains and stout ones of the town of Mansoul
+agreed and resolved upon a time to make a sally out upon the camp of
+Diabolus, and this must be done in the night; and there was the folly of
+Mansoul, (for the night is always the best for the enemy, but the worst
+for Mansoul to fight in,) but yet they would do it, their courage was so
+high; their last victory also still stuck in their memories.
+
+So the night appointed being come, the Prince’s brave captains cast lots
+who should lead the van in this new and desperate expedition against
+Diabolus, and against his Diabolonian army; and the lot fell to Captain
+Credence, to Captain Experience, and to Captain Good-Hope, to lead the
+forlorn hope. (This Captain Experience the Prince created such when
+himself did reside in the town of Mansoul.) So, as I said, they made
+their sally out upon the army that lay in the siege against them; and
+their hap was to fall in with the main body of their enemies. Now
+Diabolus and his men being expertly accustomed to night-work, took the
+alarm presently, and were as ready to give them battle, as if they had
+sent them word of their coming. Wherefore to it they went amain, and
+blows were hard on every side; the hell drum also was beat most
+furiously, while the trumpets of the Prince most sweetly sounded. And
+thus the battle was joined; and Captain Insatiable looked to the enemy’s
+carriages, and waited when he should receive some prey.
+
+The Prince’s captains fought it stoutly, beyond what indeed could be
+expected they should; they wounded many; they made the whole army of
+Diabolus to make a retreat. But I cannot tell how, but the brave Captain
+Credence, Captain Good-Hope, and Captain Experience, as they were upon
+the pursuit, cutting down, and following hard after the enemy in the
+rear, Captain Credence stumbled and fell, by which fall he caught so
+great a hurt, that he could not rise till Captain Experience did help him
+up, at which their men were put in disorder. The captain also was so
+full of pain, that he could not forbear but aloud to cry out: at this,
+the other two captains fainted, supposing that Captain Credence had
+received his mortal wound; their men also were more disordered, and had
+no list to fight. Now Diabolus being very observing, though at this time
+as yet he was put to the worst, perceiving that a halt was made among the
+men that were the pursuers, what does he but, taking it for granted that
+the captains were either wounded or dead, he therefore makes at first a
+stand, then faces about, and so comes up upon the Prince’s army with as
+much of his fury as hell could help him to; and his hap was to fall in
+just among the three captains, Captain Credence, Captain Good-Hope, and
+Captain Experience, and did cut, wound, and pierce them so dreadfully,
+that what through discouragement, what through disorder, and what through
+the wounds that they had received, and also the loss of much blood, they
+scarce were able, though they had for their power the three best hands in
+Mansoul, to get safe into the hold again.
+
+Now, when the body of the Prince’s army saw how these three captains were
+put to the worst, they thought it their wisdom to make as safe and good a
+retreat as they could, and so returned by the sally-port again; and so
+there was an end of this present action. But Diabolus was so flushed
+with this night’s work, that he promised himself, in few days, an easy
+and complete conquest over the town of Mansoul; wherefore, on the day
+following, he comes up to the sides thereof with great boldness, and
+demands entrance, and that forthwith they deliver themselves up to his
+government. The Diabolonians, too, that were within, they began to be
+somewhat brisk, as we shall show afterward.
+
+But the valiant Lord Mayor replied, that what he got he must get by
+force; for as long as Emmanuel, their Prince, was alive, (though he at
+present was not so with them as they wished,) they should never consent
+to yield Mansoul up to another.
+
+And with that the Lord Willbewill stood up, and said, ‘Diabolus, thou
+master of the den, and enemy to all that is good, we poor inhabitants of
+the town of Mansoul are too well acquainted with thy rule and government,
+and with the end of those things that for certain will follow submitting
+to thee, to do it. Wherefore though while we were without knowledge we
+suffered thee to take us, (as the bird that saw not the snare fell into
+the hands of the fowler,) yet since we have been turned from darkness to
+light, we have also been turned from the power of Satan to God. And
+though through thy subtlety, and also the subtlety of the Diabolonians
+within, we have sustained much loss, and also plunged ourselves into much
+perplexity, yet give up ourselves, lay down our arms, and yield to so
+horrid a tyrant as thou, we shall not; die upon the place we choose
+rather to do. Besides, we have hopes that in time deliverance will come
+from court unto us, and therefore we yet will maintain a war against
+thee.’
+
+This brave speech of the Lord Willbewill, with that also of the Lord
+Mayor, did somewhat abate the boldness of Diabolus, though it kindled the
+fury of his rage. It also succoured the townsmen and captains; yea, it
+was as a plaster to the brave Captain Credence’s wound; for you must know
+that a brave speech now (when the captains of the town with their men of
+war came home routed, and when the enemy took courage and boldness at the
+success that he had obtained to draw up to the walls, and demand
+entrance, as he did) was in season, and also advantageous.
+
+The Lord Willbewill also did play the man within; for while the captains
+and soldiers were in the field, he was in arms in the town, and wherever
+by him there was a Diabolonian found, they were forced to feel the weight
+of his heavy hand, and also the edge of his penetrating sword: many
+therefore of the Diabolonians he wounded, as the Lord Cavil, the Lord
+Brisk, the Lord Pragmatic, and the Lord Murmur; several also of the
+meaner sort he did sorely maim; though there cannot at this time an
+account be given you of any that he slew outright. The cause, or rather
+the advantage that my Lord Willbewill had at this time to do thus, was
+for that the captains were gone out to fight the enemy in the field.
+‘For now,’ thought the Diabolonians within, ‘is our time to stir and make
+an uproar in the town.’ What do they therefore but quickly get
+themselves into a body, and fall forthwith to hurricaning in Mansoul, as
+if now nothing but whirlwind and tempest should be there. Wherefore, as
+I said, he takes this opportunity to fall in among them with his men,
+cutting and slashing with courage that was undaunted; at which the
+Diabolonians with all haste dispersed themselves to their holds, and my
+lord to his place as before.
+
+This brave act of my lord did somewhat revenge the wrong done by Diabolus
+to the captains, and also did let them know that Mansoul was not to be
+parted with for the loss of a victory or two; wherefore the wing of the
+tyrant was clipped again, as to boasting,—I mean in comparison of what he
+would have done, if the Diabolonians had put the town to the same plight
+to which he had put the captains.
+
+Well, Diabolus yet resolves to have the other bout with Mansoul. ‘For,’
+thought he, ‘since I beat them once, I may beat them twice.’ Wherefore
+he commanded his men to be ready at such an hour of the night, to make a
+fresh assault upon the town; and he gave it out in special that they
+should bend all their force against Feel-gate, and attempt to break into
+the town through that. The word that then he did give to his officers
+and soldiers was Hell-fire. ‘And,’ said he, ‘if we break in upon them,
+as I wish we do, either with some, or with all our force, let them that
+break in look to it, that they forget not the word. And let nothing be
+heard in the town of Mansoul but, “Hell-fire! Hell-fire! Hell-fire!”’
+The drummer was also to beat without ceasing, and the standard-bearers
+were to display their colours; the soldiers, too, were to put on what
+courage they could, and to see that they played manfully their parts
+against the town.
+
+So when night was come, and all things by the tyrant made ready for the
+work, he suddenly makes his assault upon Feel-gate, and after he had
+awhile struggled there, he throws the gate wide open: for the truth is,
+those gates were but weak, and so most easily made to yield. When
+Diabolus had thus far made his attempt, he placed his captains (namely,
+Torment and No-Ease) there; so he attempted to press forward, but the
+Prince’s captains came down upon him, and made his entrance more
+difficult than he desired. And, to speak truth, they made what
+resistance they could; but the three of their best and most valiant
+captains being wounded, and by their wounds made much incapable of doing
+the town that service they would, (and all the rest having more than
+their hands full of the doubters, and their captains that did follow
+Diabolus,) they were overpowered with force, nor could they keep them out
+of the town. Wherefore the Prince’s men and their captains betook
+themselves to the castle, as to the stronghold of the town: and this they
+did partly for their own security, partly for the security of the town,
+and partly, or rather chiefly, to preserve to Emmanuel the
+prerogative-royal of Mansoul; for so was the castle of Mansoul.
+
+The captains therefore being fled into the castle, the enemy, without
+much resistance, possess themselves of the rest of the town, and
+spreading themselves as they went into every corner, they cried out as
+they marched, according to the command of the tyrant, ‘Hell-fire!
+Hell-fire! Hell-fire!’ so that nothing for a while throughout the town of
+Mansoul could be heard but the direful noise of ‘Hell-fire!’ together
+with the roaring of Diabolus’s drum. And now did the clouds hang black
+over Mansoul, nor to reason did anything but ruin seem to attend it.
+Diabolus also quartered his soldiers in the houses of the inhabitants of
+the town of Mansoul. Yea, the subordinate preacher’s house was as full
+of these outlandish doubters as ever it could hold, and so was my Lord
+Mayor’s, and my Lord Willbewill’s also. Yea, where was there a corner, a
+cottage, a barn, or a hogstye, that now was not full of these vermin?
+Yea, they turned the men of the town out of their houses, and would lie
+in their beds, and sit at their tables themselves. Ah, poor Mansoul! now
+thou feelest the fruits of sin, yea, what venom was in the flattering
+words of Mr. Carnal-Security! They made great havoc of whatever they
+laid their hands on; yea, they fired the town in several places; many
+young children also were by them dashed in pieces; and those that were
+yet unborn they destroyed in their mothers’ wombs: for you must needs
+think that it could not now be otherwise; for what conscience, what pity,
+what bowels of compassion can any expect at the hands of outlandish
+doubters? Many in Mansoul that were women, both young and old, they
+forced, ravished, and beastlike abused, so that they swooned, miscarried,
+and many of them died, and so lay at the top of every street, and in all
+by-places of the town.
+
+And now did Mansoul seem to be nothing but a den of dragons, an emblem of
+hell, and a place of total darkness. Now did Mansoul lie almost like the
+barren wilderness; nothing but nettles, briars, thorns, weeds, and
+stinking things seemed now to cover the face of Mansoul. I told you
+before, how that these Diabolonian doubters turned the men of Mansoul out
+of their beds, and now I will add, they wounded them, they mauled them,
+yea, and almost brained many of them. Many did I say, yea most, if not
+all of them. Mr. Conscience they so wounded, yea, and his wounds so
+festered, that he could have no ease day nor night, but lay as if
+continually upon a rack; but that Shaddai rules all, certainly they had
+slain him outright. Mr. Lord Mayor they so abused that they almost put
+out his eyes; and had not my Lord Willbewill got into the castle, they
+intended to have chopped him all to pieces; for they did look upon him,
+as his heart now stood, to be one of the very worst that was in Mansoul
+against Diabolus and his crew. And indeed he hath shown himself a man,
+and more of his exploits you will hear of afterwards.
+
+Now, a man might have walked for days together in Mansoul, and scarcely
+have seen one in the town that looked like a religious man. Oh, the
+fearful state of Mansoul now! now every corner swarmed with outlandish
+doubters; red-coats and black-coats walked the town by clusters, and
+filled up all the houses with hideous noises, vain songs, lying stories,
+and blasphemous language against Shaddai and his Son. Now also those
+Diabolonians that lurked in the walls and dens and holes that were in the
+town of Mansoul, came forth and showed themselves; yea, walked with open
+face in company with the doubters that were in Mansoul. Yea, they had
+more boldness now to walk the streets, to haunt the houses, and to show
+themselves abroad, than had any of the honest inhabitants of the now
+woful town of Mansoul.
+
+But Diabolus and his outlandish men were not at peace in Mansoul; for
+they were not there entertained as were the captains and forces of
+Emmanuel: the townsmen did browbeat them what they could; nor did they
+partake or make stroy of any of the necessaries of Mansoul, but that
+which they seized on against the townsmen’s will: what they could, they
+hid from them, and what they could not, they had with an ill-will. They,
+poor hearts! had rather have had their room than their company; but they
+were at present their captives, and their captives for the present they
+were forced to be. But, I say, they discountenanced them as much as they
+were able, and showed them all the dislike that they could.
+
+The captains also from the castle did hold them in continual play with
+their slings, to the chafing and fretting of the minds of the enemies.
+True, Diabolus made a great many attempts to have broken open the gates
+of the castle, but Mr. Godly-Fear was made the keeper of that; and he was
+a man of that courage, conduct, and valour, that it was in vain, as long
+as life lasted within him, to think to do that work, though mostly
+desired; wherefore all the attempts that Diabolus made against him were
+fruitless. I have wished sometimes that that man had had the whole rule
+of the town of Mansoul.
+
+Well, this was the condition of the town of Mansoul for about two years
+and a half: the body of the town was the seat of war, the people of the
+town were driven into holes, and the glory of Mansoul was laid in the
+dust. What rest, then, could be to the inhabitants, what peace could
+Mansoul have, and what sun could shine upon it? Had the enemy lain so
+long without in the plain against the town, it had been enough to have
+famished them: but now, when they shall be within, when the town shall be
+their tent, their trench and fort against the castle that was in the
+town; when the town shall be against the town, and shall serve to be a
+defence to the enemies of her strength and life: I say, when they shall
+make use of the forts and town-holds to secure themselves in, even till
+they shall take, spoil, and demolish the castle,—this was terrible! and
+yet this was now the state of the town of Mansoul.
+
+After the town of Mansoul had been in this sad and lamentable condition,
+for so long a time as I have told you, and no petitions that they
+presented their Prince with, all this while, could prevail, the
+inhabitants of the town, namely, the elders and chief of Mansoul,
+gathered together, and, after some time spent in condoling their
+miserable state and this miserable judgment coming upon them, they agreed
+together to draw up yet another petition, and to send it away to Emmanuel
+for relief. But Mr. Godly-Fear stood up and answered, that he knew that
+his Lord the Prince never did nor ever would receive a petition for these
+matters, from the hand of any whoever, unless the Lord Secretary’s hand
+was to it; ‘and this,’ quoth he, ‘is the reason that you prevailed not
+all this while.’ Then they said they would draw up one, and get the Lord
+Secretary’s hand unto it. But Mr. Godly-Fear answered again, that he
+knew also that the Lord Secretary would not set his hand to any petition
+that himself had not an hand in composing and drawing up. ‘And besides,’
+said he, ‘the Prince doth know my Lord Secretary’s hand from all the
+hands in the world; wherefore he cannot be deceived by any pretence
+whatever. Wherefore my advice is that you go to my Lord, and implore him
+to lend you his aid.’ (Now he did yet abide in the castle, where all the
+captains and men-at-arms were.)
+
+So they heartily thanked Mr. Godly-Fear, took his counsel, and did as he
+had bidden them. So they went and came to my Lord, and made known the
+cause of their coming to him; namely, that since Mansoul was in so
+deplorable a condition, his Highness would be pleased to undertake to
+draw up a petition for them to Emmanuel, the Son of the mighty Shaddai,
+and to their King and his Father by him.
+
+Then said the Secretary to them, ‘What petition is it that you would have
+me draw up for you?’ But they said, ‘Our Lord knows best the state and
+condition of the town of Mansoul; and how we are backslidden and
+degenerated from the Prince: thou also knowest who is come up to war
+against us, and how Mansoul is now the seat of war. My Lord knows,
+moreover, what barbarous usages our men, women, and children have
+suffered at their hands; and how our homebred Diabolonians do walk now
+with more boldness than dare the townsmen in the streets of Mansoul. Let
+our Lord therefore, according to the wisdom of God that is in him, draw
+up a petition for his poor servants to our Prince Emmanuel.’ ‘Well,’
+said the Lord Secretary, ‘I will draw up a petition for you, and will
+also set my hand thereto.’ Then said they, ‘But when shall we call for
+it at the hands of our Lord?’ But he answered, ‘Yourselves must be
+present at the doing of it; yea, you must put your desires to it. True,
+the hand and pen shall be mine, but the ink and paper must be yours; else
+how can you say it is your petition? Nor have I need to petition for
+myself, because I have not offended.’ He also added as followeth: ‘No
+petition goes from me in my name to the Prince, and so to his Father by
+him, but when the people that are chiefly concerned therein do join in
+heart and soul in the matter, for that must be inserted therein.’
+
+So they did heartily agree with the sentence of the Lord, and a petition
+was forthwith drawn up for them. But now, who should carry it? that was
+next. But the Secretary advised that Captain Credence should carry it;
+for he was a well-spoken man. They therefore called for him, and
+propounded to him the business. ‘Well,’ said the captain, ‘I gladly
+accept of the motion; and though I am lame, I will do this business for
+you with as much speed, and as well as I can.’
+
+The contents of the petition were to this purpose
+
+‘O our Lord, and Sovereign Prince Emmanuel, the potent, the
+long-suffering Prince! grace is poured into thy lips, and to thee belong
+mercy and forgiveness, though we have rebelled against thee. We, who are
+no more worthy to be called thy Mansoul, nor yet fit to partake of common
+benefits, do beseech thee, and thy Father by thee, to do away our
+transgressions. We confess that thou mightest cast us away for them; but
+do it not for thy name’s sake: let the Lord rather take an opportunity,
+at our miserable condition, to let out his bowels and compassions to us.
+We are compassed on every side, Lord; our own backslidings reprove us;
+our Diabolonians within our town fright us; and the army of the angel of
+the bottomless pit distresses us. Thy grace can be our salvation, and
+whither to go but to thee we know not.
+
+‘Furthermore, O gracious Prince, we have weakened our captains, and they
+are discouraged, sick, and, of late, some of them grievously worsted and
+beaten out of the field by the power and force of the tyrant. Yea, even
+those of our captains, in whose valour we did formerly use to put most of
+our confidence, they are as wounded men. Besides, Lord, our enemies are
+lively, and they are strong; they vaunt and boast themselves, and do
+threaten to part us among themselves for a booty. They are fallen also
+upon us, Lord, with many thousand doubters, such as with whom we cannot
+tell what to do; they are all grim-looked and unmerciful ones, and they
+bid defiance to us and thee.
+
+‘Our wisdom is gone, our power is gone, because thou art departed from
+us; nor have we what we may call ours but sin, shame, and confusion of
+face for sin. Take pity upon us, O Lord, take pity upon us, thy
+miserable town of Mansoul, and save us out of the hands of our enemies.
+Amen.’
+
+This petition, as was touched afore, was handed by the Lord Secretary,
+and carried to the court by the brave and most stout Captain Credence.
+Now he carried it out at Mouth-gate, (for that, as I said, was the
+sally-port of the town,) and he went and came to Emmanuel with it. Now
+how it came out, I do not know; but for certain it did, and that so far
+as to reach the ears of Diabolus. Thus I conclude, because that the
+tyrant had it presently by the end, and charged the town of Mansoul with
+it, saying, ‘Thou rebellious and stubborn-hearted Mansoul, I will make
+thee to leave off petitioning. Art thou yet for petitioning? I will
+make thee to leave.’ Yea, he also knew who the messenger was that
+carried the petition to the Prince, and it made him both to fear and
+rage.
+
+Wherefore he commanded that his drum should be beat again, a thing that
+Mansoul could not abide to hear: but when Diabolus will have his drum
+beat, Mansoul must abide the noise. Well, the drum was beat, and the
+Diabolonians were gathered together.
+
+Then said Diabolus, ‘O ye stout Diabolonians, be it known unto you, that
+there is treachery hatched against us in the rebellious town of Mansoul;
+for albeit the town is in our possession, as you see, yet these miserable
+Mansoulians have attempted to dare, and have been so hardy as yet to send
+to the court to Emmanuel for help. This I give you to understand, that
+ye may yet know how to carry it to the wretched town of Mansoul.
+Wherefore, O my trusty Diabolonians, I command that yet more and more ye
+distress this town of Mansoul, and vex it with your wiles, ravish their
+women, deflower their virgins, slay their children, brain their ancients,
+fire their town, and what other mischief you can; and let this be the
+reward of the Mansoulians from me, for their desperate rebellions against
+me.’
+
+This, you see, was the charge; but something stepped in betwixt that and
+execution, for as yet there was but little more done than to rage.
+
+Moreover, when Diabolus had done thus, he went the next way up to the
+castle gates, and demanded that, upon pain of death, the gates should be
+opened to him, and that entrance should be given him and his men that
+followed after. To whom Mr. Godly-Fear replied, (for he it was that had
+the charge of that gate,) that the gate should not be opened unto him,
+nor to the men that followed after him. He said, moreover, that Mansoul,
+when she had suffered awhile, should be made perfect, strengthened,
+settled.
+
+Then said Diabolus, ‘Deliver me, then, the men that have petitioned
+against me, especially Captain Credence, that carried it to your Prince;
+deliver that varlet into my hands, and I will depart from the town.’
+
+Then up starts a Diabolonian, whose name was Mr. Fooling, and said, ‘My
+lord offereth you fair: it is better for you that one man perish, than
+that your whole Mansoul should be undone.’
+
+But Mr. Godly-Fear made him this replication, ‘How long will Mansoul be
+kept out of the dungeon, when she hath given up her faith to Diabolus!
+As good lose the town, as lose Captain Credence; for if one be gone the
+other must follow.’ But to that Mr. Fooling said nothing.
+
+Then did my Lord Mayor reply, and said, ‘O thou devouring tyrant, be it
+known unto thee, we shall hearken to none of thy words; we are resolved
+to resist thee as long as a captain, a man, a sling, and a stone to throw
+at thee shall be found in the town of Mansoul.’ But Diabolus answered,
+‘Do you hope, do you wait, do you look for help and deliverance? You
+have sent to Emmanuel, but your wickedness sticks too close in your
+skirts, to let innocent prayers come out of your lips. Think you that
+you shall be prevailers and prosper in this design? You will fail in
+your wish, you will fail in your attempts; for it is not only I, but your
+Emmanuel is against you: yea, it is he that hath sent me against you to
+subdue you. For what, then, do you hope? or by what means will you
+escape?’
+
+Then said the Lord Mayor, ‘We have sinned indeed; but that shall be no
+help to thee, for our Emmanuel hath said it, and that in great
+faithfulness, “and him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out.” He
+hath also told us, O our enemy, that “all manner of sin and blasphemy
+shall be forgiven” to the sons of men. Therefore we dare not despair,
+but will look for, wait for, and hope for deliverance still.’
+
+Now, by this time, Captain Credence was returned and come from the court
+from Emmanuel to the castle of Mansoul, and he returned to them with a
+packet. So my Lord Mayor, hearing that Captain Credence was come,
+withdrew himself from the noise of the roaring of the tyrant, and left
+him to yell at the wall of the town, or against the gates of the castle.
+So he came up to the captain’s lodgings, and saluting him, he asked him
+of his welfare, and what was the best news at court. But when he asked
+Captain Credence that, the water stood in his eyes. Then said the
+captain, ‘Cheer up, my lord, for all will be well in time.’ And with
+that he first produced his packet, and laid it by; but that the Lord
+Mayor, and the rest of the captains, took for sign of good tidings. Now
+a season of grace being come, he sent for all the captains and elders of
+the town, that were here and there in their lodgings in the castle and
+upon their guard, to let them know that Captain Credence was returned
+from the court, and that he had something in general, and something in
+special, to communicate to them. So they all came up to him, and saluted
+him, and asked him concerning his journey, and what was the best news at
+the court. And he answered them as he had done the Lord Mayor before,
+that all would be well at last. Now, when the captain had thus saluted
+them, he opened his packet, and thence did draw out his several notes for
+those that he had sent for.
+
+And the first note was for my Lord Mayor, wherein was signified:—That the
+Prince Emmanuel had taken it well that my Lord Mayor had been so true and
+trusty in his office, and the great concerns that lay upon him for the
+town and people of Mansoul. Also, he bid him to know, that he took it
+well that he had been so bold for his Prince Emmanuel, and had engaged so
+faithfully in his cause against Diabolus. He also signified, at the
+close of his letter, that he should shortly receive his reward.
+
+The second note that came out, was for the noble Lord Willbewill, wherein
+there was signified:—That his Prince Emmanuel did well understand how
+valiant and courageous he had been for the honour of his Lord, now in his
+absence, and when his name was under contempt by Diabolus. There was
+signified also, that his Prince had taken it well that he had been so
+faithful to the town of Mansoul, in his keeping of so strict a hand and
+eye over and so strict a rein upon the neck of the Diabolonians, that did
+still lie lurking in their several holes in the famous town of Mansoul.
+He signified, moreover, how that he understood that my Lord had, with his
+own hand, done great execution upon some of the chief of the rebels
+there, to the great discouragement of the adverse party and to the good
+example of the whole town of Mansoul; and that shortly his lordship
+should have his reward.
+
+The third note came out for the subordinate preacher, wherein was
+signified:—That his Prince took it well from him, that he had so honestly
+and so faithfully performed his office, and executed the trust committed
+to him by his Lord, while he exhorted, rebuked, and forewarned Mansoul
+according to the laws of the town. He signified, moreover, that he took
+it well at his hand that he called to fasting, to sackcloth, and ashes,
+when Mansoul was under her revolt. Also, that he called for the aid of
+the Captain Boanerges to help in so weighty a work; and that shortly he
+also should receive his reward.
+
+The fourth note came out for Mr. Godly-Fear, wherein his Lord thus
+signified:—That his Lordship observed, that he was the first of all the
+men in Mansoul that detected Mr. Carnal-Security as the only one that,
+through his subtlety and cunning, had obtained for Diabolus a defection
+and decay of goodness in the blessed town of Mansoul. Moreover, his Lord
+gave him to understand, that he still remembered his tears and mourning
+for the state of Mansoul. It was also observed, by the same note, that
+his Lord took notice of his detecting of this Mr. Carnal-Security, at his
+own table among his guests, in his own house, and that in the midst of
+his jolliness, even while he was seeking to perfect his villanies against
+the town of Mansoul. Emmanuel also took notice that this reverend
+person, Mr. Godly-Fear, stood stoutly to it, at the gates of the castle,
+against all the threats and attempts of the tyrant; and that he had put
+the townsmen in a way to make their petition to their Prince, so as that
+he might accept thereof, and as they might obtain an answer of peace; and
+that therefore shortly he should receive his reward.
+
+After all this, there was yet produced a note which was written to the
+whole town of Mansoul, whereby they perceived—That their Lord took notice
+of their so often repeating of petitions to him; and that they should see
+more of the fruits of such their doings in time to come. Their Prince
+did also therein tell them, that he took it well, that their heart and
+mind, now at last, abode fixed upon him and his ways, though Diabolus had
+made such inroads upon them; and that neither flatteries on the one hand,
+nor hardships on the other, could make them yield to serve his cruel
+designs. There was also inserted at the bottom of this note—That his
+Lordship had left the town of Mansoul in the hands of the Lord Secretary,
+and under the conduct of Captain Credence, saying, ‘Beware that you yet
+yield yourselves unto their governance; and in due time you shall receive
+your reward.’
+
+So, after the brave Captain Credence had delivered his notes to those to
+whom they belonged, he retired himself to my Lord Secretary’s lodgings,
+and there spends time in conversing with him; for they too were very
+great one with another, and did indeed know more how things would go with
+Mansoul than did all the townsmen besides. The Lord Secretary also loved
+the Captain Credence dearly; yea, many a good bit was sent him from my
+Lord’s table; also, he might have a show of countenance, when the rest of
+Mansoul lay under the clouds: so, after some time for converse was spent,
+the captain betook himself to his chambers to rest. But it was not long
+after when my Lord did send for the captain again; so the captain came to
+him, and they greeted one another with usual salutations. Then said the
+captain to the Lord Secretary, ‘What hath my Lord to say to his servant?’
+So the Lord Secretary took him and had him aside, and after a sign or two
+of more favour, he said, ‘I have made thee the Lord’s lieutenant over all
+the forces in Mansoul; so that, from this day forward, all men in Mansoul
+shall be at thy word; and thou shalt be he that shall lead in, and that
+shall lead out Mansoul. Thou shalt therefore manage, according to thy
+place, the war for thy Prince, and for the town of Mansoul, against the
+force and power of Diabolus; and at thy command shall the rest of the
+captains be.’
+
+Now the townsmen began to perceive what interest the captain had, both
+with the court, and also with the Lord Secretary in Mansoul; for no man
+before could speed when sent, nor bring such good news from Emmanuel as
+he. Wherefore what do they, after some lamentation that they made no
+more use of him in their distresses, but send by their subordinate
+preacher to the Lord Secretary, to desire him that all that ever they
+were and had might be put under the government, care, custody, and
+conduct of Captain Credence.
+
+So their preacher went and did his errand, and received this answer from
+the mouth of his Lord: that Captain Credence should be the great doer in
+all the King’s army, against the King’s enemies, and also for the welfare
+of Mansoul. So he bowed to the ground, and thanked his Lordship, and
+returned and told his news to the townsfolk. But all this was done with
+all imaginable secrecy, because the foes had yet great strength in the
+town. But to return to our story again.
+
+When Diabolus saw himself thus boldly confronted by the Lord Mayor, and
+perceived the stoutness of Mr. Godly-Fear, he fell into a rage, and
+forthwith called a council of war, that he might be revenged on Mansoul.
+So all the princes of the pit came together, and old Incredulity at the
+head of them, with all the captains of his army. So they consult what to
+do. Now the effect and conclusion of the council that day was how they
+might take the castle, because they could not conclude themselves masters
+of the town so long as that was in the possession of their enemies.
+
+So one advised this way, and another advised that; but when they could
+not agree in their verdict, Apollyon, that president of the council,
+stood up, and thus he began: ‘My brotherhood,’ quoth he, ‘I have two
+things to propound unto you; and my first is this. Let us withdraw
+ourselves from the town into the plain again, for our presence here will
+do us no good, because the castle is yet in our enemies’ hands; nor is it
+possible that we should take that, so long as so many brave captains are
+in it, and that this bold fellow, Godly-Fear, is made the keeper of the
+gates of it. Now, when we have withdrawn ourselves into the plain, they,
+of their own accord, will be glad of some little ease; and it may be, of
+their own accord, they again may begin to be remiss, and even their so
+being will give them a bigger blow than we can possibly give them
+ourselves. But if that should fail, our going forth of the town may draw
+the captains out after us; and you know what it cost them when we fought
+them in the field before. Besides, can we but draw them out into the
+field, we may lay an ambush behind the town, which shall, when they are
+come forth abroad, rush in and take possession of the castle.’
+
+But Beelzebub stood up, and replied, saying: ‘It is impossible to draw
+them all off from the castle; some, you may be sure, will lie there to
+keep that; wherefore it will be but in vain thus to attempt, unless we
+were sure that they will all come out.’ He therefore concluded that what
+was done must be done by some other means. And the most likely means
+that the greatest of their heads could invent, was that which Apollyon
+had advised to before, namely, to get the townsmen again to sin. ‘For,’
+said he, ‘it is not our being in the town, nor in the field, nor our
+fighting, nor our killing of their men, that can make us the masters of
+Mansoul; for so long as one in the town is able to lift up his finger
+against us, Emmanuel will take their parts; and if he shall take their
+parts, we know what time of day it will be with us. Wherefore, for my
+part,’ quoth he, ‘there is, in my judgment, no way to bring them into
+bondage to us, like inventing a way to make them sin. Had we,’ said he,
+‘left all our doubters at home, we had done as well as we have done now,
+unless we could have made them the masters and governors of the castle;
+for doubters at a distance are but like objections refelled with
+arguments. Indeed, can we but get them into the hold, and make them
+possessors of that, the day will be our own. Let us, therefore, withdraw
+ourselves into the plain, (not expecting that the captains in Mansoul
+should follow us,) but yet, I say, let us do this, and before we so do,
+let us advise again with our trusty Diabolonians that are yet in their
+holds of Mansoul, and set them to work to betray the town to us; for they
+indeed must do it, or it will be left undone for ever.’ By these sayings
+of Beelzebub, (for I think it was he that gave this counsel,) the whole
+conclave was forced to be of his opinion, namely, that the way to get the
+castle was to get the town to sin. Then they fell to inventing by what
+means they might do this thing.
+
+Then Lucifer stood up, and said: ‘The counsel of Beelzebub is pertinent.
+Now, the way to bring this to pass, in mine opinion, is this: let us
+withdraw our force from the town of Mansoul; let us do this, and let us
+terrify them no more, either with summons, or threats, or with the noise
+of our drum, or any other awakening means. Only let us lie in the field
+at a distance, and be as if we regarded them not; for frights, I see, do
+but awaken them, and make them more stand to their arms. I have also
+another stratagem in my head: you know Mansoul is a market-town, and a
+town that delights in commerce; what, therefore, if some of our
+Diabolonians shall feign themselves far-country men, and shall go out and
+bring to the market of Mansoul some of our wares to sell; and what matter
+at what rates they sell their wares, though it be but for half the worth?
+Now, let those that thus shall trade in their market be those that are
+witty and true to us, and I will lay my crown to pawn it will do. There
+are two that are come to my thoughts already, that I think will be arch
+at this work, and they are Mr. Penny-wise-pound-foolish, and Mr.
+Get-i’the-hundred-and-lose-i’the-shire; nor is this man with the long
+name at all inferior to the other. What, also, if you join with them Mr.
+Sweet-world and Mr. Present-good; they are men that are civil and
+cunning, but our true friends and helpers. Let these, with as many more,
+engage in this business for us, and let Mansoul be taken up in much
+business, and let them grow full and rich, and this is the way to get
+ground of them. Remember ye not that thus we prevailed upon Laodicea,
+and how many at present do we hold in this snare? Now, when they begin
+to grow full, they will forget their misery; and if we shall not affright
+them, they may happen to fall asleep, and so be got to neglect their town
+watch, their castle watch, as well as their watch at the gates.
+
+‘Yea, may we not, by this means, so cumber Mansoul with abundance, that
+they shall be forced to make of their castle a warehouse, instead of a
+garrison fortified against us, and a receptacle for men of war. Thus, if
+we get our goods and commodities thither, I reckon that the castle is
+more than half ours. Besides, could we so order it that it shall be
+filled with such kind of wares, then if we made a sudden assault upon
+them, it would be hard for the captains to take shelter there. Do you
+not know that of the parable, “The deceitfulness of riches choke the
+word”? and again, “When the heart is over-charged with surfeiting and
+drunkenness, and the cares of this life,” all mischief comes upon them at
+unawares?
+
+‘Furthermore, my lords,’ quoth he, ‘you very well know that it is not
+easy for a people to be filled with our things, and not to have some of
+our Diabolonians as retainers to their houses and services. Where is a
+Mansoulian that is full of this world, that has not for his servants and
+waiting-men, Mr. Profuse, or Mr. Prodigality, or some other of our
+Diabolonian gang, as Mr. Voluptuous, Mr. Pragmatical, Mr. Ostentation, or
+the like? Now these can take the castle of Mansoul, or blow it up, or
+make it unfit for a garrison for Emmanuel, and any of these will do.
+Yea, these, for aught I know, may do it for us sooner than an army of
+twenty thousand men. Wherefore, to end as I began, my advice is, that we
+quietly withdraw ourselves, not offering any further force, or forcible
+attempts, upon the castle, at least at this time; and let us set on foot
+our new project, and let us see if that will not make them destroy
+themselves.’
+
+This advice was highly applauded by them all, and was accounted the very
+masterpiece of hell, namely, to choke Mansoul with a fulness of this
+world, and to surfeit her heart with the good things thereof. But see
+how things meet together! Just as this Diabolonian council was broken
+up, Captain Credence received a letter from Emmanuel, the contents of
+which were these: That upon the third day he would meet him in the field
+in the plains about Mansoul. ‘Meet me in the field!’ quoth the Captain;
+‘what meaneth my lord by this? I know not what he meaneth by meeting me
+in the field.’ So he took the note in his hand, and did carry it to my
+Lord Secretary, to ask his thoughts thereupon; for my Lord was a seer in
+all matters concerning the King, and also for the good and comfort of the
+town of Mansoul. So he showed my Lord the note, and desired his opinion
+thereof. ‘For my part,’ quoth Captain Credence, ‘I know not the meaning
+thereof.’ So my lord did take and read it and, after a little pause, he
+said, ‘The Diabolonians have had against Mansoul a great consultation
+to-day; they have, I say, this day been contriving the utter ruin of the
+town; and the result of their council is, to set Mansoul into such a way
+which, if taken, will surely make her destroy herself. And, to this end,
+they are making ready for their own departure out of the town, intending
+to betake themselves to the field again,’ and there to lie till they
+shall see whether this their project will take or no. But be thou ready
+with the men of thy Lord, (for on the third day they will be in the
+plain,) there to fall upon the Diabolonians; for the Prince will by that
+time be in the field; yea, by that it is break of day, sun-rising, or
+before, and that with a mighty force against them. So he shall be before
+them, and thou shalt be behind them, and betwixt you both their army
+shall be destroyed.’
+
+When Captain Credence heard this, away goes he to the rest of the
+captains, and tells them what a note he had a while since received from
+the hand of Emmanuel. ‘And,’ said he, ‘that which was dark therein hath
+my lord the Lord Secretary expounded unto me.’ He told them, moreover,
+what by himself and by them must be done to answer the mind of their
+Lord. Then were the captains glad; and Captain Credence commanded that
+all the King’s trumpeters should ascend to the battlements of the castle,
+and there, in the audience of Diabolus and of the whole town of Mansoul,
+make the best music that heart could invent. The trumpeters then did as
+they were commanded. They got themselves up to the top of the castle,
+and thus they began to sound. Then did Diabolus start, and said, ‘What
+can be the meaning of this? they neither sound Boot-and-saddle, nor
+Horse-and-away, nor a charge. What do these madmen mean that yet they
+should be so merry and glad?’ Then answered one of themselves and said,
+‘This is for joy that their Prince Emmanuel is coming to relieve the town
+of Mansoul; and to this end he is at the head of an army, and that this
+relief is near.’
+
+The men of Mansoul also were greatly concerned at this melodious charm of
+the trumpets; they said, yea, they answered one another, saying, ‘This
+can be no harm to us; surely this can be no harm to us.’ Then said the
+Diabolonians, ‘What had we best to do?’ and it was answered, ‘It was best
+to quit the town;’ and ‘that,’ said one, ‘ye may do in pursuance of your
+last counsel, and by so doing also be better able to give the enemy
+battle, should an army from without come upon us. So, on the second day,
+they withdrew themselves from Mansoul, and abode in the plains without;
+but they encamped themselves before Eye-gate, in what terrene and
+terrible manner they could. The reason why they would not abide in the
+town (besides the reasons that were debated in their late conclave) was,
+for that they were not possessed of the stronghold, and ‘because,’ said
+they, ‘we shall have more convenience to fight, and also to fly, if need
+be, when we are encamped in the open plains.’ Besides, the town would
+have been a pit for them rather than a place of defence, had the Prince
+come up and inclosed them fast therein. Therefore they betook themselves
+to the field, that they might also be out of the reach of the slings, by
+which they were much annoyed all the while that they were in the town.
+
+Well, the time that the captains were to fall upon the Diabolonians being
+come, they eagerly prepared themselves for action; for Captain Credence
+had told the captains over night, that they should meet their Prince in
+the field to-morrow. This, therefore, made them yet far more desirous to
+be engaging the enemy; for ‘You shall see the Prince in the field
+to-morrow’ was like oil to a flaming fire, for of a long time they had
+been at a distance: they therefore were for this the more earnest and
+desirous of the work. So, as I said, the hour being come, Captain
+Credence, with the rest of the men of war, drew out their forces before
+it was day by the sally-port of the town. And, being all ready, Captain
+Credence went up to the head of the army, and gave to the rest of the
+captains the word, and so they to their under-officers and soldiers: the
+word was ‘The sword of the Prince Emmanuel, and the shield of Captain
+Credence;’ which is, in the Mansoulian tongue, ‘The word of God and
+faith.’ Then the captains fell on, and began roundly to front, and
+flank, and rear Diabolus’s camp.
+
+Now, they left Captain Experience in the town, because he was yet ill of
+his wounds, which the Diabolonians had given him in the last fight. But
+when he perceived that the captains were at it, what does he but, calling
+for his crutches with haste, gets up, and away he goes to the battle,
+saying, ‘Shall I lie here, when my brethren are in the fight, and when
+Emmanuel, the Prince, will show himself in the field to his servants?’
+But when the enemy saw the man come with his crutches, they were daunted
+yet the more; ‘for,’ thought they, ‘what spirit has possessed these
+Mansoulians, that they fight us upon their crutches?’ Well, the
+captains, as I said, fell on, and did bravely handle their weapons, still
+crying out and shouting, as they laid on blows, ‘The sword of the Prince
+Emmanuel, and the shield of Captain Credence!’
+
+Now, when Diabolus saw that the captains were come out, and that so
+valiantly they surrounded his men, he concluded that, for the present,
+nothing from them was to be looked for but blows, and the dints of their
+‘two-edged sword.’
+
+Wherefore he also falls on upon the Prince’s army with all his deadly
+force: so the battle was joined. Now who was it that at first Diabolus
+met with in the fight, but Captain Credence on the one hand, and the Lord
+Willbewill on the other: now Willbewill’s blows were like the blows of a
+giant, for that man had a strong arm, and he fell in upon the election
+doubters, for they were the life-guard of Diabolus, and he kept them in
+play a good while, cutting and battering shrewdly. Now when Captain
+Credence saw my lord engaged, he did stoutly fall on, on the other hand,
+upon the same company also; so they put them to great disorder. Now
+Captain Good-Hope had engaged the vocation doubters, and they were sturdy
+men; but the captain was a valiant man: Captain Experience did also send
+him some aid; so he made the vocation doubters to retreat. The rest of
+the armies were hotly engaged, and that on every side, and the
+Diabolonians did fight stoutly. Then did my Lord Secretary command that
+the slings from the castle should be played; and his men could throw
+stones at an hair’s breadth. But, after a while, those that were made to
+fly before the captains of the Prince, did begin to rally again, and they
+came up stoutly upon the rear of the Prince’s army: wherefore the
+Prince’s army began to faint; but, remembering that they should see the
+face of their Prince by-and-by, they took courage, and a very fierce
+battle was fought. Then shouted the captains, saying, ‘The sword of the
+Prince Emmanuel, and the shield of Captain Credence!’ and with that
+Diabolus gave back, thinking that more aid had been come. But no
+Emmanuel as yet appeared. Moreover, the battle did hang in doubt; and
+they made a little retreat on both sides. Now, in the time of respite,
+Captain Credence bravely encouraged his men to stand to it; and Diabolus
+did the like, as well as he could. But Captain Credence made a brave
+speech to his soldiers, the contents whereof here follow:—
+
+‘Gentlemen soldiers, and my brethren in this design, it rejoiceth me much
+to see in the field for our Prince, this day, so stout and so valiant an
+army, and such faithful lovers of Mansoul. You have hitherto, as hath
+become you, shown yourselves men of truth and courage against the
+Diabolonian forces; so that, for all their boast, they have not yet much
+cause to boast of their gettings. Now take to yourselves your wonted
+courage, and show yourselves men even this once only; for in a few
+minutes after the next engagement, this time, you shall see your Prince
+show himself in the field; for we must make this second assault upon this
+tyrant Diabolus, and then Emmanuel comes.’
+
+No sooner had the captain made this speech to his soldiers, but one Mr.
+Speedy came post to the captain from the Prince, to tell him that
+Emmanuel was at hand. This news when the captain had received, he
+communicated to the other field-officers, and they again to their
+soldiers and men of war. Wherefore, like men raised from the dead, so
+the captains and their men arose, made up to the enemy, and cried as
+before, ‘The sword of the Prince Emmanuel, and the shield of Captain
+Credence!’
+
+The Diabolonians also bestirred themselves, and made resistance as well
+as they could; but in this last engagement the Diabolonians lost their
+courage, and many of the doubters fell down dead to the ground. Now,
+when they had been in heat of battle about an hour or more, Captain
+Credence lift up his eyes and saw, and, behold, Emmanuel came; and he
+came with colours flying, trumpets sounding, and the feet of his men
+scarce touched the ground, they hasted with that celerity towards the
+captains that were engaged. Then did Credence wind with his men to the
+townward, and gave to Diabolus the field: so Emmanuel came upon him on
+the one side, and the enemies’ place was betwixt them both. Then again
+they fell to it afresh; and now it was but a little while more but
+Emmanuel and Captain Credence met, still trampling down the slain as they
+came.
+
+But when the captains saw that the Prince was come, and that he fell upon
+the Diabolonians on the other side, and that Captain Credence and his
+Highness had got them up betwixt them, they shouted, (they so shouted
+that the ground rent again,) saying, ‘The sword of Emmanuel, and the
+shield of Captain Credence!’ Now, when Diabolus saw that he and his
+forces were so hard beset by the Prince and his princely army, what does
+he, and the lords of the pit that were with him, but make their escape,
+and forsake their army, and leave them to fall by the hand of Emmanuel,
+and of his noble Captain Credence: so they fell all down slain before
+them, before the Prince, and before his royal army; there was not left so
+much as one doubter alive; they lay spread upon the ground dead men, as
+one would spread dung upon the land.
+
+When the battle was over, all things came into order in the camp. Then
+the captains and elders of Mansoul came together to salute Emmanuel,
+while without the corporation: so they saluted him, and welcomed him, and
+that with a thousand welcomes, for that he was come to the borders of
+Mansoul again. So he smiled upon them, and said, ‘Peace be to you.’
+Then they addressed themselves to go to the town; they went then to go up
+to Mansoul, they, the Prince, with all the new forces that now he had
+brought with him to the war. Also all the gates of the town were set
+open for his reception, so glad were they of his blessed return. And
+this was the manner and order of this going of his into Mansoul:
+
+First. As I said, all the gates of the town were set open, yea, the
+gates of the castle also; the elders, too, of the town of Mansoul placed
+themselves at the gates of the town, to salute him at his entrance
+thither: and so they did; for, as he drew near, and approached towards
+the gates, they said, ‘Lift up your heads, O ye gates; and be ye lift up,
+ye everlasting doors; and the King of glory shall come in.’ And they
+answered again, ‘Who is the King of glory?’ and they made return to
+themselves, ‘The Lord, strong and mighty; the Lord mighty in battle.
+Lift up your heads, O ye gates; even lift them up, ye everlasting doors,’
+etc.
+
+Secondly. It was ordered also, by those of Mansoul, that all the way
+from the town gates to those of the castle, his blessed Majesty should be
+entertained with the song, by them that had the best skill in music in
+all the town of Mansoul: then did the elders, and the rest of the men of
+Mansoul, answer one another as Emmanuel entered the town, till he came at
+the castle gates, with songs and sound of trumpets, saying, ‘They have
+seen thy goings, O God; even the goings of my God, my King, in the
+sanctuary. So the singers went before, the players on instruments
+followed after, and among them were the damsels playing on timbrels.’
+
+Thirdly. Then the captains, (for I would speak a word of them,) they in
+their order waited on the Prince, as he entered into the gates of
+Mansoul. Captain Credence went before, and Captain Good-Hope with him;
+Captain Charity came behind with other of his companions, and Captain
+Patience followed after all; and the rest of the captains, some on the
+right hand, and some on the left, accompanied Emmanuel into Mansoul. And
+all the while the colours were displayed, the trumpets sounded, and
+continual shoutings were among the soldiers. The Prince himself rode
+into the town in his armour, which was all of beaten gold, and in his
+chariot—the pillars of it were of silver, the bottom thereof of gold, the
+covering of it was of purple, the midst thereof being paved with love for
+the daughters of the town of Mansoul.
+
+Fourthly. When the Prince was come to the entrance of Mansoul, he found
+all the streets strewed with lilies and flowers, curiously decked with
+boughs and branches from the green trees that stood round about the town.
+Every door also was filled with persons, who had adorned every one their
+fore-part against their house with something of variety and singular
+excellency, to entertain him withal as he passed in the streets: they
+also themselves, as Emmanuel passed by, did welcome him with shouts and
+acclamations of joy, saying, ‘Blessed be the Prince that cometh in the
+name of his Father Shaddai.’
+
+Fifthly. At the castle gates the elders of Mansoul, namely, the Lord
+Mayor, the Lord Willbewill, the subordinate preacher, Mr. Knowledge, and
+Mr. Mind, with other of the gentry of the place, saluted Emmanuel again.
+They bowed before him, they kissed the dust of his feet, they thanked,
+they blessed, and praised his Highness for not taking advantage against
+them for their sins, but rather had pity upon them in their misery, and
+returned to them with mercies, and to build up their Mansoul for ever.
+Thus was he had up straightway to the castle; for that was the royal
+palace, and the place where his honour was to dwell; the which was ready
+prepared for his Highness by the presence of the Lord Secretary, and the
+work of Captain Credence. So he entered in.
+
+Sixthly. Then the people and commonalty of the town of Mansoul came to
+him into the castle to mourn, and to weep, and to lament for their
+wickedness, by which they had forced him out of the town. So when they
+were come, bowed themselves to the ground seven times; they also wept,
+they wept aloud, and asked forgiveness of the Prince, and prayed that he
+would again, as of old, confirm his love to Mansoul.
+
+To the which the great Prince replied, ‘Weep not, but go your way, eat
+the fat, and drink the sweet, and send portions to them for whom nought
+is prepared; for the joy of your Lord is your strength. I am returned to
+Mansoul with mercies, and my name shall be set up, exalted, and magnified
+by it.’ He also took these inhabitants, and kissed them, and laid them
+in his bosom.
+
+Moreover, he gave to the elders of Mansoul, and to each town officer, a
+chain of gold and a signet. He also sent to their wives earrings and
+jewels, and bracelets, and other things. He also bestowed upon the
+true-born children of Mansoul many precious things.
+
+When Emmanuel, the Prince, had done all these things for the famous town
+of Mansoul, then he said unto them, first, ‘Wash your garments, then put
+on your ornaments, and then come to me into the castle of Mansoul.’ So
+they went to the fountain that was set open for Judah and Jerusalem to
+wash in; and there they washed, and there they made their ‘garments
+white,’ and came again to the Prince into the castle, and thus they stood
+before him.
+
+And now there was music and dancing throughout the whole town of Mansoul,
+and that because their Prince had again granted to them his presence and
+the light of his countenance; the bells also did ring, and the sun shone
+comfortably upon them for a great while together.
+
+The town of Mansoul did also now more thoroughly seek the destruction and
+ruin of all remaining Diabolonians that abode in the walls, and the dens
+that they had in the town of Mansoul; for there was of them that had, to
+this day, escaped with life and limb from the hand of their suppressors
+in the famous town of Mansoul.
+
+But my Lord Willbewill was a greater terror to them now than ever he had
+been before; forasmuch as his heart was yet more fully bent to seek,
+contrive, and pursue them to the death; he pursued them night and day,
+and did put them now to sore distress, as will afterwards appear.
+
+After things were thus far put into order in the famous town of Mansoul,
+care was taken, and order given by the blessed Prince Emmanuel, that the
+townsmen should, without further delay, appoint some to go forth into the
+plain to bury the dead that were there,—the dead that fell by the sword
+of Emmanuel, and by the shield of the Captain Credence,—lest the fumes
+and ill savours that would arise from them might infect the air, and so
+annoy the famous town of Mansoul. This also was a reason of this order,
+namely, that, as much as in Mansoul lay, they might cut off the name, and
+being, and remembrance of those enemies from the thought of the famous
+town of Mansoul and its inhabitants.
+
+So order was given out by the Lord Mayor, that wise and trusty friend of
+the town of Mansoul, that persons should be employed about this necessary
+business; and Mr. Godly-Fear, and one Mr. Upright, were to be overseers
+about this matter: so persons were put under them to work in the fields,
+and to bury the slain that lay dead in the plains. And these were their
+places of employment: some were to make the graves, some to bury the
+dead, and some were to go to and fro in the plains, and also round about
+the borders of Mansoul, to see if a skull, or a bone, or a piece of a
+bone of a doubter, was yet to be found above ground anywhere near the
+corporation; and if any were found, it was ordered, that the searchers
+that searched should set up a mark thereby, and a sign, that those that
+were appointed to bury them might find it, and bury it out of sight, that
+the name and remembrance of a Diabolonian doubter might be blotted out
+from under heaven; and that the children, and they that were to be born
+in Mansoul, might not know, if possible, what a skull, what a bone, or a
+piece of a bone of a doubter was. So the buriers, and those that were
+appointed for that purpose, did as they were commanded: they buried the
+doubters, and all the skulls and bones, and pieces of bones of doubters,
+wherever they found them; and so they cleansed the plains. Now also Mr.
+God’s-Peace took up his commission, and acted again as in former days.
+
+Thus they buried in the plains about Mansoul the election doubters, the
+vocation doubters, the grace doubters, the perseverance doubters, the
+resurrection doubters, the salvation doubters, and the glory doubters;
+whose captains were Captain Rage, Captain Cruel, Captain Damnation,
+Captain Insatiable, Captain Brimstone, Captain Torment, Captain No-Ease,
+Captain Sepulchre, and Captain Past-Hope; and old Incredulity was, under
+Diabolus, their general. There were also the seven heads of their army;
+and they were the Lord Beelzebub, the Lord Lucifer, the Lord Legion, the
+Lord Apollyon, the Lord Python, the Lord Cerberus, and the Lord Belial.
+But the princes and the captains, with old Incredulity, their general,
+did all of them make their escape: so their men fell down slain by the
+power of the Prince’s forces, and by the hands of the men of the town of
+Mansoul. They also were buried as is afore related, to the exceeding
+great joy of the now famous town of Mansoul. They that buried them
+buried also with them their arms, which were cruel instruments of death:
+(their weapons were arrows, darts, mauls, firebrands, and the like).
+They buried also their armour, their colours, banners, with the standard
+of Diabolus, and what else soever they could find that did but smell of a
+Diabolonian doubter.
+
+Now when the tyrant had arrived at Hell-Gate Hill, with his old friend
+Incredulity, they immediately descended the den, and having there with
+their fellows for a while condoled their misfortune and great loss that
+they sustained against the town of Mansoul, they fell at length into a
+passion, and revenged they would be for the loss that they sustained
+before the town of Mansoul. Wherefore they presently call a council to
+contrive yet further what was to be done against the famous town of
+Mansoul; for their yawning paunches could not wait to see the result of
+their Lord Lucifer’s and their Lord Apollyon’s counsel that they had
+given before; for their raging gorge thought every day, even as long as a
+short for ever, until they were filled with the body and soul, with the
+flesh and bones, and with all the delicates of Mansoul. They therefore
+resolve to make another attempt upon the town of Mansoul, and that by an
+army mixed and made up partly of doubters, and partly of blood-men. A
+more particular account now take of both.
+
+The doubters are such as have their name from their nature, as well as
+from the land and kingdom where they are born: their nature is to put a
+question upon every one of the truths of Emmanuel; and their country is
+called the land of Doubting, and that land lieth off, and farthest remote
+to the north, between the land of Darkness and that called the ‘valley of
+the shadow of death.’ For though the land of Darkness, and that called
+‘the valley of the shadow of death,’ be sometimes called as if they were
+one and the self-same place, yet indeed they are two, lying but a little
+way asunder, and the land of Doubting points in, and lieth between them.
+This is the land of Doubting; and these that came with Diabolus to ruin
+the town of Mansoul are the natives of that country.
+
+The blood-men are a people that have their name derived from the
+malignity of their nature, and from the fury that is in them to execute
+it upon the town of Mansoul: their land lieth under the dog-star, and by
+that they are governed as to their intellectuals. The name of their
+country is the province of Loath-good: the remote parts of it are far
+distant from the land of Doubting, yet they do both butt and bound upon
+the hill called Hell-Gate Hill. These people are always in league with
+the doubters, for they jointly do make question of the faith and fidelity
+of the men of the town of Mansoul, and so are both alike qualified for
+the service of their prince.
+
+Now of these two countries did Diabolus, by the beating of his drum,
+raise another army against the town of Mansoul, of five-and-twenty
+thousand strong. There were ten thousand doubters, and fifteen thousand
+blood-men, and they were put under several captains for the war; and old
+Incredulity was again made general of the army.
+
+As for the doubters, their captains were five of the seven that were
+heads of the last Diabolonian army, and these are their names: Captain
+Beelzebub, Captain Lucifer, Captain Apollyon, Captain Legion, and Captain
+Cerberus; and the captains that they had before were some of them made
+lieutenants, and some ensigns of the army.
+
+But Diabolus did not count that, in this expedition of his, these
+doubters would prove his principal men, for their manhood had been tried
+before; also the Mansoulians had put them to the worst: only he did bring
+them to multiply a number, and to help, if need was, at a pinch. But his
+trust he put in his blood-men, for that they were all rugged villains,
+and he knew that they had done feats heretofore.
+
+As for the blood-men, they also were under command and the names of their
+captains were, Captain Cain, Captain Nimrod, Captain Ishmael, Captain
+Esau, Captain Saul, Captain Absalom, Captain Judas, and Captain Pope.
+
+1. Captain Cain was over two bands, namely, the zealous and the angry
+blood-men: his standard-bearer bare the red colours, and his scutcheon
+was the murdering club.
+
+2. Captain Nimrod was captain over two bands, namely, the tyrannical and
+encroaching blood-men: his standard-bearer bare the red colours, and his
+scutcheon was the great bloodhound.
+
+3. Captain Ishmael was captain over two bands, namely, the mocking and
+scorning blood-men: his standard-bearer bare the red colours, and his
+scutcheon was one mocking at Abraham’s Isaac.
+
+4. Captain Esau was captain over two bands, namely, the blood-men that
+grudged that another should have the blessing; also over the blood-men
+that are for executing their private revenge upon others: his
+standard-bearer bare the red colours, and his scutcheon was one privately
+lurking to murder Jacob.
+
+5. Captain Saul was captain over two bands, namely, the groundlessly
+jealous and the devilishly furious blood-men: his standard-bearer bare
+the red colours, and his scutcheon was three bloody darts cast at
+harmless David.
+
+6. Captain Absalom was captain over two bands, namely, over the blood-men
+that will kill a father or a friend for the glory of this world; also
+over those blood-men that will hold one fair in hand with words, till
+they shall have pierced him with their swords: his standard-bearer did
+bear the red colours, and his scutcheon was the son pursuing the father’s
+blood.
+
+7. Captain Judas was over two bands, namely, the blood-men that will sell
+a man’s life for money, and those also that will betray their friend with
+a kiss: his standard-bearer bare the red colours, and his scutcheon was
+thirty pieces of silver and the halter.
+
+8. Captain Pope was captain over one band, for all these spirits are
+joined in one under him: his standard-bearer bare the red colours, and
+his scutcheon was the stake, the flame, and the good man in it.
+
+Now, the reason why Diabolus did so soon rally another force, after he
+had been beaten out of the field, was, for that he put mighty confidence
+in this army of blood-men; for he put a great deal of more trust in them
+than he did before in his army of doubters; though they had also often
+done great service for him in the strengthening of him in his kingdom.
+But these blood-men, he had proved them often, and their sword did seldom
+return empty. Besides, he knew that these, like mastiffs, would fasten
+upon any; upon father, mother, brother, sister, prince, or governor, yea
+upon the Prince of princes. And that which encouraged him the more was,
+for that they once did force Emmanuel out of the kingdom of Universe;
+‘And why,’ thought he, ‘may they not also drive him from the town of
+Mansoul?’
+
+So this army of five-and-twenty thousand strong was, by their general,
+the great Lord Incredulity, led up against the town of Mansoul. Now Mr.
+Prywell, the scoutmaster-general, did himself go out to spy, and he did
+bring Mansoul tidings of their coming. Wherefore they shut up their
+gates, and put themselves in a posture of defence against these new
+Diabolonians that came up against the town.
+
+So Diabolus brought up his army, and beleaguered the town of Mansoul; the
+doubters were placed about Feel-gate, and the blood-men set down before
+Eye-gate and Ear-gate.
+
+Now when this army had thus encamped themselves, Incredulity did, in the
+name of Diabolus, his own name, and in the name of the blood-men and the
+rest that were with him, send a summons as hot as a red-hot iron to
+Mansoul, to yield to their demands; threatening, that if they still stood
+it out against them, they would presently burn down Mansoul with fire.
+For you must know that, as for the blood-men, they were not so much that
+Mansoul should be surrendered, as that Mansoul should be destroyed, and
+cut off out of the land of the living. True, they send to them to
+surrender; but should they so do, that would not stench or quench the
+thirsts of these men. They must have blood, the blood of Mansoul, else
+they die; and it is from hence that they have their name. Wherefore
+these blood-men he reserved while now that they might, when all his
+engines proved ineffectual, as his last and sure card be played against
+the town of Mansoul.
+
+Now, when the townsmen had received this red-hot summons, it begat in
+them at present some changing and interchanging thoughts; but they
+jointly agreed, in less than half an hour, to carry the summons to the
+Prince, the which they did when they had writ at the bottom of it, ‘Lord,
+save Mansoul from bloody men!’
+
+So he took it, and looked upon it, and considered it, and took notice
+also of that short petition that the men of Mansoul had written at the
+bottom of it, and called to him the noble Captain Credence, and bid him
+go and take Captain Patience with him, and go and take care of that side
+of Mansoul that was beleaguered by the blood-men. So they went and did
+as they were commanded: the Captain Credence went and took Captain
+Patience, and they both secured that side of Mansoul that was besieged by
+the blood-men.
+
+Then he commanded that Captain Good-hope and Captain Charity, and my Lord
+Willbewill, should take charge of the other side of the town. ‘And I,’
+said the Prince, ‘will set my standard upon the battlements of your
+castle, and do you three watch against the doubters.’ This done, he
+again commanded that the brave captain, the Captain Experience, should
+draw up his men in the market-place, and that there he should exercise
+them day by day before the people of the town of Mansoul. Now this siege
+was long, and many a fierce attempt did the enemy, especially those
+called the blood-men, make upon the town of Mansoul; and many a shrewd
+brush did some of the townsmen meet with from them, especially Captain
+Self-Denial, who, I should have told you before, was commanded to take
+the care of Ear-gate and Eye-gate now against the blood-men. This
+Captain Self-Denial was a young man, but stout, and a townsman in
+Mansoul, as Captain Experience also was. And Emmanuel, at his second
+return to Mansoul, made him a captain over a thousand of the Mansoulians,
+for the good of the corporation. This captain, therefore, being an hardy
+man, and a man of great courage, and willing to venture himself for the
+good of the town of Mansoul, would now and then sally out upon the
+blood-men, and give them many notable alarms, and entered several brisk
+skirmishes with them, and also did some execution upon them; but you must
+think that this could not easily be done, but he must meet with brushes
+himself, for he carried several of their marks in his face; yea, and some
+in some other parts of his body.
+
+So, after some time spent for the trial of the faith, and hope, and love
+of the town of Mansoul, the Prince Emmanuel upon a day calls his captains
+and men of war together, and divides them into two companies; this done,
+he commands them at a time appointed, and that in the morning very early,
+to sally out upon the enemy, saying: ‘Let half of you fall upon the
+doubters, and half of you fall upon the blood-men. Those of you that go
+out against the doubters, kill and slay, and cause to perish so many of
+them as by any means you can lay hands on; but for you that go out
+against the blood-men, slay them not, but take them alive.’
+
+So, at the time appointed, betimes in the morning, the captains went out
+as they were commanded, against the enemies. Captain Good-Hope, Captain
+Charity, and those that were joined with them, as Captain Innocent and
+Captain Experience, went out against the doubters; and Captain Credence,
+and Captain Patience, with Captain Self-Denial, and the rest that were to
+join with them, went out against the blood-men.
+
+Now, those that went out against the doubters drew up into a body before
+the plain, and marched on to bid them battle. But the doubters,
+remembering their last success, made a retreat, not daring to stand the
+shock, but fled from the Prince’s men; wherefore they pursued them, and
+in their pursuit slew many, but they could not catch them all. Now those
+that escaped went some of them home; and the rest by fives, nines, and
+seventeens, like wanderers, went straggling up and down the country,
+where they upon the barbarous people showed and exercised many of their
+Diabolonian actions: nor did these people rise up in arms against them,
+but suffered themselves to be enslaved by them. They would also after
+this show themselves in companies before the town of Mansoul, but never
+to abide in it; for if Captain Credence, Captain Good-Hope, or Captain
+Experience did but show themselves, they fled.
+
+Those that went out against the blood-men did as they were commanded:
+they forbore to slay any, but sought to compass them about. But the
+blood-men, when they saw that no Emmanuel was in the field, concluded
+also that no Emmanuel was in Mansoul; wherefore they, looking upon what
+the captains did to be, as they called it, a fruit of the extravagancy of
+their wild and foolish fancies, rather despised them than feared them.
+But the captains, minding their business, at last did compass them round;
+they also that had routed the doubters came in amain to their aid: so, in
+fine, after some little struggling, (for the blood-men also would have
+run for it, only now it was too late; for though they are mischievous and
+cruel, where they can overcome, yet all blood-men are chicken-hearted
+men, when they once come to see themselves matched and equalled,)—so the
+captains took them, and brought them to the Prince.
+
+Now when they were taken, had before the Prince, and examined, he found
+them to be of three several counties, though they all came out of one
+land.
+
+1. One sort of them came out of Blind-man-shire, and they were such as
+did ignorantly what they did.
+
+2. Another sort of them came out of Blind-zeal-shire, and they did
+superstitiously what they did.
+
+3. The third sort of them came out of the town of Malice, in the county
+of Envy, and they did what they did out of spite and implacableness.
+
+For the first of these, namely, they that came out of Blind-man-shire,
+when they saw where they were, and against whom they had fought, they
+trembled and cried, as they stood before him; and as many of these as
+asked him mercy, he touched their lips with his golden sceptre.
+
+They that came out of Blind-zeal-shire, they did not as their fellows
+did; for they pleaded that they had a right to do what they did, because
+Mansoul was a town whose laws and customs were diverse from all that
+dwelt thereabouts. Very few of these could be brought to see their evil;
+but those that did, and asked mercy, they also obtained favour.
+
+Now, they that came out of the town of Malice, that is in the county of
+Envy, they neither wept, nor disputed, nor repented, but stood gnawing
+their tongues before him for anguish and madness, because they could not
+have their will upon Mansoul. Now these last, with all those of the
+other two sorts that did not unfeignedly ask pardon for their
+faults,—those he made to enter into sufficient bond to answer for what
+they had done against Mansoul, and against her King, at the great and
+general assizes to be holden for our Lord the King, where he himself
+should appoint for the country and kingdom of Universe. So they became
+bound each man for himself, to come in, when called upon, to answer
+before our Lord the King for what they had done as before.
+
+And thus much concerning this second army that was sent by Diabolus to
+overthrow Mansoul.
+
+But there were three of those that came from the land of Doubting, who,
+after they had wandered and ranged the country a while, and perceived
+that they had escaped, were so hardy as to thrust themselves, knowing
+that yet there were in the town Diabolonians,—I say, they were so hardy
+as to thrust themselves into Mansoul among them. (Three, did I say? I
+think there were four.) Now, to whose house should these Diabolonian
+doubters go, but to the house of an old Diabolonian in Mansoul, whose
+name was Evil-Questioning, a very great enemy he was to Mansoul, and a
+great doer among the Diabolonians there. Well, to this
+Evil-Questioning’s house, as was said, did these Diabolonians come (you
+may be sure that they had directions how to find the way thither), so he
+made them welcome, pitied their misfortune, and succoured them with the
+best that he had in his house. Now, after a little acquaintance (and it
+was not long before they had that), this old Evil-Questioning asked the
+doubters if they were all of a town (he knew that they were all of one
+kingdom), and they answered: ‘No, nor not of one shire neither; for I,’
+said one, ‘am an election doubter:’ ‘I,’ said another, ‘am a vocation
+doubter:’ then said the third, ‘I am a salvation doubter:’ and the fourth
+said he was a grace doubter. ‘Well,’ quoth the old gentleman, ‘be of
+what shire you will, I am persuaded that you are down, boys: you have the
+very length of my foot, are one with my heart, and shall be welcome to
+me.’ So they thanked him, and were glad that they had found themselves
+an harbour in Mansoul.
+
+Then said Evil-Questioning to them: ‘How many of your company might there
+be that came with you to the siege of Mansoul?’ and they answered: ‘There
+were but ten thousand doubters in all, for the rest of the army consisted
+of fifteen thousand blood-men. These blood-men,’ quoth they, ‘border
+upon our country; but, poor men! as we hear, they were every one taken by
+Emmanuel’s forces.’ ‘Ten thousand!’ quoth the old gentleman; ‘I will
+promise you, that is a round company. But how came it to pass, since you
+were so mighty a number, that you fainted, and durst not fight your
+foes?’ ‘Our general,’ said they, ‘was the first man that did run for
+it.’ ‘Pray,’ quoth their landlord, ‘who was that, your cowardly
+general?’ ‘He was once the Lord Mayor of Mansoul,’ said they: ‘but pray
+call him not a cowardly general; for whether any from the east to the
+west has done more service for our prince Diabolus, than has my Lord
+Incredulity, will be a hard question for you to answer. But had they
+catched him, they would for certain have hanged him; and we promise you,
+hanging is but a bad business.’ Then said the old gentleman, ‘I would
+that all the ten thousand doubters were now well armed in Mansoul, and
+myself at the head of them; I would see what I could do.’ ‘Ay,’ said
+they, ‘that would be well if we could see that; but wishes, alas! what
+are they?’ and these words were spoken aloud. ‘Well,’ said old
+Evil-Questioning, ‘take heed that you talk not too loud; you must be quat
+and close, and must take care of yourselves while you are here, or, I
+will assure you, you will be snapped.’ ‘Why?’ quoth the doubters.
+‘Why!’ quoth the old gentleman; ‘why! because both the Prince and Lord
+Secretary, and their captains and soldiers, are all at present in town;
+yea, the town is as full of them as ever it can hold. And besides, there
+is one whose name is Willbewill, a most cruel enemy of ours, and him the
+Prince has made keeper of the gates, and has commanded him that, with all
+the diligence he can, he should look for, search out, and destroy all,
+and all manner of Diabolonians. And if he lighteth upon you, down you
+go, though your heads were made of gold.’
+
+And now, to see how it happened, one of the Lord Willbewill’s faithful
+soldiers, whose name was Mr. Diligence, stood all this while listening
+under old Evil-Questioning’s eaves, and heard all the talk that had been
+betwixt him and the doubters that he entertained under his roof.
+
+The soldier was a man that my lord had much confidence in, and that he
+loved dearly; and that both because he was a man of courage, and also a
+man that was unwearied in seeking after Diabolonians to apprehend them.
+
+Now this man, as I told you, heard all the talk that was between old
+Evil-Questioning and these Diabolonians; wherefore what does he but goes
+to his lord, and tells him what he had heard. ‘And sayest thou so, my
+trusty?’ quoth my lord. ‘Ay,’ quoth Diligence, ‘that I do; and if your
+lordship will be pleased to go with me, you shall find it as I have
+said.’ ‘And are they there?’ quoth my lord. ‘I know Evil-Questioning
+well, for he and I were great in the time of our apostasy: but I know not
+now where he dwells.’ ‘But I do,’ said his man, ‘and if your lordship
+will go, I will lead you the way to his den.’ ‘Go!’ quoth my lord, ‘that
+I will. Come, my Diligence, let us go find them out.’
+
+So my lord and his man went together the direct way to his house. Now
+his man went before to show him his way, and they went till they came
+even under old Mr. Evil-Questioning’s wall. Then said Diligence, ‘Hark!
+my lord, do you know the old gentleman’s tongue when you hear it?’
+‘Yes,’ said my lord, ‘I know it well, but I have not seen him many a day.
+This I know, he is cunning; I wish he doth not give us the slip.’ ‘Let
+me alone for that,’ said his servant Diligence. ‘But how shall we find
+the door?’ quoth my lord. ‘Let me alone for that, too,’ said his man.
+So he had my Lord Willbewill about, and showed him the way to the door.
+Then my lord, without more ado, broke open the door, rushed into the
+house, and caught them all five together, even as Diligence his man had
+told him. So my lord apprehended them, and led them away, and committed
+them to the hand of Mr. Trueman, the gaoler, and commanded, and he did
+put them in ward. This done, my Lord Mayor was acquainted in the morning
+with what my Lord Willbewill had done over night, and his lordship
+rejoiced much at the news, not only because there were doubters
+apprehended, but because that old Evil-Questioning was taken; for he had
+been a very great trouble to Mansoul, and much affliction to my Lord
+Mayor himself. He had also been sought for often, but no hand could ever
+be laid upon him till now.
+
+Well, the next thing was to make preparation to try these five that by my
+lord had been apprehended, and that were in the hands of Mr. Trueman, the
+gaoler. So the day was set, and the court called and come together, and
+the prisoners brought to the bar. My Lord Willbewill had power to have
+slain them when at first he took them, and that without any more ado; but
+he thought it at this time more for the honour of the Prince, the comfort
+of Mansoul, and the discouragement of the enemy, to bring them forth to
+public judgment.
+
+But, I say, Mr. Trueman brought them in chains to the bar; to the
+town-hall, for that was the place of judgment. So, to be short, the jury
+was panelled, the witnesses sworn, and the prisoners tried for their
+lives: the jury was the same that tried Mr. No-Truth, Pitiless, Haughty,
+and the rest of their companions.
+
+And, first, old Questioning himself was set to the bar for he was the
+receiver, the entertainer, and comforter of these doubters, that by
+nation were outlandish men: then he was bid to hearken to his charge, and
+was told that he had liberty to object, if he had ought to say for
+himself. So his indictment was read: the manner and form here follows.
+
+‘Mr. Questioning, Thou art here indicted by the name of Evil-Questioning,
+an intruder upon the town of Mansoul, for that thou art a Diabolonian by
+nature, and also a hater of the Prince Emmanuel, and one that hast
+studied the ruin of the town of Mansoul. Thou art also here indicted for
+countenancing the King’s enemies, after wholesome laws made to the
+contrary: for, 1. Thou hast questioned the truth of her doctrine and
+state: 2. In wishing that ten thousand doubters were in her: 3. In
+receiving, in entertaining, and encouraging of her enemies, that came
+from their army unto thee. What sayest thou to this indictment? art thou
+guilty or not guilty?’
+
+‘My lord,’ quoth he, ‘I know not the meaning of this indictment,
+forasmuch as I am not the man concerned in it; the man that standeth by
+this charge accused before this bench is called by the name of
+Evil-Questioning, which name I deny to be mine, mine being
+Honest-Inquiry. The one indeed sounds like the other; but, I trow, your
+lordships know that between these two there is a wide difference; for I
+hope that a man, even in the worst of times, and that, too, amongst the
+worst of men, may make an honest inquiry after things, without running
+the danger of death.’
+
+Then spake my Lord Willbewill, for he was one of the witnesses: ‘My lord,
+and you the honourable bench and magistrates of the town of Mansoul, you
+all have heard with your ears that the prisoner at the bar has denied his
+name, and so thinks to shift from the charge of the indictment. But I
+know him to be the man concerned, and that his proper name is
+Evil-Questioning. I have known him, my lord, above these thirty years,
+for he and I (a shame it is for me to speak it) were great acquaintance,
+when Diabolus, that tyrant, had the government of Mansoul; and I testify
+that he is a Diabolonian by nature, an enemy to our Prince, and a hater
+of the blessed town of Mansoul. He has, in times of rebellion, been at
+and lain in my house, my lord, not so little as twenty nights together,
+and we did use to talk then, for the substance of talk, as he and his
+doubters have talked of late: true, I have not seen him many a day. I
+suppose that the coming of Emmanuel to Mansoul has made him change his
+lodgings, as this indictment has driven him to change his name; but this
+is the man, my lord.’
+
+Then said the court unto him, ‘Hast thou any more to say?’
+
+‘Yes,’ quoth the old gentleman, ‘that I have; for all that as yet has
+been said against me, is but by the mouth of one witness; and it is not
+lawful for the famous town of Mansoul, at the mouth of one witness, to
+put any man to death.’
+
+Then stood forth Mr. Diligence, and said, ‘My lord, as I was upon my
+watch such a night at the head of Bad Street, in this town, I chanced to
+hear a muttering within this gentleman’s house. Then, thought I, what is
+to do here? So I went up close, but very softly, to the side of the
+house to listen, thinking, as indeed it fell out, that there I might
+light upon some Diabolonian conventicle. So, as I said, I drew nearer
+and nearer; and when I was got up close to the wall, it was but a while
+before I perceived that there were outlandish men in the house; but I did
+well understand their speech, for I have been a traveller myself. Now,
+hearing such language in such a tottering cottage as this old gentleman
+dwelt in, I clapped mine ear to a hole in the window, and there heard
+them talk as followeth. This old Mr. Questioning asked these doubters
+what they were, whence they came, and what was their business in these
+parts; and they told him to all these questions, yet he did entertain
+them. He also asked what numbers there were of them; and they told him
+ten thousand men. He then asked them, why they made no more manly
+assault upon Mansoul; and they told him: so he called their general
+coward, for marching off when he should have fought for his prince.
+Further, this old Evil-Questioning wished, and I heard him wish, would
+all the ten thousand doubters were now in Mansoul, and himself at the
+head of them. He bid them also to take heed and lie quat; for if they
+were taken they must die, although they had heads of gold.’ Then said
+the court: ‘Mr. Evil-Questioning, here is now another witness against
+you, and his testimony is full: 1. He swears that you did receive these
+men into your house, and that you did nourish them there, though you knew
+that they were Diabolonians, and the King’s enemies. 2. He swears that
+you did wish ten thousand of them in Mansoul. 3. He swears that you did
+give them advice to be quat and close, lest they were taken by the King’s
+servants. All which manifesteth that thou art a Diabolonian; but hadst
+thou been a friend to the King, thou wouldst have apprehended them.’
+
+Then said Evil-Questioning: ‘To the first of these I answer, The men that
+came into mine house were strangers, and I took them in; and is it now
+become a crime in Mansoul for a man to entertain strangers? That I did
+also nourish them is true; and why should my charity be blamed? As for
+the reason why I wished ten thousand of them in Mansoul, I never told it
+to the witnesses, nor to themselves. I might wish them to be taken, and
+so my wish might mean well to Mansoul, for aught that any yet knows. I
+did also bid them take heed that they fell not into the captains’ hands;
+but that might be because I am unwilling that any man should be slain,
+and not because I would have the King’s enemies as such escape.’
+
+My Lord Mayor then replied: ‘That though it was a virtue to entertain
+strangers, yet it was treason to entertain the King’s enemies. And for
+what else thou hast said, thou dost by words but labour to evade and
+defer the execution of judgment. But could there be no more proved
+against thee but that thou art a Diabolonian, thou must for that die the
+death by the law; but to be a receiver, a nourisher, a countenancer, and
+a harbourer of others of them, yea, of outlandish Diabolonians, yea, of
+them that came from far on purpose to cut off and destroy our
+Mansoul—this must not be borne.’
+
+Then said Evil-Questioning: ‘I see how the game will go: I must die for
+my name, and for my charity.’ And so he held his peace.
+
+Then they called the outlandish doubters to the bar, and the first of
+them that was arraigned was the election doubter. So his indictment was
+read; and because he was an outlandish man, the substance of it was told
+him by an interpreter; namely, ‘That he was there charged with being an
+enemy of Emmanuel the Prince, a hater of the town of Mansoul, and an
+opposer of her most wholesome doctrine.’
+
+Then the judge asked him if he would plead? but he said only this—That he
+confessed that he was an election doubter, and that that was the religion
+that he had ever been brought up in. And said, moreover, ‘If I must die
+for my religion, I trow, I shall die a martyr, and so I care the less.’
+
+_Judge_. Then it was replied: ‘To question election, is to overthrow a
+great doctrine of the gospel, namely, the omnisciency, and power, and
+will of God; to take away the liberty of God with his creature, to
+stumble the faith of the town of Mansoul, and to make salvation to depend
+upon works, and not upon grace. It also belied the word, and disquieted
+the minds of the men of Mansoul; therefore by the best of laws he must
+die.’
+
+Then was the vocation doubter called, and set to the bar; and his
+indictment for substance was the same with the other, only he was
+particularly charged with denying the calling of Mansoul.
+
+The judge asked him also what he had to say for himself?
+
+So he replied: ‘That he never believed that there was any such thing as a
+distinct and powerful call of God to Mansoul; otherwise than by the
+general voice of the word, nor by that neither, otherwise than as it
+exhorted them to forbear evil, and to do that which is good, and in so
+doing a promise of happiness is annexed.’
+
+Then said the judge: ‘Thou art a Diabolonian, and hast denied a great
+part of one of the most experimental truths of the Prince of the town of
+Mansoul; for he has called, and she has heard a most distinct and
+powerful call of her Emmanuel, by which she has been quickened, awakened,
+and possessed with heavenly grace to desire to have communion with her
+Prince, to serve him, and to do his will, and to look for her happiness
+merely of his good pleasure. And for thine abhorrence of this good
+doctrine, thou must die the death.’
+
+Then the grace doubter was called, and his indictment was read and he
+replied thereto: ‘That though he was of the land of doubting, his father
+was the offspring of a Pharisee, and lived in good fashion among his
+neighbours, and that he taught him to believe, and believe it I do, and
+will, that Mansoul shall never be saved freely by grace.’
+
+Then said the judge: ‘Why, the law of the Prince is plain: 1. Negatively,
+“not of works:” 2. Positively, “by grace you are saved.” And thy
+religion settleth in and upon the works of the flesh; for the works of
+the law are the works of the flesh. Besides, in saying as thou hast
+done, thou hast robbed God of His glory, and given it to a sinful man;
+thou hast robbed Christ of the necessity of His undertaking, and the
+sufficiency thereof, and hast given both these to the works of the flesh.
+Thou hast despised the work of the Holy Ghost, and hast magnified the
+will of the flesh, and of the legal mind. Thou art a Diabolonian, the
+son of a Diabolonian; and for thy Diabolonian principles thou must die.’
+
+The court then, having proceeded thus far with them, sent out the jury,
+who forthwith brought them in guilty of death. Then stood up the
+Recorder, and addressed himself to the prisoners: ‘You, the prisoners at
+the bar, you have been here indicted, and proved guilty of high crimes
+against Emmanuel our Prince, and against the welfare of the famous town
+of Mansoul, crimes for which you must be put to death, and die ye
+accordingly.’ So they were sentenced to the death of the cross. The
+place assigned them for execution, was that where Diabolus drew up his
+last army against Mansoul; save only that old Evil-Questioning was hanged
+at the top of Bad Street, just over against his own door.
+
+When the town of Mansoul had thus far rid themselves of their enemies,
+and of the troublers of their peace, in the next place a strict
+commandment was given out, that yet my Lord Willbewill should, with
+Diligence his man, search for, and do his best to apprehend what town
+Diabolonians were yet left alive in Mansoul. The names of several of
+them were, Mr. Fooling, Mr. Let-Good-Slip, Mr. Slavish-Fear, Mr. No-Love,
+Mr. Mistrust, Mr. Flesh, and Mr. Sloth. It was also commanded, that he
+should apprehend Mr. Evil-Questioning’s children, that he left behind
+him, and that they should demolish his house. The children that he left
+behind him were these: Mr. Doubt, and he was his eldest son; the next to
+him was Legal-Life, Unbelief, Wrong-Thoughts-of-Christ, Clip-Promise,
+Carnal-Sense, Live-by-Feeling, Self-Love. All these he had by one wife,
+and her name was No-Hope; she was the kinswoman of old Incredulity, for
+he was her uncle; and when her father, old Dark, was dead, he took her
+and brought her up, and when she was marriageable, he gave her to this
+old Evil-Questioning to wife.
+
+Now the Lord Willbewill did put into execution his commission, with great
+Diligence, his man. He took Fooling in the streets, and hanged him up in
+Want-wit-Alley, over against his own house. This Fooling was he that
+would have had the town of Mansoul deliver up Captain Credence into the
+hands of Diabolus, provided that then he would have withdrawn his force
+out of the town. He also took Mr. Let-Good-Slip one day as he was busy
+in the market, and executed him according to law. Now there was an
+honest poor man in Mansoul, and his name was Mr. Meditation, one of no
+great account in the days of apostasy, but now of repute with the best of
+the town. This man, therefore, they were willing to prefer. Now Mr.
+Let-Good-Slip had a great deal of wealth heretofore in Mansoul, and, at
+Emmanuel’s coming, it was sequestered to the use of the Prince: this,
+therefore, was now given to Mr. Meditation, to improve for the common
+good, and after him to his son, Mr. Think-Well; this Think-Well he had by
+Mrs. Piety his wife, and she was the daughter of Mr. Recorder.
+
+After this, my lord apprehended Clip-Promise: now because he was a
+notorious villain, for by his doings much of the King’s coin was abused,
+therefore he was made a public example. He was arraigned and judged to
+be first set in the pillory, then to be whipped by all the children and
+servants in Mansoul, and then to be hanged till he was dead. Some may
+wonder at the severity of this man’s punishment; but those that are
+honest traders in Mansoul, are sensible of the great abuse that one
+clipper of promises in little time may do to the town of Mansoul. And
+truly my judgment is, that all those of his name and life should be
+served even as he.
+
+He also apprehended Carnal-Sense, and put him in hold; but how it came
+about, I cannot tell, but he brake prison, and made his escape: yea, and
+the bold villain will not yet quit the town, but lurks in the Diabolonian
+dens a days, and haunts like a ghost honest men’s houses a nights.
+Wherefore, there was a proclamation set up in the market-place in
+Mansoul, signifying that whosoever could discover Carnal-Sense, and
+apprehend him and slay him, should be admitted daily to the Prince’s
+table, and should be made keeper of the treasure of Mansoul. Many,
+therefore, did bend themselves to do this thing, but take him and slay
+him they could not, though often he was discovered.
+
+But my lord took Mr. Wrong-Thoughts-of-Christ, and put him in prison, and
+he died there; though it was long first, for he died of a lingering
+consumption.
+
+Self-Love was also taken and committed to custody; but there were many
+that were allied to him in Mansoul, so his judgment was deferred. But at
+last Mr. Self-Denial stood up, and said: ‘If such villains as these may
+be winked at in Mansoul, I will lay down my commission.’ He also took
+him from the crowd, and had him among his soldiers, and there he was
+brained. But some in Mansoul muttered at it, though none durst speak
+plainly, because Emmanuel was in town. But this brave act of Captain
+Self-Denial came to the Prince’s ears; so he sent for him, and made him a
+lord in Mansoul. My Lord Willbewill also obtained great commendations of
+Emmanuel, for what he had done for the town of Mansoul.
+
+Then my Lord Self-Denial took courage, and set to the pursuing of the
+Diabolonians, with my Lord Willbewill; and they took Live-by-Feeling, and
+they took Legal-Life, and put them in hold till they died. But Mr.
+Unbelief was a nimble Jack: him they could never lay hold of, though they
+attempted to do it often. He therefore, and some few more of the
+subtlest of the Diabolonian tribe, did yet remain in Mansoul, to the time
+that Mansoul left off to dwell any longer in the kingdom of Universe.
+But they kept them to their dens and holes: if one of them did appear, or
+happen to be seen in any of the streets of the town of Mansoul, the whole
+town would be up in arms after them; yea, the very children in Mansoul
+would cry out after them as after a thief, and would wish that they might
+stone them to death with stones. And now did Mansoul arrive to some good
+degree of peace and quiet; her Prince also did abide within her borders;
+her captains, also, and her soldiers did their duties; and Mansoul minded
+her trade that she had with the country that was afar off; also she was
+busy in her manufacture.
+
+When the town of Mansoul had thus far rid themselves of so many of their
+enemies, and the troublers of their peace, the Prince sent to them, and
+appointed a day wherein he would, at the market-place, meet the whole
+people, and there give them in charge concerning some further matters,
+that, if observed, would tend to their further safety and comfort, and to
+the condemnation and destruction of their home-bred Diabolonians. So the
+day appointed was come, and the townsmen met together; Emmanuel also came
+down in his chariot, and all his captains in their state attending him,
+on the right hand and on the left. Then was an oyes made for silence,
+and, after some mutual carriages of love, the Prince began, and thus
+proceeded:—
+
+‘You, my Mansoul, and the beloved of mine heart, many and great are the
+privileges that I have bestowed upon you; I have singled you out from
+others, and have chosen you to myself, not for your worthiness, but for
+mine own sake. I have also redeemed you, not only from the dread of my
+Father’s law, but from the hand of Diabolus. This I have done because I
+loved you, and because I have set my heart upon you to do you good. I
+have also, that all things, that might hinder thy way to the pleasures of
+paradise might be taken out of the way, laid down for thee for thy soul a
+plenary satisfaction, and have bought thee to myself; a price not of
+corruptible things, as of silver and gold, but a price of blood, mine own
+blood, which I have freely spilled upon the ground to make thee mine. So
+I have reconciled thee, O my Mansoul, to my Father, and entrusted thee in
+the mansion houses that are with my Father in the royal city, where
+things are, O my Mansoul, that eye hath not seen, nor hath entered into
+the heart of man to conceive.
+
+‘Besides, O my Mansoul, thou seest what I have done, and how I have taken
+thee out of the hands of thine enemies: unto whom thou hadst deeply
+revolted from my Father, and by whom thou wast content to be possessed,
+and also to be destroyed. I came to thee first by my law, then by my
+gospel, to awaken thee, and show thee my glory. And thou knowest what
+thou wast, what thou saidst, what thou didst, and how many times thou
+rebelledst against my Father and me; yet I left thee not as thou seest
+this day, but came to thee, have borne thy manners, have waited upon
+thee, and, after all, accepted of thee, even of my mere grace and favour;
+and would not suffer thee to be lost, as thou most willingly wouldst have
+been. I also compassed thee about, and afflicted thee on every side,
+that I might make thee weary of thy ways, and bring down thy heart with
+molestation to a willingness to close with thy good and happiness. And
+when I had gotten a complete conquest over thee, I turned it to thy
+advantage.
+
+‘Thou seest, also, what a company of my Father’s host I have lodged
+within thy borders: captains and rulers, soldiers and men of war, engines
+and excellent devices to subdue and bring down thy foes; thou knowest my
+meaning, O Mansoul. And they are my servants, and thine, too, Mansoul.
+Yea, my design of possessing of thee with them, and the natural tendency
+of each of them is to defend, purge, strengthen, and sweeten thee for
+myself, O Mansoul, and to make thee meet for my Father’s presence,
+blessing, and glory; for thou, my Mansoul, art created to be prepared
+unto these.
+
+‘Thou seest, moreover, my Mansoul, how I have passed by thy backslidings,
+and have healed thee. Indeed I was angry with thee, but I have turned
+mine anger away from thee, because I loved thee still, and mine anger and
+mine indignation is ceased in the destruction of thine enemies, O
+Mansoul. Nor did thy goodness fetch me again unto thee, after that I for
+thy transgressions have hid my face, and withdrawn my presence from thee.
+The way of backsliding was thine, but the way and means of thy recovery
+was mine. I invented the means of thy return; it was I that made an
+hedge and a wall, when thou wast beginning to turn to things in which I
+delighted not. It was I that made thy sweet bitter, thy day night, thy
+smooth way thorny, and that also confounded all that sought thy
+destruction. It was I that set Mr. Godly-Fear to work in Mansoul. It
+was I that stirred up thy conscience and understanding, thy will and thy
+affections, after thy great and woful decay. It was I that put life into
+thee, O Mansoul, to seek me, that thou mightest find me, and in thy
+finding find thine own health, happiness, and salvation. It was I that
+fetched the second time the Diabolonians out of Mansoul; and it was I
+that overcame them, and that destroyed them before thy face.
+
+‘And now, my Mansoul, I am returned to thee in peace, and thy
+transgressions against me are as if they had not been. Nor shall it be
+with thee as in former days, but I will do better for thee than at thy
+beginning.
+
+For yet a little while, O my Mansoul, even after a few more times are
+gone over thy head, I will (but be not thou troubled at what I say) take
+down this famous town of Mansoul, stick and stone, to the ground. And I
+will carry the stones thereof, and the timber thereof, and the walls
+thereof, and the dust thereof, and the inhabitants thereof, into mine own
+country, even into a kingdom of my Father; and will there set it up in
+such strength and glory, as it never did see in the kingdom where now it
+is placed. I will even there set it up for my Father’s habitation; for
+for that purpose it was at first erected in the kingdom of Universe; and
+there will I make it a spectacle of wonder, a monument of mercy, and the
+admirer of its own mercy. There shall the natives of Mansoul see all
+that, of which they have seen nothing here: there shall they be equal to
+those unto whom they have been inferior here. And there shalt thou, O my
+Mansoul, have such communion with me, with my Father, and with your Lord
+Secretary, as it is not possible here to be enjoyed, nor ever could be,
+shouldest thou live in Universe the space of a thousand years.
+
+‘And there, O my Mansoul, thou shalt be afraid of murderers no more; of
+Diabolonians, and their threats, no more. There, there shall be no more
+plots, nor contrivances, nor designs against thee, O my Mansoul. There
+thou shalt no more hear the evil-tidings, or the noise of the Diabolonian
+drum. There thou shalt not see the Diabolonian standard-bearers, nor yet
+behold Diabolus’s standard. No Diabolonian mount shall be cast up
+against thee there; nor shall there the Diabolonian standard be set up to
+make thee afraid. There thou shalt not need captains, engines, soldiers,
+and men of war. There thou shalt meet with no sorrow, nor grief, nor
+shall it be possible that any Diabolonian should again, for ever, be able
+to creep into thy skirts, burrow in thy walls, or be seen again within
+thy borders all the days of eternity. Life shall there last longer than
+here you are able to desire it should; and yet it shall always be sweet
+and new, nor shall any impediment attend it for ever.
+
+‘There, O Mansoul, thou shalt meet with many of those that have been like
+thee, and that have been partakers of thy sorrows; even such as I have
+chosen, and redeemed, and set apart, as thou, for my Father’s court and
+city-royal. All they will be glad in thee, and thou, when thou seest
+them, shalt be glad in thine heart.
+
+‘There are things, O Mansoul, even things of my Father’s providing, and
+mine, that never were seen since the beginning of the world; and they are
+laid up with my Father, and sealed up among his treasures for thee, till
+thou shalt come thither to enjoy them. I told you before, that I would
+remove my Mansoul, and set it up elsewhere; and where I will set it,
+there are those that love thee, and those that rejoice in thee now; but
+how much more, when they shall see thee exalted to honour! My Father
+will then send them for you to fetch you; and their bosoms are chariots
+to put you in. And you, O my Mansoul, shall ride upon the wings of the
+wind. They will come to convey, conduct, and bring you to that, when
+your eyes see more, that will be your desired haven.
+
+‘And thus, O my Mansoul, I have showed unto thee what shall be done to
+thee hereafter, if thou canst hear, if thou canst understand; and now I
+will tell thee what at present must be thy duty and practice, until I
+come and fetch thee to myself, according as is related in the Scriptures
+of truth.
+
+‘First, I charge thee that thou dost hereafter keep more white and clean
+the liveries which I gave thee before my last withdrawing from thee. Do
+it, I say, for this will be thy wisdom. They are in themselves fine
+linen, but thou must keep them white and clean. This will be your
+wisdom, your honour, and will be greatly for my glory. When your
+garments are white, the world will count you mine. Also, when your
+garments are white, then I am delighted in your ways; for then your
+goings to and fro will be like a flash of lightning, that those that are
+present must take notice of; also their eyes will be made to dazzle
+thereat. Deck thyself, therefore, according to my bidding, and make
+thyself by my law straight steps for thy feet; so shall thy King greatly
+desire thy beauty, for he is thy Lord, and worship thou him.
+
+‘Now, that thou mayest keep them as I bid thee, I have, as I before did
+tell thee, provided for thee an open fountain to wash thy garments in.
+Look, therefore, that thou wash often in my fountain, and go not in
+defiled garments; for as it is to my dishonour and my disgrace, so it
+will be to thy discomfort, when you shall walk in filthy garments. Let
+not, therefore, my garments, your garments, the garments that I gave
+thee, be defiled or spotted by the flesh. Keep thy garments always
+white, and let thy head lack no ointment.
+
+‘My Mansoul, I have ofttimes delivered thee from the designs, plots,
+attempts, and conspiracies of Diabolus; and for all this I ask thee
+nothing, but that thou render not to me evil for my good; but that thou
+bear in mind my love, and the continuation of my kindness to my beloved
+Mansoul, so as to provoke thee to walk in thy measure according to the
+benefit bestowed on thee. Of old, the sacrifices were bound with cords
+to the horns of the altar. Consider what is said to thee, O my blessed
+Mansoul.
+
+‘O my Mansoul, I have lived, I have died, I live, and will die no more
+for thee. I live, that thou mayest not die. Because I live, thou shalt
+live also. I reconciled thee to my Father by the blood of my cross; and
+being reconciled, thou shalt live through me. I will pray for thee; I
+will fight for thee; I will yet do thee good.
+
+‘Nothing can hurt thee but sin; nothing can grieve me but sin; nothing
+can make thee base before thy foes but sin: take heed of sin, my Mansoul.
+
+‘And dost thou know why I at first, and do still, suffer Diabolonians to
+dwell in thy walls, O Mansoul? It is to keep thee wakening, to try thy
+love, to make thee watchful, and to cause thee yet to prize my noble
+captains, their soldiers, and my mercy.
+
+‘It is also, that yet thou mayest be made to remember what a deplorable
+condition thou once wast in. I mean when, not some, but all did dwell,
+not in thy walls, but in thy castle, and in thy stronghold, O Mansoul.
+
+‘O my Mansoul, should I slay all them within, many there be without, that
+would bring thee into bondage; for were all these within cut off, those
+without would find thee sleeping; and then, as in a moment, they would
+swallow up my Mansoul. I therefore left them in thee, not to do thee
+hurt (the which they yet will, if thou hearken to them, and serve them,)
+but to do thee good, the which they must, if thou watch and fight against
+them. Know, therefore, that whatever they shall tempt thee to, my design
+is, that they should drive thee, not further off, but nearer to my
+father, to learn thee war, to make petitioning desirable to thee, and to
+make thee little in thine own eyes. Hearken diligently to this, my
+Mansoul.
+
+‘Show me, then, thy love, my Mansoul, and let not those that are within
+thy walls, take thy affections off from him that hath redeemed thy soul.
+Yea, let the sight of a Diabolonian heighten thy love to me. I came
+once, and twice, and thrice, to save thee from the poison of those arrows
+that would have wrought thy death: stand for me, thy Friend, my Mansoul,
+against the Diabolonians, and I will stand for thee before my Father, and
+all his court. Love me against temptation, and I will love thee
+notwithstanding thine infirmities.
+
+‘O my Mansoul, remember what my captains, my soldiers, and mine engines
+have done for thee. They have fought for thee, they have suffered by
+thee, they have borne much at thy hands to do thee good, O Mansoul.
+Hadst thou not had them to help thee, Diabolus had certainly made a hand
+of thee. Nourish them, therefore, my Mansoul. When thou dost well, they
+will be well; when thou dost ill, they will be ill, and sick, and weak.
+Make not my captains sick, O Mansoul; for if they be sick, thou canst not
+be well; if they be weak, thou canst not be strong; if they be faint,
+thou canst not be stout and valiant for thy King, O Mansoul. Nor must
+thou think always to live by sense: thou must live upon my word. Thou
+must believe, O my Mansoul, when I am from thee, that yet I love thee,
+and bear thee upon mine heart for ever.
+
+‘Remember, therefore, O my Mansoul, that thou art beloved of me: as I
+have, therefore, taught thee to watch, to fight, to pray, and to make war
+against my foes; so now I command thee to believe that my love is
+constant to thee. O my Mansoul, how have I set my heart, my love upon
+thee! Watch. Behold, I lay none other burden upon thee, than what thou
+hast already. Hold fast, till I come.’
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES
+
+
+{0} Unfortunately the illustrations are still in copyright in the UK
+(where I live), and so have not been included. They will be included
+when they come out of copyright in the UK.—DP.
+
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HOLY WAR MADE BY SHADDAI UPON
+DIABOLUS***
+
+
+******* This file should be named 395-0.txt or 395-0.zip *******
+
+
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/3/9/395
+
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
+ www.gutenberg.org/license.
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at 809
+North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email
+contact links and up to date contact information can be found at the
+Foundation's web site and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For forty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
diff --git a/395-0.zip b/395-0.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..baaafcf
--- /dev/null
+++ b/395-0.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/395-h.zip b/395-h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6cb0ca6
--- /dev/null
+++ b/395-h.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/395-h/395-h.htm b/395-h/395-h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6e8a410
--- /dev/null
+++ b/395-h/395-h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,10029 @@
+<!DOCTYPE html
+ PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xml:lang="en" lang="en">
+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII" />
+<title>The Holy War made by Shaddai upon Diabolus, by John Bunyan</title>
+ <style type="text/css">
+/*<![CDATA[ XML blockout */
+<!--
+ P { margin-top: .75em;
+ margin-bottom: .75em;
+ }
+ P.gutsumm { margin-left: 5%;}
+ P.poetry {margin-left: 3%; }
+ .GutSmall { font-size: 0.7em; }
+ H1, H2 {
+ text-align: center;
+ margin-top: 2em;
+ margin-bottom: 2em;
+ }
+ H3, H4, H5 {
+ text-align: center;
+ margin-top: 1em;
+ margin-bottom: 1em;
+ }
+ BODY{margin-left: 10%;
+ margin-right: 10%;
+ }
+ table { border-collapse: collapse; }
+table {margin-left:auto; margin-right:auto;}
+ td { vertical-align: top; border: 1px solid black;}
+ td p { margin: 0.2em; }
+ .blkquot {margin-left: 4em; margin-right: 4em;} /* block indent */
+
+ .smcap {font-variant: small-caps;}
+
+ .pagenum {position: absolute;
+ left: 92%;
+ font-size: small;
+ text-align: right;
+ font-weight: normal;
+ color: gray;
+ }
+ img { border: none; }
+ img.dc { float: left; width: 50px; height: 50px; }
+ p.gutindent { margin-left: 2em; }
+ div.gapspace { height: 0.8em; }
+ div.gapline { height: 0.8em; width: 100%; border-top: 1px solid;}
+ div.gapmediumline { height: 0.3em; width: 40%; margin-left:30%;
+ border-top: 1px solid; }
+ div.gapmediumdoubleline { height: 0.3em; width: 40%; margin-left:30%;
+ border-top: 1px solid; border-bottom: 1px solid;}
+ div.gapshortdoubleline { height: 0.3em; width: 20%;
+ margin-left: 40%; border-top: 1px solid;
+ border-bottom: 1px solid; }
+ div.gapdoubleline { height: 0.3em; width: 50%;
+ margin-left: 25%; border-top: 1px solid;
+ border-bottom: 1px solid;}
+ div.gapshortline { height: 0.3em; width: 20%; margin-left:40%;
+ border-top: 1px solid; }
+ .citation {vertical-align: super;
+ font-size: .8em;
+ text-decoration: none;}
+ img.floatleft { float: left;
+ margin-right: 1em;
+ margin-top: 0.5em; margin-bottom: 0.5em; }
+ img.floatright { float: right;
+ margin-left: 1em; margin-top: 0.5em;
+ margin-bottom: 0.5em; }
+ img.clearcenter {display: block;
+ margin-left: auto;
+ margin-right: auto; margin-top: 0.5em;
+ margin-bottom: 0.5em}
+ -->
+ /* XML end ]]>*/
+ </style>
+</head>
+<body>
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Holy War made by Shaddai upon Diabolus,
+by John Bunyan
+
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+
+
+
+Title: The Holy War made by Shaddai upon Diabolus
+
+
+Author: John Bunyan
+
+
+
+Release Date: February 9, 2013 [eBook #395]
+[This file was first posted on December 7, 1995]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HOLY WAR MADE BY SHADDAI UPON
+DIABOLUS***
+</pre>
+<p>Transcribed from the 1907 Religious Tract Society edition by
+David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org</p>
+<h1>THE HOLY WAR MADE<br />
+BY SHADDI UPON<br />
+DIABOLUS <span class="GutSmall">FOR THE</span><br />
+<span class="GutSmall">REGAINING OF THE METROPOLIS</span><br />
+<span class="GutSmall">OF THE WORLD OR THE LOSING</span><br />
+<span class="GutSmall">AND TAKING AGAIN OF THE TOWN</span><br />
+<span class="GutSmall">OF MANSOUL.&nbsp; BY JOHN
+BUNYAN</span></h1>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">WITH
+THREE</span><br />
+<span class="GutSmall">COLOURED ILLUSTRATIONS</span><br />
+BY VICTOR PROUT <a name="citation0"></a><a href="#footnote0"
+class="citation">[0]</a></p>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center">&ldquo;I have used
+similitudes.&rdquo;&nbsp; Hosea xii. 10</p>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center">
+<a href="images/p0b.jpg">
+<img alt=
+"Decorative design"
+title=
+"Decorative design"
+src="images/p0s.jpg" />
+</a></p>
+<p style="text-align: center">London<br />
+THE RELIGIOUS TRACT SOCIETY<br />
+4 Bouverie Street and 65 St Paul&rsquo;s Churchyard<br />
+1907</p>
+<div class="gapspace">&nbsp;</div>
+<p style="text-align: center"><span class="GutSmall">PRINTED
+BY</span><br />
+<span class="GutSmall">HAZELL, WATSON AND VINEY, LD.</span><br />
+<span class="GutSmall">LONDON AND AYLESBURY.</span></p>
+<h2>PREFACE.</h2>
+<p><span class="smcap"><i>In</i></span><i> the year 1682 there
+was published by Dorman Newman</i>, &lsquo;<i>at the King&rsquo;s
+Arms in the Poultry</i>,&rsquo;<i> and Benjamin Alsop</i>,
+&lsquo;<i>at the Angel and Bible in the Poultry</i>,&rsquo;<i> a
+volume entitled</i> &lsquo;<i>The Holy War</i>, <i>made by
+Shaddai upon Diabolus for the regaining of the Metropolis of the
+World; or the Losing and Taking again of the Town of
+Mansoul</i>.&rsquo;<i>&nbsp; It was the work of John Bunyan</i>,
+<i>who</i>, <i>sixteen years before</i>, <i>had published the
+story of his own spiritual struggle under the title of</i>
+&lsquo;<i>Grace abounding to the Chief of Sinners</i>&rsquo;;<i>
+and</i>, <i>but four years before</i>, <i>had produced</i>
+&lsquo;<i>The Pilgrim&rsquo;s Progress</i>&rsquo; (<i>Part
+I</i>).&nbsp; <i>Bunyan had speedily followed the issue of
+the</i> &lsquo;<i>Pilgrim&rsquo;s Progress</i>&rsquo; <i>with
+the</i> &lsquo;<i>Life and Death of Mr. Badman</i>,&rsquo;<i>
+picture of English life and character as he had seen it</i>,
+<i>grimly faithful to fact</i>.&nbsp; <i>In</i> &lsquo;<i>The
+Holy War</i>&rsquo;<i> Bunyan returned to allegory</i>.&nbsp;
+<i>As a piece of literature the book is in no way inferior to
+the</i> &lsquo;<i>Pilgrim&rsquo;s Progress</i>.&rsquo;<i>&nbsp;
+If Bunyan had written nothing else</i>, &lsquo;<i>The Holy
+War</i>&rsquo; <i>would have sufficed to establish his claim to a
+place amongst the masters of English prose</i>.&nbsp; <i>As an
+appeal to the conscience it is not a whit less effective than
+the</i> &lsquo;<i>Pilgrim&rsquo;s Progress</i>&rsquo;; <i>but in
+the power of seizing and retaining the reader&rsquo;s attention
+it is scarcely so successful</i>.&nbsp; <i>Nevertheless Macaulay
+held that</i> &lsquo;<i>if there had been no</i>
+&ldquo;<i>Pilgrim&rsquo;s Progress</i>&rdquo; &ldquo;<i>The Holy
+War</i>&rdquo; <i>would have been the first of religious
+allegories</i>.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>In working out the details of</i> &lsquo;<i>The Holy
+War</i>&rsquo; <i>Bunyan seems to have kept in mind his own
+experience</i>.&nbsp; <i>The fortifications of the city</i>,
+<i>the movements of the opposing forces</i>, <i>the changes in
+the municipal offices of Mansoul were reproductions of scenes and
+events that had but recently gone on under Bunyan&rsquo;s
+eyes</i>.&nbsp; <i>He adapted them with extraordinary success to
+the presentation both of the doctrines of grace and of the
+temptations which attend the Christian life</i>.&nbsp; <i>The
+characters and the incidents are</i>, <i>in effect</i>, <i>the
+characters and incidents of every age</i>.&nbsp; <i>It is this
+which gives to the story of Mansoul its undying freshness</i>,
+<i>and suits it to the needs of men in all climes</i>.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;<i>The Holy War</i>&rsquo; <i>has been translated into
+many languages</i>, <i>including some of those with the scantiest
+of literature</i>.&nbsp; <i>Indeed</i>, <i>as this edition is
+being prepared for the press</i>, <i>assistance is being rendered
+by the Religious Tract Society in the printing of</i>
+&lsquo;<i>The Holy War</i>&rsquo; <i>in Kongo</i>.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><i>A. R. BUCKLAND</i>.</p>
+<h2>TO THE READER.</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&rsquo;Tis strange to me, that
+they that love to tell<br />
+Things done of old, yea, and that do excel<br />
+Their equals in historiology,<br />
+Speak not of Mansoul&rsquo;s wars, but let them lie<br />
+Dead, like old fables, or such worthless things,<br />
+That to the reader no advantage brings:<br />
+When men, let them make what they will their own,<br />
+Till they know this, are to themselves unknown.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Of stories, I well know, there&rsquo;s divers
+sorts,<br />
+Some foreign, some domestic; and reports<br />
+Are thereof made as fancy leads the writers:<br />
+(By books a man may guess at the inditers.)<br />
+Some will again of that which never was,<br />
+Nor will be, feign (and that without a cause)<br />
+Such matter, raise such mountains, tell such things<br />
+Of men, of laws, of countries, and of kings;<br />
+And in their story seem to be so sage,<br />
+And with such gravity clothe every page,<br />
+That though their frontispiece says all is vain,<br />
+Yet to their way disciples they obtain.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But, readers, I have somewhat else to do,<br />
+Than with vain stories thus to trouble you.<br />
+What here I say, some men do know so well,<br />
+They can with tears and joy the story tell.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; The town of Mansoul is well known to many,<br />
+Nor are her troubles doubted of by any<br />
+That are acquainted with those Histories<br />
+That Mansoul and her wars anatomize.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Then lend thine ear to what I do relate,<br />
+Touching the town of Mansoul and her state:<br />
+How she was lost, took captive, made a slave:<br />
+And how against him set, that should her save;<br />
+Yea, how by hostile ways she did oppose<br />
+Her Lord, and with his enemy did close.<br />
+For they are true: he that will them deny<br />
+Must needs the best of records vilify.<br />
+For my part, I myself was in the town,<br />
+Both when &rsquo;twas set up, and when pulling down.<br />
+I saw Diabolus in his possession,<br />
+And Mansoul also under his oppression.<br />
+Yea, I was there when she own&rsquo;d him for lord,<br />
+And to him did submit with one accord.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When Mansoul trampled upon things divine,<br />
+And wallowed in filth as doth a swine;<br />
+When she betook herself unto her arms,<br />
+Fought her Emmanuel, despis&rsquo;d his charms;<br />
+Then I was there, and did rejoice to see<br />
+Diabolus and Mansoul so agree.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Let no men, then, count me a fable-maker,<br />
+Nor make my name or credit a partaker<br />
+Of their derision: what is here in view,<br />
+Of mine own knowledge, I dare say is true.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I saw the Prince&rsquo;s armed men come down<br />
+By troops, by thousands, to besiege the town;<br />
+I saw the captains, heard the trumpets sound,<br />
+And how his forces covered all the ground.<br />
+Yea, how they set themselves in battle-&rsquo;ray,<br />
+I shall remember to my dying day.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I saw the colours waving in the wind,<br />
+And they within to mischief how combin&rsquo;d<br />
+To ruin Mansoul, and to make away<br />
+Her primum mobile without delay.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I saw the mounts cast up against the town,<br />
+And how the slings were placed to beat it down:<br />
+I heard the stones fly whizzing by mine ears,<br />
+(What longer kept in mind than got in fears?)<br />
+I heard them fall, and saw what work they made.<br />
+And how old Mors did cover with his shade<br />
+The face of Mansoul; and I heard her cry,<br />
+&lsquo;Woe worth the day, in dying I shall die!&rsquo;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I saw the battering-rams, and how they
+play&rsquo;d<br />
+To beat open Ear-gate; and I was afraid<br />
+Not only Ear-gate, but the very town<br />
+Would by those battering-rams be beaten down.<br />
+I saw the fights, and heard the captains shout,<br />
+And in each battle saw who faced about;<br />
+I saw who wounded were, and who were slain;<br />
+And who, when dead, would come to life again.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I heard the cries of those that wounded were,<br />
+(While others fought like men bereft of fear,)<br />
+And while the cry, &lsquo;Kill, kill,&rsquo; was in mine ears,<br
+/>
+The gutters ran, not so with blood as tears.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Indeed, the captains did not always fight,<br />
+But then they would molest us day and night;<br />
+Their cry, &lsquo;Up, fall on, let us take the town,&rsquo;<br />
+Kept us from sleeping, or from lying down.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I was there when the gates were broken ope,<br />
+And saw how Mansoul then was stripp&rsquo;d of hope;<br />
+I saw the captains march into the town,<br />
+How there they fought, and did their foes cut down.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I heard the Prince bid Boanerges go<br />
+Up to the castle, and there seize his foe;<br />
+And saw him and his fellows bring him down,<br />
+In chains of great contempt quite through the town.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I saw Emmanuel, when he possess&rsquo;d<br />
+His town of Mansoul; and how greatly blest<br />
+A town his gallant town of Mansoul was,<br />
+When she received his pardon, loved his laws.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; When the Diabolonians were caught,<br />
+When tried, and when to execution brought,<br />
+Then I was there; yea, I was standing by<br />
+When Mansoul did the rebels crucify.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I also saw Mansoul clad all in white,<br />
+I heard her Prince call her his heart&rsquo;s delight.<br />
+I saw him put upon her chains of gold,<br />
+And rings, and bracelets, goodly to behold.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; What shall I say?&nbsp; I heard the people&rsquo;s
+cries,<br />
+And saw the Prince wipe tears from Mansoul&rsquo;s eyes.<br />
+And heard the groans, and saw the joy of many:<br />
+Tell you of all, I neither will, nor can I.<br />
+But by what here I say, you well may see<br />
+That Mansoul&rsquo;s matchless wars no fables be.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Mansoul, the desire of both princes was:<br />
+One keep his gain would, t&rsquo;other gain his loss.<br />
+Diabolus would cry, &lsquo;The town is mine!&rsquo;<br />
+Emmanuel would plead a right divine<br />
+Unto his Mansoul: then to blows they go,<br />
+And Mansoul cries, &lsquo;These wars will me undo.&rsquo;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Mansoul! her wars seemed endless in her eyes;<br />
+She&rsquo;s lost by one, becomes another&rsquo;s prize:<br />
+And he again that lost her last would swear,<br />
+&lsquo;Have her I will, or her in pieces tear.&rsquo;<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Mansoul! it was the very seat of war;<br />
+Wherefore her troubles greater were by far<br />
+Than only where the noise of war is heard,<br />
+Or where the shaking of a sword is fear&rsquo;d;<br />
+Or only where small skirmishes are fought,<br />
+Or where the fancy fighteth with a thought.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; She saw the swords of fighting men made red,<br />
+And heard the cries of those with them wounded:<br />
+Must not her frights, then, be much more by far<br />
+Than theirs that to such doings strangers are?<br />
+Or theirs that hear the beating of a drum,<br />
+But not made fly for fear from house and home?<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Mansoul not only heard the trumpet&rsquo;s sound,<br
+/>
+But saw her gallants gasping on the ground:<br />
+Wherefore we must not think that she could rest<br />
+With them, whose greatest earnest is but jest:<br />
+Or where the blust&rsquo;ring threat&rsquo;ning of great wars<br
+/>
+Do end in parlies, or in wording jars.<br />
+Mansoul! her mighty wars, they did portend<br />
+Her weal or woe, and that world without end:<br />
+Wherefore she must be more concern&rsquo;d than they<br />
+Whose fears begin, and end the selfsame day;<br />
+Or where none other harm doth come to him<br />
+That is engaged, but loss of life or limb,<br />
+As all must needs confess that now do dwell<br />
+In Universe, and can this story tell.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Count me not, then, with them that, to amaze<br />
+The people, set them on the stars to gaze,<br />
+Insinuating with much confidence,<br />
+That each of them is now the residence<br />
+Of some brave creatures: yea, a world they will<br />
+Have in each star, though it be past their skill<br />
+To make it manifest to any man,<br />
+That reason hath, or tell his fingers can.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; But I have too long held thee in the porch,<br />
+And kept thee from the sunshine with a torch,<br />
+Well, now go forward, step within the door,<br />
+And there behold five hundred times much more<br />
+Of all sorts of such inward rarities<br />
+As please the mind will, and will feed the eyes<br />
+With those, which, if a Christian, thou wilt see<br />
+Not small, but things of greatest moment be.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Nor do thou go to work without my key;<br />
+(In mysteries men soon do lose their way;)<br />
+And also turn it right, if thou wouldst know<br />
+My riddle, and wouldst with my heifer plough;<br />
+It lies there in the window.&nbsp; Fare thee well,<br />
+My next may be to ring thy passing-bell.</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">John
+Bunyan</span>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<h2>AN ADVERTISEMENT TO THE READER.</h2>
+<blockquote><p>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<span class="smcap">Some</span>
+say the &lsquo;Pilgrim&rsquo;s Progress&rsquo; is not mine,<br />
+Insinuating as if I would shine<br />
+In name and fame by the worth of another,<br />
+Like some made rich by robbing of their brother.<br />
+Or that so fond I am of being sire,<br />
+I&rsquo;ll father bastards; or, if need require,<br />
+I&rsquo;ll tell a lie in print to get applause.<br />
+I scorn it: John such dirt-heap never was,<br />
+Since God converted him.&nbsp; Let this suffice<br />
+To show why I my &lsquo;Pilgrim&rsquo; patronize.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; It came from mine own heart, so to my head,<br />
+And thence into my fingers trickled;<br />
+Then to my pen, from whence immediately<br />
+On paper I did dribble it daintily.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Manner and matter, too, was all mine own,<br />
+Nor was it unto any mortal known<br />
+Till I had done it; nor did any then<br />
+By books, by wits, by tongues, or hand, or pen,<br />
+Add five words to it, or write half a line<br />
+Thereof: the whole, and every whit is mine.<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; Also for <span class="GutSmall">THIS</span>, thine
+eye is now upon,<br />
+The matter in this manner came from none<br />
+But the same heart, and head, fingers, and pen,<br />
+As did the other.&nbsp; Witness all good men;<br />
+For none in all the world, without a lie,<br />
+Can say that this is mine, excepting I<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp; I write not this of my ostentation,<br />
+Nor &lsquo;cause I seek of men their commendation;<br />
+I do it to keep them from such surmise,<br />
+As tempt them will my name to scandalize.<br />
+Witness my name, if anagram&rsquo;d to thee,<br />
+The letters make&mdash;&lsquo;Nu hony in a B.&rsquo;</p>
+<p style="text-align: right"><span class="smcap">John
+Bunyan</span>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<h2>A RELATION OF THE HOLY WAR.</h2>
+<p><span class="smcap">In</span> my travels, as I walked through
+many regions and countries, it was my chance to happen into that
+famous continent of Universe.&nbsp; A very large and spacious
+country it is: it lieth between the two poles, and just amidst
+the four points of the heavens.&nbsp; It is a place well watered,
+and richly adorned with hills and valleys, bravely situate, and
+for the most part, at least where I was, very fruitful, also well
+peopled, and a very sweet air.</p>
+<p>The people are not all of one complexion, nor yet of one
+language, mode, or way of religion, but differ as much as, it is
+said, do the planets themselves.&nbsp; Some are right, and some
+are wrong, even as it happeneth to be in lesser regions.</p>
+<p>In this country, as I said, it was my lot to travel; and there
+travel I did, and that so long, even till I learned much of their
+mother tongue, together with the customs and manners of them
+among whom I was.&nbsp; And, to speak truth, I was much delighted
+to see and hear many things which I saw and heard among them;
+yea, I had, to be sure, even lived and died a native among them,
+(so was I taken with them and their doings,) had not my master
+sent for me home to his house, there to do business for him, and
+to oversee business done.</p>
+<p>Now there is in this gallant country of Universe a fair and
+delicate town, a corporation called Mansoul; a town for its
+building so curious, for its situation so commodious, for its
+privileges so advantageous, (I mean with reference to its
+origin,) that I may say of it, as was said before of the
+continent in which it is placed, There is not its equal under the
+whole heaven.</p>
+<p>As to the situation of this town, it lieth just between the
+two worlds; and the first founder and builder of it, so far as by
+the best and most authentic records I can gather, was one
+Shaddai; and he built it for his own delight.&nbsp; He made it
+the mirror and glory of all that he made, even the top-piece,
+beyond anything else that he did in that country.&nbsp; Yea, so
+goodly a town was Mansoul when first built, that it is said by
+some, the gods, at the setting up thereof, came down to see it,
+and sang for joy.&nbsp; And as he made it goodly to behold, so
+also mighty to have dominion over all the country round
+about.&nbsp; Yea, all were commanded to acknowledge Mansoul for
+their metropolitan, all were enjoined to do homage to it.&nbsp;
+Aye, the town itself had positive commission and power from her
+King to demand service of all, and also to subdue any that
+anyways denied to do it.</p>
+<p>There was reared up in the midst of this town a most famous
+and stately palace; for strength, it might be called a castle;
+for pleasantness, a paradise; for largeness, a place so copious
+as to contain all the world.&nbsp; This place the King Shaddai
+intended but for himself alone, and not another with him; partly
+because of his own delights, and partly because he would not that
+the terror of strangers should be upon the town.&nbsp; This place
+Shaddai made also a garrison of, but committed the keeping of it
+only to the men of the town.</p>
+<p>The walls of the town were well built, yea, so fast and firm
+were they knit and compact together, that, had it not been for
+the townsmen themselves, they could not have been shaken or
+broken for ever.&nbsp; For here lay the excellent wisdom of him
+that builded Mansoul, that the walls could never be broken down
+nor hurt by the most mighty adverse potentate, unless the
+townsmen gave consent thereto.</p>
+<p>This famous town of Mansoul had five gates, in at which to
+come, out at which to go; and these were made likewise answerable
+to the walls, to wit, impregnable, and such as could never be
+opened nor forced but by the will and leave of those
+within.&nbsp; The names of the gates were these: Ear-gate,
+Eye-gate, Mouth-gate, Nose-gate, and Feel-gate.</p>
+<p>Other things there were that belonged to the town of Mansoul,
+which if you adjoin to these, will yet give farther demonstration
+to all, of the glory and strength of the place.&nbsp; It had
+always a sufficiency of provision within its walls; it had the
+best, most wholesome, and excellent law that then was extant in
+the world.&nbsp; There was not a rascal, rogue, or traitorous
+person then within its walls; they were all true men, and fast
+joined together; and this, you know, is a great matter.&nbsp; And
+to all these, it had always (so long as it had the goodness to
+keep true to Shaddai the King) his countenance, his protection,
+and it was his delight, etc.</p>
+<p>Well, upon a time, there was one Diabolus, a mighty giant,
+made an assault upon this famous town of Mansoul, to take it, and
+make it his own habitation.&nbsp; This giant was king of the
+blacks, and a most raving prince he was.&nbsp; We will, if you
+please, first discourse of the origin of this Diabolus, and then
+of his taking of this famous town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>This Diabolus is indeed a great and mighty prince, and yet
+both poor and beggarly.&nbsp; As to his origin, he was at first
+one of the servants of King Shaddai, made, and taken, and put by
+him into most high and mighty place; yea, was put into such
+principalities as belonged to the best of his territories and
+dominions.&nbsp; This Diabolus was made &lsquo;son of the
+morning,&rsquo; and a brave place he had of it: it brought him
+much glory, and gave him much brightness, an income that might
+have contented his Luciferian heart, had it not been insatiable,
+and enlarged as hell itself.</p>
+<p>Well, he seeing himself thus exalted to greatness and honour,
+and raging in his mind for higher state and degree, what doth he
+but begins to think with himself how he might be set up as lord
+over all, and have the sole power under Shaddai.&nbsp; (Now that
+did the King reserve for his Son, yea, and had already bestowed
+it upon him.)&nbsp; Wherefore he first consults with himself what
+had best to be done; and then breaks his mind to some other of
+his companions, to the which they also agreed.&nbsp; So, in fine,
+they came to this issue that they should make an attempt upon the
+King&rsquo;s Son to destroy him, that the inheritance might be
+theirs.&nbsp; Well, to be short, the treason, as I said, was
+concluded, the time appointed, the word given, the rebels
+rendezvoused, and the assault attempted.&nbsp; Now the King and
+his Son being all and always eye, could not but discern all
+passages in his dominions; and he, having always love for his Son
+as for himself, could not at what he saw but be greatly provoked
+and offended: wherefore what does he, but takes them in the very
+nick and first trip that they made towards their design, convicts
+them of the treason, horrid rebellion, and conspiracy that they
+had devised, and now attempted to put into practice, and casts
+them altogether out of all place of trust, benefit, honour, and
+preferment.&nbsp; This done, he banishes them the court, turns
+them down into the horrible pits, as fast bound in chains, never
+more to expect the least favour from his hands, but to abide the
+judgment that he had appointed, and that for ever.</p>
+<p>Now they being thus cast out of all place of trust, profit,
+and honour, and also knowing that they had lost their
+prince&rsquo;s favour for ever, (being banished his court, and
+cast down to the horrible pits,) you may he sure they would now
+add to their former pride what malice and rage against Shaddai,
+and against his Son, they could.&nbsp; Wherefore, roving and
+ranging in much fury from place to place, if, perhaps, they might
+find something that was the King&rsquo;s, by spoiling of that, to
+revenge themselves on him; at last they happened into this
+spacious country of Universe, and steer their course towards the
+town of Mansoul; and considering that that town was one of the
+chief works and delights of King Shaddai, what do they but, after
+counsel taken, make an assault upon that.&nbsp; I say, they knew
+that Mansoul belonged unto Shaddai; for they were there when he
+built it and beautified it for himself.&nbsp; So when they had
+found the place, they shouted horribly for joy, and roared on it
+as a lion upon the prey, saying, &lsquo;Now we have found the
+prize, and how to be revenged on King Shaddai for what he hath
+done to us.&rsquo;&nbsp; So they sat down and called a council of
+war, and considered with themselves what ways and methods they
+had best to engage in for the winning to themselves this famous
+town of Mansoul, and these four things were then propounded to be
+considered of.</p>
+<p>First.&nbsp; Whether they had best all of them to show
+themselves in this design to the town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>Secondly.&nbsp; Whether they had best to go and sit down
+against Mansoul in their now ragged and beggarly guise.</p>
+<p>Thirdly.&nbsp; Whether they had best show to Mansoul their
+intentions, and what design they came about, or whether to
+assault it with words and ways of deceit.</p>
+<p>Fourthly.&nbsp; Whether they had not best to some of their
+companions to give out private orders to take the advantage, if
+they see one or more of the principal townsmen, to shoot them, if
+thereby they shall judge their cause and design will the better
+be promoted.</p>
+<p>1. It was answered to the first of these proposals in the
+negative, to wit, that it would not be best that all should show
+themselves before the town, because the appearance of many of
+them might alarm and frighten the town; whereas a few or but one
+of them was not so likely to do it.&nbsp; And to enforce this
+advice to take place it was added further, that if Mansoul was
+frighted, or did take the alarm, &lsquo;It is impossible,&rsquo;
+said Diabolus (for he spake now), &lsquo;that we should take the
+town: for that none can enter into it without its own
+consent.&nbsp; Let, therefore, but few, or but one, assault
+Mansoul; and in mine opinion,&rsquo; said Diabolus, &lsquo;let me
+be he.&rsquo;&nbsp; Wherefore to this they all agreed.</p>
+<p>2. And then to the second proposal they came, namely, Whether
+they had best go and sit down before Mansoul in their now ragged
+and beggarly guise.&nbsp; To which it was answered also in the
+negative, By no means; and that because, though the town of
+Mansoul had been made to know, and to have to do, before now,
+with things that are invisible, they did never as yet see any of
+their fellow-creatures in so sad and rascally condition as they;
+and this was the advice of that fierce Alecto.&nbsp; Then said
+Apollyon, &lsquo;The advice is pertinent; for even one of us
+appearing to them as we are now, must needs both beget and
+multiply such thoughts in them as will both put them into a
+consternation of spirit, and necessitate them to put themselves
+upon their guard.&nbsp; And if so,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;then,
+as my Lord Diabolus said but now, it is in vain for us to think
+of taking the town.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then said that mighty giant
+Beelzebub, &lsquo;The advice that already is given is safe; for
+though the men of Mansoul have seen such things as we once were,
+yet hitherto they did never behold such things as we now are; and
+it is best, in mine opinion, to come upon them in such a guise as
+is common to, and most familiar among them.&rsquo;&nbsp; To this,
+when they had consented, the next thing to be considered was, in
+what shape, hue, or guise Diabolus had best to show himself when
+he went about to make Mansoul his own.&nbsp; Then one said one
+thing, and another the contrary.&nbsp; At last Lucifer answered,
+that, in his opinion, it was best that his lordship should assume
+the body of some of those creatures that they of the town had
+dominion over; &lsquo;for,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;these are not
+only familiar to them, but, being under them, they will never
+imagine that an attempt should by them be made upon the town;
+and, to blind all, let him assume the body of one of those beasts
+that Mansoul deems to be wiser than any of the rest.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+This advice was applauded of all: so it was determined that the
+giant Diabolus should assume the dragon, for that he was in those
+days as familiar with the town of Mansoul as now is the bird with
+the boy; for nothing that was in its primitive state was at all
+amazing to them.&nbsp; Then they proceeded to the third thing,
+which was:</p>
+<p>3. Whether they had best to show their intentions, or the
+design of his coming, to Mansoul, or no.&nbsp; This also was
+answered in the negative, because of the weight that was in the
+former reasons, to wit, for that Mansoul were a strong people, a
+strong people in a strong town, whose wall and gates were
+impregnable, (to say nothing of their castle,) nor can they by
+any means be won but by their own consent.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Besides,&rsquo; said Legion, (for he gave answer to this,)
+&lsquo;a discovery of our intentions may make them send to their
+king for aid; and if that be done, I know quickly what time of
+day it will be with us.&nbsp; Therefore let us assault them in
+all pretended fairness, covering our intentions with all manner
+of lies, flatteries, delusive words; feigning things that never
+will be, and promising that to them that they shall never
+find.&nbsp; This is the way to win Mansoul, and to make them of
+themselves open their gates to us; yea, and to desire us too to
+come in to them.&nbsp; And the reason why I think that this
+project will do is, because the people of Mansoul now are, every
+one, simple and innocent, all honest and true; nor do they as yet
+know what it is to be assaulted with fraud, guile, and
+hypocrisy.&nbsp; They are strangers to lying and dissembling
+lips; wherefore we cannot, if thus we be disguised, by them at
+all be discerned; our lies shall go for true sayings, and our
+dissimulations for upright dealings.&nbsp; What we promise them
+they will in that believe us, especially if, in all our lies and
+feigned words, we pretend great love to them, and that our design
+is only their advantage and honour.&rsquo;&nbsp; Now there was
+not one bit of a reply against this; this went as current down as
+doth the water down a steep descent.&nbsp; Wherefore they go to
+consider of the last proposal, which was:</p>
+<p>4. Whether they had not best to give out orders to some of
+their company to shoot some one or more of the principal of the
+townsmen, if they judge that their cause may be promoted
+thereby.&nbsp; This was carried in the affirmative, and the man
+that was designed by this stratagem to be destroyed was one Mr.
+Resistance, otherwise called Captain Resistance.&nbsp; And a
+great man in Mansoul this Captain Resistance was, and a man that
+the giant Diabolus and his band more feared than they feared the
+whole town of Mansoul besides.&nbsp; Now who should be the actor
+to do the murder?&nbsp; That was the next, and they appointed one
+Tisiphone, a fury of the lake, to do it.</p>
+<p>They thus having ended their council of war, rose up, and
+essayed to do as they had determined; they marched towards
+Mansoul, but all in a manner invisible, save one, only one; nor
+did he approach the town in his own likeness, but under the shade
+and in the body of the dragon.</p>
+<p>So they drew up and sat down before Ear-gate, for that was the
+place of hearing for all without the town, as Eye-gate was the
+place of perspection.&nbsp; So, as I said, he came up with his
+train to the gate, and laid his ambuscado for Captain Resistance
+within bow-shot of the town.&nbsp; This done, the giant ascended
+up close to the gate, and called to the town of Mansoul for
+audience.&nbsp; Nor took he any with him but one Ill-pause, who
+was his orator in all difficult matters.&nbsp; Now, as I said, he
+being come up to the gate, (as the manner of those times was,)
+sounded his trumpet for audience; at which the chief of the town
+of Mansoul, such as my Lord Innocent, my Lord Willbewill, my Lord
+Mayor, Mr. Recorder, and Captain Resistance, came down to the
+wall to see who was there, and what was the matter.&nbsp; And my
+Lord Willbewill, when he had looked over and saw who stood at the
+gate, demanded what he was, wherefore he was come, and why he
+roused the town of Mansoul with so unusual a sound.</p>
+<p>Diabolus, then, as if he had been a lamb, began his oration,
+and said: &lsquo;Gentlemen of the famous town of Mansoul, I am,
+as you may perceive, no far dweller from you, but near, and one
+that is bound by the king to do you my homage and what service I
+can; wherefore, that I may be faithful to myself and to you, I
+have somewhat of concern to impart unto you.&nbsp; Wherefore,
+grant me your audience, and hear me patiently.&nbsp; And first, I
+will assure you, it is not myself, but you&mdash;not mine, but
+your advantage that I seek by what I now do, as will full well be
+made manifest, by that I have opened my mind unto you.&nbsp; For,
+gentlemen, I am (to tell you the truth) come to show you how you
+may obtain great and ample deliverance from a bondage that,
+unawares to yourselves, you are captivated and enslaved
+under.&rsquo;&nbsp; At this the town of Mansoul began to prick up
+its ears.&nbsp; And &lsquo;What is it?&nbsp; Pray what is
+it?&rsquo; thought they.&nbsp; And he said, &lsquo;I have
+somewhat to say to you concerning your King, concerning his law,
+and also touching yourselves.&nbsp; Touching your King, I know he
+is great and potent; but yet all that he hath said to you is
+neither true nor yet for your advantage.&nbsp; 1. It is not true,
+for that wherewith he hath hitherto awed you, shall not come to
+pass, nor be fulfilled, though you do the thing that he hath
+forbidden.&nbsp; But if there was danger, what a slavery is it to
+live always in fear of the greatest of punishments, for doing so
+small and trivial a thing as eating of a little fruit is.&nbsp;
+2. Touching his laws, this I say further, they are both
+unreasonable, intricate, and intolerable.&nbsp; Unreasonable, as
+was hinted before; for that the punishment is not proportioned to
+the offence: there is great difference and disproportion between
+the life and an apple; yet the one must go for the other by the
+law of your Shaddai.&nbsp; But it is also intricate, in that he
+saith, first, you may eat of all; and yet after forbids the
+eating of one.&nbsp; And then, in the last place, it must needs
+be intolerable, forasmuch as that fruit which you are forbidden
+to eat of (if you are forbidden any) is that, and that alone,
+which is able, by your eating, to minister to you a good as yet
+unknown by you.&nbsp; This is manifest by the very name of the
+tree; it is called the &ldquo;tree of knowledge of good and
+evil;&rdquo; and have you that knowledge as yet? No, no; nor can
+you conceive how good, how pleasant, and how much to be desired
+to make one wise it is, so long as you stand by your King&rsquo;s
+commandment.&nbsp; Why should you be holden in ignorance and
+blindness?&nbsp; Why should you not be enlarged in knowledge and
+understanding?&nbsp; And now, O ye inhabitants of the famous town
+of Mansoul, to speak more particularly to yourselves you are not
+a free people!&nbsp; You are kept both in bondage and slavery,
+and that by a grievous threat; no reason being annexed but,
+&ldquo;So I will have it; so it shall be.&rdquo;&nbsp; And is it
+not grievous to think on, that that very thing which you are
+forbidden to do might you but do it, would yield you both wisdom
+and honour? for then your eyes will be opened, and you shall be
+as gods.&nbsp; Now, since this is thus,&rsquo; quoth he,
+&lsquo;can you be kept by any prince in more slavery and in
+greater bondage than you are under this day?&nbsp; You are made
+underlings, and are wrapped up in inconveniences, as I have well
+made appear.&nbsp; For what bondage greater than to be kept in
+blindness?&nbsp; Will not reason tell you that it is better to
+have eyes than to be without them? and so to be at liberty to be
+better than to be shut up in a dark and stinking cave?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>And just now, while Diabolus was speaking these words to
+Mansoul, Tisiphone shot at Captain Resistance, where he stood on
+the gate, and mortally wounded him in the head; so that he, to
+the amazement of the townsmen, and the encouragement of Diabolus,
+fell down dead quite over the wall.&nbsp; Now, when Captain
+Resistance was dead, (and he was the only man of war in the
+town,) poor Mansoul was wholly left naked of courage, nor had she
+now any heart to resist.&nbsp; But this was as the devil would
+have it.&nbsp; Then stood forth he, Mr. Ill-pause, that Diabolus
+brought with him, who was his orator; and he addressed himself to
+speak to the town of Mansoul; the tenour of whose speech here
+follows:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Gentlemen,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;it is my
+master&rsquo;s happiness that he has this day a quiet and
+teachable auditory; and it is hoped by us that we shall prevail
+with you not to cast off good advice.&nbsp; My master has a very
+great love for you; and although, as he very well knows, that he
+runs the hazard of the anger of King Shaddai, yet love to you
+will make him do more than that.&nbsp; Nor doth there need that a
+word more should be spoken to confirm for truth what he hath
+said; there is not a word but carries with it self-evidence in
+its bowels; the very name of the tree may put an end to all
+controversy in this matter.&nbsp; I therefore, at this time,
+shall only add this advice to you, under and by the leave of my
+lord;&rsquo; (and with that he made Diabolus a very low congee;)
+&lsquo;consider his words, look on the tree and the promising
+fruit thereof; remember also that yet you know but little, and
+that this is the way to know more: and if your reasons be not
+conquered to accept of such good counsel, you are not the men
+that I took you to be.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>But when the townsfolk saw that the tree was good for food,
+and that it was pleasant to the eye, and a tree to be desired to
+make one wise, they did as old Ill-pause advised; they took and
+did eat thereof.&nbsp; Now this I should have told you before,
+that even then, when this Ill-pause was making his speech to the
+townsmen, my Lord Innocency (whether by a shot from the camp of
+the giant, or from some sinking qualm that suddenly took him, or
+whether by the stinking breath of that treacherous villain old
+Ill-pause, for so I am most apt to think) sunk down in the place
+where he stood, nor could be brought to life again.&nbsp; Thus
+these two brave men died&mdash;brave men, I call them; for they
+were the beauty and glory of Mansoul, so long as they lived
+therein; nor did there now remain any more a noble spirit in
+Mansoul; they all fell down and yielded obedience to Diabolus;
+and became his slaves and vassals, as you shall hear.</p>
+<p>Now these being dead, what do the rest of the townsfolk, but,
+as men that had found a fool&rsquo;s paradise, they presently, as
+afore was hinted, fall to prove the truth of the giant&rsquo;s
+words.&nbsp; And, first, they did as Ill-pause had taught them;
+they looked, they considered they were taken with the forbidden
+fruit; they took thereof, and did eat; and having eaten, they
+became immediately drunken therewith.&nbsp; So they open the
+gate, both Ear-gate and Eye-gate, and let in Diabolus with all
+his bands, quite forgetting their good Shaddai, his law, and the
+judgment that he had annexed, with solemn threatening, to the
+breach thereof.</p>
+<p>Diabolus, having now obtained entrance in at the gates of the
+town, marches up to the middle thereof, to make his conquest as
+sure as he could; and finding, by this time, the affections of
+the people warmly inclining to him, he, as thinking it was best
+striking while the iron is hot, made this further deceivable
+speech unto them, saying, &lsquo;Alas, my poor Mansoul!&nbsp; I
+have done thee indeed this service, as to promote thee to honour,
+and to greaten thy liberty; but, alas! alas! poor Mansoul, thou
+wantest now one to defend thee; for assure thyself that when
+Shaddai shall hear what is done, he will come; for sorry will he
+be that thou hast broken his bonds, and cast his cords away from
+thee.&nbsp; What wilt thou do?&nbsp; Wilt thou, after
+enlargement, suffer thy privileges to be invaded and taken away,
+or what wilt resolve with thyself?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then they all with one consent said to this bramble, &lsquo;Do
+thou reign over us.&rsquo;&nbsp; So he accepted the motion, and
+became the king of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; This being done,
+the next thing was to give him possession of the castle, and so
+of the whole strength of the town.&nbsp; Wherefore, into the
+castle he goes; it was that which Shaddai built in Mansoul for
+his own delight and pleasure; this now was become a den and hold
+for the giant Diabolus.</p>
+<p>Now, having got possession of this stately palace or castle,
+what doth he but makes it a garrison for himself, and strengthens
+and fortifies it with all sorts of provision, against the King
+Shaddai, or those that should endeavour the regaining of it to
+him and his obedience again.</p>
+<p>This done, but not thinking himself yet secure enough, in the
+next place he bethinks himself of new modelling the town; and so
+he does, setting up one, and putting down another at
+pleasure.&nbsp; Wherefore my Lord Mayor, whose name was my Lord
+Understanding, and Mr. Recorder, whose name was Mr. Conscience,
+these he put out of place and power.</p>
+<p>As for my Lord Mayor, though he was an understanding man, and
+one too that had complied with the rest of the town of Mansoul in
+admitting the giant into the town, yet Diabolus thought not fit
+to let him abide in his former lustre and glory, because he was a
+seeing man.&nbsp; Wherefore he darkened him, not only by taking
+from him his office and power, but by building a high and strong
+tower, just between the sun&rsquo;s reflections and the windows
+of my lord&rsquo;s palace; by which means his house and all, and
+the whole of his habitation, were made as dark as darkness
+itself.&nbsp; And thus, being alienated from the light, he became
+as one that was born blind.&nbsp; To this, his house, my lord was
+confined as to a prison; nor might he, upon his parole, go
+farther than within his own bounds.&nbsp; And now, had he had a
+heart to do for Mansoul, what could he do for it, or wherein
+could he be profitable to her?&nbsp; So then, so long as Mansoul
+was under the power and government of Diabolus, (and so long it
+was under him, as it was obedient to him, which was even until by
+a war it was rescued out of his hand,) so long my Lord Mayor was
+rather an impediment in, than an advantage to the famous town of
+Mansoul.</p>
+<p>As for Mr. Recorder, before the town was taken, he was a man
+well read in the laws of his king, and also a man of courage and
+faithfulness to speak truth at every occasion; and he had a
+tongue as bravely hung as he had a head filled with
+judgment.&nbsp; Now, this man Diabolus could by no means abide,
+because, though he gave his consent to his coming into the town,
+yet he could not, by all the wiles, trials, stratagems, and
+devices that he could use, make him wholly his own.&nbsp; True,
+he was much degenerated from his former king, and also much
+pleased with many of the giant&rsquo;s laws and service; but all
+this would not do, forasmuch as he was not wholly his.&nbsp; He
+would now and then think upon Shaddai, and have dread of his law
+upon him, and then he would speak against Diabolus with a voice
+as great as when a lion roareth.&nbsp; Yea, and would also at
+certain times, when his fits were upon him, (for you must know
+that sometimes he had terrible fits,) make the whole town of
+Mansoul shake with his voice: and therefore the now king of
+Mansoul could not abide him.</p>
+<p>Diabolus, therefore, feared the Recorder more than any that
+was left alive in the town of Mansoul, because, as I said, his
+words did shake the whole town; they were like the rattling
+thunder, and also like thunder-claps.&nbsp; Since, therefore, the
+giant could not make him wholly his own, what doth he do but
+studies all that he could to debauch the old gentleman, and by
+debauchery to stupefy his mind, and more harden his heart in the
+ways of vanity.&nbsp; And as he attempted, so he accomplished his
+design: he debauched the man, and by little and little so drew
+him into sin and wickedness, that at last he was not only
+debauched, as at first, and so by consequence defiled, but was
+almost (at last, I say) past all conscience of sin.&nbsp; And
+this was the farthest Diabolus could go.&nbsp; Wherefore he
+bethinks him of another project, and that was, to persuade the
+men of the town that Mr. Recorder was mad, and so not to be
+regarded.&nbsp; And for this he urged his fits, and said,
+&lsquo;If he be himself, why doth he not do thus always?&nbsp;
+But,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;as all mad folks have their fits,
+and in them their raving language, so hath this old and doating
+gentleman.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Thus, by one means or another, he quickly got Mansoul to
+slight, neglect, and despise whatever Mr. Recorder could
+say.&nbsp; For, besides what already you have heard, Diabolus had
+a way to make the old gentleman, when he was merry, unsay and
+deny what he in his fits had affirmed.&nbsp; And, indeed, this
+was the next way to make himself ridiculous, and to cause that no
+man should regard him.&nbsp; Also now he never spake freely for
+King Shaddai, but also by force and constraint.&nbsp; Besides, he
+would at one time be hot against that at which, at another, he
+would hold his peace; so uneven was he now in his doings.&nbsp;
+Sometimes he would be as if fast asleep, and again sometimes as
+dead, even then when the whole town of Mansoul was in her career
+after vanity, and in her dance after the giant&rsquo;s pipe.</p>
+<p>Wherefore, sometimes when Mansoul did use to be frighted with
+the thundering voice of the Recorder that was, and when they did
+tell Diabolus of it, he would answer, that what the old gentleman
+said was neither of love to him nor pity to them, but of a
+foolish fondness that he had to be prating; and so would hush,
+still, and put all to quiet again.&nbsp; And that he might leave
+no argument unurged that might tend to make them secure, he said,
+and said it often, &lsquo;O Mansoul! consider that,
+notwithstanding the old gentleman&rsquo;s rage, and the rattle of
+his high and thundering words, you hear nothing of Shaddai
+himself;&rsquo; when, liar and deceiver that he was, every outcry
+of Mr. Recorder against the sin of Mansoul was the voice of God
+in him to them.&nbsp; But he goes on, and says, &lsquo;You see
+that he values not the loss nor rebellion of the town of Mansoul,
+nor will he trouble himself with calling his town to a reckoning
+for their giving themselves to me.&nbsp; He knows that though you
+were his, now you are lawfully mine; so, leaving us one to
+another, he now hath shaken his hands of us.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Moreover, O Mansoul!&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;consider
+how I have served you, even to the uttermost of my power; and
+that with the best that I have, could get, or procure for you in
+all the world: besides, I dare say that the laws and customs that
+you now are under, and by which you do homage to me, do yield you
+more solace and content than did the paradise that at first you
+possessed.&nbsp; Your liberty also, as yourselves do very well
+know, has been greatly widened and enlarged by me; whereas I
+found you a penned-up people.&nbsp; I have not laid any restraint
+upon you; you have no law, statute, or judgment of mine to fright
+you; I call none of you to account for your doings, except the
+madman&mdash;you know who I mean; I have granted you to live,
+each man like a prince in his own, even with as little control
+from me as I myself have from you.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>And thus would Diabolus hush up and quiet the town of Mansoul,
+when the Recorder that was, did at times molest them: yea, and
+with such cursed orations as these, would set the whole town in a
+rage and fury against the old gentleman.&nbsp; Yea, the rascal
+crew at some times would be for destroying him.&nbsp; They have
+often wished, in my hearing, that he had lived a thousand miles
+off from them: his company, his words, yea, the sight of him, and
+specially when they remembered how in old times he did use to
+threaten and condemn them, (for all he was now so debauched,) did
+terrify and afflict them sore.</p>
+<p>But all wishes were vain, for I do not know how, unless by the
+power of Shaddai, and his wisdom, he was preserved in being
+amongst them.&nbsp; Besides, his house was as strong as a castle,
+and stood hard by a stronghold of the town: moreover, if at any
+time any of the crew or rabble attempted to make him away, he
+could pull up the sluices, and let in such floods as would drown
+all round about him.</p>
+<p>But to leave Mr. Recorder, and to come to my Lord Willbewill,
+another of the gentry of the famous town of Mansoul.&nbsp; This
+Willbewill was as high-born as any man in Mansoul, and was as
+much, if not more, a freeholder than many of them were; besides,
+if I remember my tale aright, he had some privileges peculiar to
+himself in the famous town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Now, together with
+these, he was a man of great strength, resolution, and courage,
+nor in his occasion could any turn him away.&nbsp; But I say,
+whether he was proud of his estate, privileges, strength, or
+what, (but sure it was through pride of something,) he scorns now
+to be a slave in Mansoul; and therefore resolves to bear office
+under Diabolus, that he might (such an one as he was) be a petty
+ruler and governor in Mansoul.&nbsp; And, headstrong man that he
+was! thus he began betimes; for this man, when Diabolus did make
+his oration at Ear-gate, was one of the first that was for
+consenting to his words, and for accepting his counsel at
+wholesome, and that was for the opening of the gate, and for
+letting him into the town; wherefore Diabolus had a kindness for
+him, and therefore he designed for him a place.&nbsp; And
+perceiving the valour and stoutness of the man, he coveted to
+have him for one of his great ones, to act and do in matters of
+the highest concern.</p>
+<p>So he sent for him, and talked with him of that secret matter
+that lay in his breast, but there needed not much persuasion in
+the case.&nbsp; For as at first he was willing that Diabolus
+should be let into the town, so now he was as willing to serve
+him there.&nbsp; When the tyrant, therefore, perceived the
+willingness of my lord to serve him, and that his mind stood
+bending that way, he forthwith made him the captain of the
+castle, governor of the wall, and keeper of the gates of Mansoul:
+yea, there was a clause in his commission, that nothing without
+him should be done in all the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; So that now,
+next to Diabolus himself, who but my Lord Willbewill in all the
+town of Mansoul! nor could anything now be done, but at his will
+and pleasure, throughout the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; He had also
+one Mr. Mind for his clerk, a man to speak on every way like his
+master: for he and his lord were in principle one, and in
+practice not far asunder.&nbsp; And now was Mansoul brought under
+to purpose, and made to fulfil the lusts of the will, and of the
+mind.</p>
+<p>But it will not out of my thoughts what a desperate one this
+Willbewill was when power was put into his hand.&nbsp; First, he
+flatly denied that he owed any suit or service to his former
+prince and liege lord.&nbsp; This done, in the next place he took
+an oath, and swore fidelity to his great master Diabolus, and
+then, being stated and settled in his places, offices,
+advancements, and preferments, oh! you cannot think, unless you
+had seen it, the strange work that this workman made in the town
+of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>First, he maligned Mr. Recorder to death; he would neither
+endure to see him, nor hear the words of his mouth; he would shut
+his eyes when he saw him, and stop his ears when he heard him
+speak.&nbsp; Also he could not endure that so much as a fragment
+of the law of Shaddai should be anywhere seen in the town.&nbsp;
+For example, his clerk, Mr. Mind, had some old, rent, and torn
+parchments of the law of Shaddai in his house, but when
+Willbewill saw them, he cast them behind his back.&nbsp; True,
+Mr. Recorder had some of the laws in his study; but my lord could
+by no means come at them.&nbsp; He also thought and said, that
+the windows of my old Lord Mayor&rsquo;s house were always too
+light for the profit of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; The light of a
+candle he could not endure.&nbsp; Now nothing at all pleased
+Willbewill but what pleased Diabolus his lord.</p>
+<p>There was none like him to trumpet about the streets the brave
+nature, the wise conduct, and great glory of the king
+Diabolus.&nbsp; He would range and rove throughout all the
+streets of Mansoul to cry up his illustrious lord, and would make
+himself even as an abject, among the base and rascal crew, to cry
+up his valiant prince.&nbsp; And I say, when and wheresoever he
+found these vassals, he would even make himself as one of
+them.&nbsp; In all ill courses he would act without bidding, and
+do mischief without commandment.</p>
+<p>The Lord Willbewill also had a deputy under him, and his name
+was Mr. Affection, one that was also greatly debauched in his
+principles, and answerable thereto in his life: he was wholly
+given to the flesh, and therefore they called him
+Vile-Affection.&nbsp; Now there was he and one Carnal-Lust, the
+daughter of Mr. Mind, (like to like,) that fell in love, and made
+a match, and were married; and, as I take it, they had several
+children, as Impudent, Blackmouth, and Hate-Reproof.&nbsp; These
+three were black boys.&nbsp; And besides these they had three
+daughters, as Scorn-Truth and Slight-God, and the name of the
+youngest was Revenge.&nbsp; These were all married in the town,
+and also begot and yielded many bad brats, too many to be here
+inserted.&nbsp; But to pass by this.</p>
+<p>When the giant had thus engarrisoned himself in the town of
+Mansoul, and had put down and set up whom he thought good, he
+betakes himself to defacing.&nbsp; Now there was in the
+market-place in Mansoul, and also upon the gates of the castle,
+an image of the blessed King Shaddai.&nbsp; This image was so
+exactly engraven, (and it was engraven in gold,) that it did the
+most resemble Shaddai himself of anything that then was extant in
+the world.&nbsp; This he basely commanded to be defaced, and it
+was as basely done by the hand of Mr. No-Truth.&nbsp; Now you
+must know that, as Diabolus had commanded, and that by the hand
+of Mr. No-Truth, the image of Shaddai was defaced, he likewise
+gave order that the same Mr. No-Truth should set up in its stead
+the horrid and formidable image of Diabolus, to the great
+contempt of the former King, and debasing of his town of
+Mansoul.</p>
+<p>Moreover, Diabolus made havoc of all remains of the laws and
+statutes of Shaddai that could be found in the town of Mansoul;
+to wit, such as contained either the doctrines of morals, with
+all civil and natural documents.&nbsp; Also relative severities
+he sought to extinguish.&nbsp; To be short, there was nothing of
+the remains of good in Mansoul which he and Willbewill sought not
+to destroy; for their design was to turn Mansoul into a brute,
+and to make it like to the sensual sow, by the hand of Mr.
+No-Truth.</p>
+<p>When he had destroyed what law and good orders he could, then
+further to effect his design, namely, to alienate Mansoul from
+Shaddai her King, he commands, and they set up his own vain
+edicts, statutes, and commandments, in all places of resort or
+concourse in Mansoul, to wit, such as gave liberty to the lusts
+of the flesh, the lusts of the eyes, and the pride of life, which
+are not of Shaddai, but of the world.&nbsp; He encouraged,
+countenanced, and promoted lasciviousness, and all ungodliness
+there.&nbsp; Yea, much more did Diabolus to encourage wickedness
+in the town of Mansoul; he promised them peace, content, joy, and
+bliss, in doing his commands, and that they should never be
+called to an account for their not doing the contrary.&nbsp; And
+let this serve to give a taste to them that love to hear tell of
+what is done beyond their knowledge afar off in other
+countries.</p>
+<p>Now Mansoul being wholly at his beck, and brought wholly to
+his bow, nothing was heard or seen therein but that which tended
+to set up him.</p>
+<p>But now he, having disabled the Lord Mayor and Mr. Recorder
+from bearing of office in Mansoul, and seeing that the town,
+before he came to it, was the most ancient of corporations in the
+world, and fearing, if he did not maintain greatness, they at any
+time should object that he had done them an injury; therefore, I
+say, (that they might see that he did not intend to lessen their
+grandeur, or to take from them any of their advantageous things,)
+he did choose for them a Lord Mayor and a Recorder himself, and
+such as contented them at the heart, and such also as pleased him
+wondrous well.</p>
+<p>The name of the Mayor that was of Diabolus&rsquo; making was
+the Lord Lustings, a man that had neither eyes nor ears.&nbsp;
+All that he did, whether as a man or an officer, he did it
+naturally, as doth the beast.&nbsp; And that which made him yet
+the more ignoble, though not to Mansoul, yet to them that beheld
+and were grieved for its ruin, was, that he never could favour
+good, but evil.</p>
+<p>The Recorder was one whose name was Forget-Good, and a very
+sorry fellow he was.&nbsp; He could remember nothing but
+mischief, and to do it with delight.&nbsp; He was naturally prone
+to do things that were hurtful, even hurtful to the town of
+Mansoul, and to all the dwellers there.&nbsp; These two,
+therefore, by their power and practice, examples, and smiles upon
+evil, did much more grammar and settle the common people in
+hurtful ways.&nbsp; For who doth not perceive that when those
+that sit aloft are vile and corrupt themselves, they corrupt the
+whole region and country where they are?</p>
+<p>Besides these, Diabolus made several burgesses and aldermen in
+Mansoul, such as out of whom the town, when it needed, might
+choose them officers, governors, and magistrates.&nbsp; And these
+are the names of the chief of them: Mr. Incredulity, Mr. Haughty,
+Mr. Swearing, Mr. Whoring, Mr. Hard-Heart, Mr. Pitiless, Mr.
+Fury, Mr. No-Truth, Mr. Stand-to-Lies, Mr. False-Peace, Mr.
+Drunkenness, Mr. Cheating, Mr. Atheism&mdash;thirteen in
+all.&nbsp; Mr. Incredulity is the eldest, and Mr. Atheism the
+youngest of the company.</p>
+<p>There was also an election of common councilmen and others, as
+bailiffs, sergeants, constables, and others; but all of them like
+to those afore-named, being either fathers, brothers, cousins, or
+nephews to them, whose names, for brevity&rsquo;s sake, I omit to
+mention.</p>
+<p>When the giant had thus far proceeded in his work, in the next
+place, he betook him to build some strongholds in the town, and
+he built three that seemed to be impregnable.&nbsp; The first he
+called the Hold of Defiance, because it was made to command the
+whole town, and to keep it from the knowledge of its ancient
+King.&nbsp; The second he called Midnight Hold, because it was
+built on purpose to keep Mansoul from the true knowledge of
+itself.&nbsp; The third was called Sweet-Sin Hold, because by
+that he fortified Mansoul against all desires of good.&nbsp; The
+first of these holds stood close by Eye-gate, that, as much might
+be, light might be darkened there; the second was built hard by
+the old castle, to the end that that might be made more blind, if
+possible; and the third stood in the market-place.</p>
+<p>He that Diabolus made governor over the first of these was one
+Spite-God, a most blasphemous wretch: he came with the whole
+rabble of them that came against Mansoul at first, and was
+himself one of themselves.&nbsp; He that was made the governor of
+Midnight Hold was one Love-no-Light; he was also of them that
+came first against the town.&nbsp; And he that was made the
+governor of the hold called Sweet-Sin Hold was one whose name was
+Love-Flesh: he was also a very lewd fellow, but not of that
+country where the other are bound.&nbsp; This fellow could find
+more sweetness when he stood sucking of a lust than he did in all
+the paradise of God.</p>
+<p>And now Diabolus thought himself safe.&nbsp; He had taken
+Mansoul, he had engarrisoned himself therein; he had put down the
+old officers, and had set up new ones; he had defaced the image
+of Shaddai, and had set up his own; he had spoiled the old law
+books, and had promoted his own vain lies; he had made him new
+magistrates, and set up new aldermen; he had builded him new
+holds, and had manned them for himself: and all this he did to
+make himself secure, in case the good Shaddai, or his Son, should
+come to make an incursion upon him.</p>
+<p>Now you may well think, that long before this time, word, by
+some one or other, could not but be carried to the good King
+Shaddai, how his Mansoul, in the continent of Universe, was lost;
+and that the runagate giant Diabolus, once one of his
+Majesty&rsquo;s servants, had, in rebellion against the King,
+made sure thereof for himself.&nbsp; Yea, tidings were carried
+and brought to the King thereof, and that to a very
+circumstance.</p>
+<p>At first, how Diabolus came upon Mansoul (they being a simple
+people and innocent) with craft, subtlety, lies, and guile.&nbsp;
+<i>Item</i>, that he had treacherously slain the right noble and
+valiant captain, their Captain Resistance, as he stood upon the
+gate with the rest of the townsmen.&nbsp; <i>Item</i>, how my
+brave Lord Innocent fell down dead (with grief, some say, or with
+being poisoned with the stinking breath of one Ill-Pause, as say
+others) at the hearing of his just lord and rightful prince,
+Shaddai, so abused by the mouth of so filthy a Diabolian as that
+varlet Ill-Pause was.&nbsp; The messenger further told, that
+after this Ill-Pause had made a short oration to the townsmen in
+behalf of Diabolus, his master; the simple town, believing that
+what was said was true, with one consent did open Ear-gate, the
+chief gate of the corporation, and did let him, with his crew,
+into a possession of the famous town of Mansoul.&nbsp; He further
+showed how Diabolus had served the Lord Mayor and Mr. Recorder,
+to wit, that he had put them from all place of power and
+trust.&nbsp; <i>Item</i>, he showed also that my Lord Willbewill
+was turned a very rebel, and runagate, and that so was one Mr.
+Mind, his clerk; and that they two did range and revel it all the
+town over, and teach the wicked ones their ways.&nbsp; He said,
+moreover, that this Willbewill was put into great trust, and
+particularly that Diabolus had put into Willbewill&rsquo;s hand
+all the strong places in Mansoul; and that Mr. Affection was made
+my Lord Willbewill&rsquo;s deputy in his most rebellious
+affairs.&nbsp; &lsquo;Yea,&rsquo; said the messenger, &lsquo;this
+monster, Lord Willbewill, has openly disavowed his King Shaddai,
+and hath horribly given his faith and plighted his troth to
+Diabolus.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Also,&rsquo; said the messenger, &lsquo;besides all
+this, the new king, or rather rebellious tyrant, over the once
+famous, but now perishing town of Mansoul, has set up a Lord
+Mayor and a Recorder of his own.&nbsp; For Mayor, he has set up
+one Mr. Lustings; and for Recorder, Mr. Forget-Good; two of the
+vilest of all the town of Mansoul.&rsquo;&nbsp; This faithful
+messenger also proceeded, and told what a sort of new burgesses
+Diabolus had made; also that he had built several strong forts,
+towers, and strongholds in Mansoul.&nbsp; He told, too, the which
+I had almost forgot, how Diabolus had put the town of Mansoul
+into arms, the better to capacitate them, on his behalf, to make
+resistance against Shaddai their King, should he come to reduce
+them to their former obedience.</p>
+<p>Now this tidings-teller did not deliver his relation of things
+in private, but in open court, the King and his Son, high lords,
+chief captains, and nobles, being all there present to
+hear.&nbsp; But by that they had heard the whole of the story, it
+would have amazed one to have seen, had he been there to behold
+it, what sorrow and grief, and compunction of spirit, there was
+among all sorts, to think that famous Mansoul was now taken: only
+the King and his Son foresaw all this long before, yea, and
+sufficiently provided for the relief of Mansoul, though they told
+not everybody thereof.&nbsp; Yet because they also would have a
+share in condoling of the Misery of Mansoul, therefore they also
+did, and that at a rate of the highest degree, bewail the losing
+of Mansoul.&nbsp; The King said plainly that it grieved him at
+the heart, and you may be sure that his Son was not a whit behind
+him.&nbsp; Thus gave they conviction to all about them that they
+had love and compassion for the famous town of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+Well, when the King and his Son were retired into the privy
+chamber, there they again consulted about what they had designed
+before, to wit, that as Mansoul should in time be suffered to be
+lost, so as certainly it should be recovered again; recovered, I
+say, in such a way, as that both the King and his Son would get
+themselves eternal fame and glory thereby.&nbsp; Wherefore, after
+this consult, the Son of Shaddai (a sweet and comely Person, and
+one that had always great affection for those that were in
+affliction, but one that had mortal enmity in his heart against
+Diabolus, because he was designed for it, and because he sought
+his crown and dignity)&mdash;this Son of Shaddai, I say, having
+stricken hands with his Father and promised that he would be his
+servant to recover his Mansoul again, stood by his resolution,
+nor would he repent of the same.&nbsp; The purport of which
+agreement was this: to wit, that at a certain time, prefixed by
+both, the King&rsquo;s Son should take a journey into the country
+of Universe, and there, in a way of justice and equity, by making
+amends for the follies of Mansoul, he should lay a foundation of
+perfect deliverance from Diabolus and from his tyranny.</p>
+<p>Moreover Emmanuel resolved to make, at a time convenient, a
+war upon the giant Diabolus, even while he was possessed of the
+town of Mansoul; and that he would fairly by strength of hand
+drive him out of his hold, his nest, and take it to himself to be
+his habitation.</p>
+<p>This now being resolved upon, order was given to the Lord
+Chief Secretary to draw up a fair record of what was determined,
+and to cause that it should be published in all the corners of
+the kingdom of Universe.&nbsp; A short breviate of the contents
+thereof you may, if you please, take here as follows:</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Let all men know who are concerned, that the Son of
+Shaddai, the great King, is engaged by covenant to his Father to
+bring his Mansoul to him again; yea, and to put Mansoul, too,
+through the power of his matchless love, into a far better and
+more happy condition than it was in before it was taken by
+Diabolus.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>These papers, therefore, were published in several places, to
+the no little molestation of the tyrant Diabolus; &lsquo;for
+now,&rsquo; thought he, &lsquo;I shall be molested, and my
+habitation will be taken from me.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>But when this matter, I mean this purpose of the King and his
+Son, did at first take air at court, who can tell how the high
+lords, chief captains, and noble princes that were there, were
+taken with the business!&nbsp; First, they whispered it one to
+another, and after that it began to ring out through the
+King&rsquo;s palace, all wondering at the glorious design that
+between the King and his Son was on foot for the miserable town
+of Mansoul.&nbsp; Yea, the courtiers could scarce do anything
+either for the King or kingdom, but they would mix, with the
+doing thereof, a noise of the love of the King and his Son, that
+they had for the town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>Nor could these lords, high captains, and princes be content
+to keep this news at court; yea, before the records thereof were
+perfected, themselves came down and told it in Universe.&nbsp; At
+last it came to the ears, as I said, of Diabolus, to his no
+little discontent; for you must think it would perplex him to
+hear of such a design against him.&nbsp; Well, but after a few
+casts in his mind, he concluded upon these four things.</p>
+<p>First, that this news, these good tidings, (if possible,)
+should be kept from the ears of the town of Mansoul;
+&lsquo;for,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;if they should once come to
+the knowledge that Shaddai, their former King, and Emmanuel his
+Son, are contriving good for the town of Mansoul, what can be
+expected by me, but that Mansoul will make a revolt from under my
+hand and government, and return again to him?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Now, to accomplish this his design, he renews his flattery
+with my Lord Willbewill, and also gives him strict charge and
+command, that he should keep watch by day and by night at all the
+gates of the town, especially Ear-gate and Eye-gate; &lsquo;for I
+hear of a design,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;a design to make us all
+traitors, and that Mansoul must be reduced to its first bondage
+again.&nbsp; I hope they are but flying stories,&rsquo; quoth he;
+&lsquo;however, let no such news by any means be let into
+Mansoul, lest the people be dejected thereat.&nbsp; I think, my
+lord, it can be no welcome news to you; I am sure it is none to
+me; and I think that, at this time, it should be all our wisdom
+and care to nip the head of all such rumours as shall tend to
+trouble our people.&nbsp; Wherefore I desire, my lord, that you
+will in this matter do as I say.&nbsp; Let there be strong guards
+daily kept at every gate of the town.&nbsp; Stop also and examine
+from whence such come that you perceive do from far come hither
+to trade, nor let them by any means be admitted into Mansoul,
+unless you shall plainly perceive that they are favourers of our
+excellent government.&nbsp; I command, moreover,&rsquo; said
+Diabolus, &lsquo;that there be spies continually walking up and
+down the town of Mansoul, and let them have power to suppress and
+destroy any that they shall perceive to be plotting against us,
+or that shall prate of what by Shaddai and Emmanuel is
+intended.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>This, therefore, was accordingly done; my Lord Willbewill
+hearkened to his lord and master, went willingly after the
+commandment, and, with all the diligence he could, kept any that
+would from going out abroad, or that sought to bring these
+tidings to Mansoul, from coming into the town.</p>
+<p>Secondly, this done, in the next place, Diabolus, that he
+might make Mansoul as sure as he could, frames and imposes a new
+oath and horrible covenant upon the townsfolk:&mdash;To wit, that
+they should never desert him nor his government, nor yet betray
+him, nor seek to alter his laws; but that they should own,
+confess, stand by, and acknowledge him for their rightful king,
+in defiance to any that do or hereafter shall, by any pretence,
+law, or title whatever, lay claim to the town of Mansoul;
+thinking, belike, that Shaddai had not power to absolve them from
+this covenant with death, and agreement with hell.&nbsp; Nor did
+the silly Mansoul stick or boggle at all at this most monstrous
+engagement; but, as if it had been a sprat in the mouth of a
+whale, they swallowed it without any chewing.&nbsp; Were they
+troubled at all?&nbsp; Nay, they rather bragged and boasted of
+their so brave fidelity to the tyrant, their pretended king,
+swearing that they would never be changelings, nor forsake their
+old lord for a new.&nbsp; Thus did Diabolus tie poor Mansoul
+fast.</p>
+<p>Thirdly.&nbsp; But jealousy, that never thinks itself strong
+enough, put him, in the next place, upon another exploit, which
+was, yet more, if possible, to debauch this town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; Wherefore he caused, by the hand of one Mr. Filth,
+an odious, nasty, lascivious piece of beastliness to be drawn up
+in writing, and to be set upon the castle gates; whereby he
+granted and gave license to all his true and trusty sons in
+Mansoul to do whatsoever their lustful appetites prompted them to
+do; and that no man was to let, hinder, or control them, upon
+pain of incurring the displeasure of their prince.</p>
+<p>Now this he did for these reasons:&mdash;</p>
+<p>1. That the town of Mansoul might be yet made weaker and
+weaker, and so more unable, should tidings come that their
+redemption was designed, to believe, hope, or consent to the
+truth thereof; for reason says, The bigger the sinner, the less
+grounds of hopes of mercy.</p>
+<p>2. The second reason was, if perhaps Emmanuel, the Son of
+Shaddai their King, by seeing the horrible and profane doings of
+the town of Mansoul, might repent, though entered into a covenant
+of redeeming them, of pursuing that covenant of their redemption;
+for he knew that Shaddai was holy, and that his Son Emmanuel was
+holy; yea, he knew it by woeful experience, for for his iniquity
+and sin was Diabolus cast from the highest orbs.&nbsp; Wherefore
+what more rational than for him to conclude that thus, for sin,
+it might fare with Mansoul?&nbsp; But fearing also lest this knot
+should break, he bethinks himself of another, to wit:&mdash;</p>
+<p>Fourthly.&nbsp; To endeavour to possess all hearts in the town
+of Mansoul that Shaddai was raising an army, to come to overthrow
+and utterly to destroy this town of Mansoul.&nbsp; And this he
+did to forestall any tidings that might come to their ears of
+their deliverance: &lsquo;For,&rsquo; thought he, &lsquo;if I
+first bruit this, the tidings that shall come after will all be
+swallowed up of this; for what else will Mansoul say, when they
+shall hear that they must be delivered, but that the true meaning
+is, Shaddai intends to destroy them?&nbsp; Wherefore he summons
+the whole town into the market-place, and there, with deceitful
+tongue, thus he addressed himself unto them:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Gentlemen, and my very good friends, you are all, as
+you know, my legal subjects, and men of the famous town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; You know how, from the first day that I have been
+with you until now, I have behaved myself among you, and what
+liberty and great privileges you have enjoyed under my
+government, I hope to your honour and mine, and also to your
+content and delight.&nbsp; Now, my famous Mansoul, a noise of
+trouble there is abroad, of trouble to the town of Mansoul; sorry
+I am thereof for your sakes: for I received but now by the post
+from my Lord Lucifer, (and he useth to have good intelligence,)
+that your old King Shaddai is raising an army to come against
+you, to destroy you root and branch; and this, O Mansoul, is now
+the cause that at this time I have called you together, namely,
+to advise what in this juncture is best to be done.&nbsp; For my
+part, I am but one, and can with ease shift for myself, did I
+list to seek my own case, and to leave my Mansoul in all the
+danger; but my heart is so firmly united to you, and so unwilling
+am I to leave you, that I am willing to stand and fall with you,
+to the utmost hazard that shall befall me.&nbsp; What say you, O
+my Mansoul?&nbsp; Will you now desert your old friend, or do you
+think of standing by me?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then, as one man, with one mouth, they cried out together,
+&lsquo;Let him die the death that will not.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said Diabolus again, &lsquo;It is in vain for us to hope
+for quarter, for this King knows not how to show it.&nbsp; True,
+perhaps, he, at his first sitting down before us, will talk of
+and pretend to mercy, that thereby, with the more ease, and less
+trouble, he may again make himself the master of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+Whatever, therefore, he shall say, believe not one syllable or
+tittle of it; for all such language is but to overcome us, and to
+make us, while we wallow in our blood, the trophies of his
+merciless victory.&nbsp; My mind is, therefore, that we resolve
+to the last man to resist him, and not to believe him upon any
+terms, for in at that door will come our danger.&nbsp; But shall
+we be flattered out of our lives?&nbsp; I hope you know more of
+the rudiments of politics than to suffer yourselves so pitifully
+to be served.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;But suppose he should, if he get us to yield, save some
+of our lives, or the lives of some of them that are underlings in
+Mansoul, what help will that be to you that are the chief of the
+town, especially you whom I have set up and whose greatness has
+been procured by you through your faithful sticking to me?&nbsp;
+And suppose, again, that he should give quarter to every one of
+you, be sure he will bring you into that bondage under which you
+were captivated before, or a worse, and then what good will your
+lives do you?&nbsp; Shall you with him live in pleasure as you do
+now?&nbsp; No, no; you must be bound by laws that will pinch you,
+and be made to do that which at present is hateful to you.&nbsp;
+I am for you, if you are for me; and it is better to die
+valiantly than to live like pitiful slaves.&nbsp; But, I say, the
+life of a slave will be counted a life too good for Mansoul
+now.&nbsp; Blood, blood, nothing but blood is in every blast of
+Shaddai&rsquo;s trumpet against poor Mansoul now.&nbsp; Pray, be
+concerned; I hear he is coming.&nbsp; Up, and stand to your arms
+that now, while you have any leisure, I may learn you some feats
+of war.&nbsp; Armour for you I have, and by me it is; yea, and it
+is sufficient for Mansoul from top to toe; nor can you be hurt by
+what his force can do, if you shall keep it well girt and
+fastened about you.&nbsp; Come, therefore, to my castle, and
+welcome, and harness yourselves for the war.&nbsp; There is
+helmet, breastplate, sword, and shield, and what not, that will
+make you fight like men.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;1. My helmet, otherwise called an head-piece, is in
+hope of doing well at last, what lives soever you live.&nbsp;
+This is that which they had who said, that they should have
+peace, though they walked in the wickedness of their heart, to
+add drunkenness to thirst.&nbsp; A piece of approved armour this
+is, and whoever has it, and can hold it, so long no arrow, dart,
+sword, or shield can hurt him.&nbsp; This, therefore, keep on,
+and thou wilt keep off many a blow, my Mansoul.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;2. My breastplate is a breastplate of iron.&nbsp; I had
+it forged in mine own country, and all my soldiers are armed
+therewith.&nbsp; In plain language, it is a hard heart, a heart
+as hard as iron, and as much past feeling as a stone; the which
+if you get and keep, neither mercy shall win you, nor judgment
+fright you.&nbsp; This therefore, is a piece of armour most
+necessary for all to put on that hate Shaddai, and that would
+fight against him under my banner.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;3. My sword is a tongue that is set on fire of hell,
+and that can bend itself to speak evil of Shaddai, his Son, his
+ways, and people.&nbsp; Use this; it has been tried a thousand
+times twice told.&nbsp; Whoever hath it, keeps it, and makes that
+use of it as I would have him, can never be conquered by mine
+enemy.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;4. My, shield is unbelief, or calling into question the
+truth of the word, or all the sayings that speak of the judgment
+that Shaddai has appointed for wicked men.&nbsp; Use this shield;
+many attempts he has made upon it, and sometimes, it is true, it
+has been bruised; but they that have writ of the wars of Emmanuel
+against my servants, have testified that he could do no mighty
+work there because of their unbelief.&nbsp; Now, to handle this
+weapon of mine aright, it is not to believe things because they
+are true, of what sort or by whomsoever asserted.&nbsp; If he
+speaks of judgment, care not for it; if he speaks of mercy, care
+not for it; if he promises, if he swears that he would do to
+Mansoul, if it turns, no hurt, but good, regard not what is said,
+question the truth of all, for it is to wield the shield of
+unbelief aright, and as my servants ought and do; and he that
+doth otherwise loves me not, nor do I count him but an enemy to
+me.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;5. Another part or piece,&rsquo; said Diabolus,
+&lsquo;of mine excellent armour is a dumb and prayerless spirit,
+a spirit that scorns to cry for mercy: wherefore be you, my
+Mansoul, sure that you make use of this.&nbsp; What! cry for
+quarter!&nbsp; Never do that, if you would be mine.&nbsp; I know
+you are stout men, and am sure that I have clad you with that
+which is armour of proof.&nbsp; Wherefore, to cry to Shaddai for
+mercy, let that be far from you.&nbsp; Besides all this, I have a
+maul, firebrands, arrows, and death, all good hand-weapons, and
+such as will do execution.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>After he had thus furnished his men with armour and arms, he
+addressed himself to them in such like words as these:
+&lsquo;Remember,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;that I am your rightful
+king, and that you have taken an oath and entered into covenant
+to be true to me and my cause: I say, remember this, and show
+yourselves stout and valiant men of Mansoul.&nbsp; Remember also
+the kindness that I have always showed to you, and that without
+your petition I have granted to you external things; wherefore
+the privileges, grants, immunities, profits, and honours
+wherewith I have endowed you do call for, at your hands, returns
+of loyalty, my lion-like men of Mansoul: and when so fit a time
+to show it as when another shall seek to take my dominion over
+you into his own hands?&nbsp; One word more, and I have
+done.&nbsp; Can we but stand, and overcome this one shock or
+brunt, I doubt not but in little time all the world will be ours;
+and when that day comes, my true hearts, I will make you kings,
+princes, and captains, and what brave days shall we have
+then!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Diabolus having thus armed and forearmed his servants and
+vassals in Mansoul against their good and lawful King Shaddai, in
+the next place, he doubleth his guards at the gates of the town,
+and he takes himself to the castle, which was his
+stronghold.&nbsp; His vassals also, to show their wills, and
+supposed (but ignoble) gallantry, exercise themselves in their
+arms every day, and teach one another feats of war; they also
+defied their enemies, and sang up the praises of their tyrant;
+they threatened also what men they would be if ever things should
+rise so high as a war between Shaddai and their king.</p>
+<p>Now all this time the good King, the King Shaddai, was
+preparing to send an army to recover the town of Mansoul again
+from under the tyranny of their pretended king Diabolus; but he
+thought good, at first, not to send them by the hand and conduct
+of brave Emmanuel his Son, but under the hand of some of his
+servants, to see first by them the temper of Mansoul, and whether
+by them they would be won to the obedience of their King.&nbsp;
+The army consisted of above forty thousand, all true men, for
+they came from the King&rsquo;s own court, and were those of his
+own choosing.</p>
+<p>They came up to Mansoul under the conduct of four stout
+generals, each man being a captain of ten thousand men, and these
+are their names and their ensigns.&nbsp; The name of the first
+was Boanerges, the name of the second was Captain Conviction, the
+name of the third was Captain Judgment, and the name of the
+fourth was Captain Execution.&nbsp; These were the captains that
+Shaddai sent to regain Mansoul.</p>
+<p>These four captains, as was said, the King thought fit, in the
+first place, to send to Mansoul, to make an attempt upon it; for
+indeed generally in all his wars he did use to send these four
+captains in the van, for they were very stout and rough-hewn men,
+men that were fit to break the ice, and to make their way by dint
+of sword, and their men were like themselves.</p>
+<p>To each of these captains the King gave a banner, that it
+might be displayed, because of the goodness of his cause, and
+because of the right that he had to Mansoul.</p>
+<p>First, to Captain Boanerges, for he was the chief, to him, I
+say, were given ten thousand men.&nbsp; His ensign was Mr.
+Thunder; he bare the black colours, and his scutcheon was the
+three burning thunderbolts.</p>
+<p>The second captain was Captain Conviction; to him also were
+given ten thousand men.&nbsp; His ensign&rsquo;s name was Mr.
+Sorrow; he did bear the pale colours, and his scutcheon was the
+book of the law wide open, from whence issued a flame of
+fire.</p>
+<p>The third captain was Captain Judgment; to him were given ten
+thousand men.&nbsp; His ensign&rsquo;s name was Mr. Terror; he
+bare the red colours, and his scutcheon was a burning fiery
+furnace.</p>
+<p>The fourth captain was Captain Execution; to him were given
+ten thousand men.&nbsp; His ensign was one Mr. Justice; he also
+bare the red colours, and his scutcheon was a fruitless tree,
+with an axe lying at the root thereof.</p>
+<p>These four captains, as I said, had every one of them under
+his command ten thousand men, all of good fidelity to the King,
+and stout at their military actions.</p>
+<p>Well, the captains and their forces, their men and under
+officers, being had upon a day by Shaddai into the field, and
+there called all over by their names, were then and there put
+into such harness as became their degree and that service which
+now they were going about for their King.</p>
+<p>Now, when the King had mustered his forces, (for it is he that
+mustereth the host to the battle,) he gave unto the captains
+their several commissions, with charge and commandment in the
+audience of all the soldiers, that they should take heed
+faithfully and courageously to do and execute the same.&nbsp;
+Their commissions were, for the substance of them, the same in
+form, though, as to name, title, place and degree of the
+captains, there might be some, but very small variation.&nbsp;
+And here let me give you an account of the matter and sum
+contained in their commission.</p>
+<blockquote><p><i>A Commission from the great Shaddai</i>,
+<i>King of Mansoul</i>, <i>to his trusty and noble Captain</i>,
+<i>the Captain Boanerges</i>, <i>for his making War upon the town
+of Mansoul</i>.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;O, thou Boanerges, one of my stout and thundering
+captains over one ten thousand of my valiant and faithful
+servants, go thou in my name, with this thy force, to the
+miserable town of Mansoul; and when thou comest thither, offer
+them first conditions of peace; and command them that, casting
+off the yoke and tyranny of the wicked Diabolus, they return to
+me, their rightful Prince and Lord.&nbsp; Command them also that
+they cleanse themselves from all that is his in the town of
+Mansoul, and look to thyself, that thou hast good satisfaction
+touching the truth of their obedience.&nbsp; Thus when thou hast
+commanded them, (if they in truth submit thereto,) then do thou,
+to the uttermost of thy power, what in thee lies to set up for me
+a garrison in the famous town of Mansoul; nor do thou hurt the
+least native that moveth or breatheth therein, if they will
+submit themselves to me, but treat thou such as if they were thy
+friend or brother; for all such I love, and they shall be dear
+unto me, and tell them that I will take a time to come unto them,
+and to let them know that I am merciful.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;But if they shall, notwithstanding thy summons and the
+producing of thy authority, resist, stand out against thee, and
+rebel, then do I command thee to make use of all thy cunning,
+power, might, and force, to bring them under by strength of
+hand.&nbsp; Farewell.&rsquo;</p>
+</blockquote>
+<p>Thus you see the sum of their commissions; for, as I said
+before, for the substance of them, they were the same that the
+rest of the noble captains had.</p>
+<p>Wherefore they, having received each commander his authority
+at the hand of their King, the day being appointed, and the place
+of their rendezvous prefixed, each commander appeared in such
+gallantry as became his cause and calling.&nbsp; So, after a new
+entertainment from Shaddai, with flying colours they set forward
+to march towards the famous town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Captain
+Boanerges led the van, Captain Conviction and Captain Judgment
+made up the main body, and Captain Execution brought up the
+rear.&nbsp; They then, having a great way to go, (for the town of
+Mansoul was far off from the court of Shaddai,) marched through
+the regions and countries of many people, not hurting or abusing
+any, but blessing wherever they came.&nbsp; They also lived upon
+the King&rsquo;s cost in all the way they went.</p>
+<p>Having travelled thus for many days, at last they came within
+sight of Mansoul; the which when they saw, the captains could for
+their hearts do no less than for a while bewail the condition of
+the town; for they quickly saw how that it was prostrate to the
+will of Diabolus, and to his ways and designs.</p>
+<p>Well, to be short, the captains came up before the town, march
+up to Ear-gate, sit down there (for that was the place of
+hearing).&nbsp; So, when they had pitched their tents and
+entrenched themselves, they addressed themselves to make their
+assault.</p>
+<p>Now the townsfolk at first, beholding so gallant a company, so
+bravely accoutred, and so excellently disciplined, having on
+their glittering armour, and displaying of their flying colours,
+could not but come out of their houses and gaze.&nbsp; But the
+cunning fox Diabolus, fearing that the people, after this sight,
+should, on a sudden summons, open the gates to the captains, came
+down with all haste from the castle, and made them retire into
+the body of the town, who, when he had them there, made this
+lying and deceivable speech unto them:</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Gentlemen,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;although you are my
+trusty and well-beloved friends, yet I cannot but a little chide
+you for your late uncircumspect action, in going out to gaze on
+that great and mighty force that but yesterday sat down before,
+and have now entrenched themselves in order to the maintaining of
+a siege against the famous town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Do you know who
+they are, whence they come, and what is their purpose in sitting
+down before the town of Mansoul?&nbsp; They are they of whom I
+have told you long ago, that they would come to destroy this
+town, and against whom I have been at the cost to arm you with
+<i>cap-a-pie</i> for your body, besides great fortifications for
+your mind.&nbsp; Wherefore, then, did you not rather, even at the
+first appearance of them, cry out, &ldquo;Fire the
+beacons!&rdquo; and give the whole town an alarm concerning them,
+that we might all have been in a posture of defence, and been
+ready to have received them with the highest acts of
+defiance?&nbsp; Then had you showed yourselves men to my liking;
+whereas, by what you have done, you have made me half
+afraid&mdash;I say, half afraid&mdash;that when they and we shall
+come to push a pike, I shall find you want courage to stand it
+out any longer.&nbsp; Wherefore have I commanded a watch, and
+that you should double your guards at the gates?&nbsp; Wherefore
+have I endeavoured to make you as hard as iron, and your hearts
+as a piece of the nether millstone?&nbsp; Was it, think you, that
+you might show yourselves women, and that you might go out like a
+company of innocents to gaze on your mortal foes?&nbsp; Fie, fie!
+put yourselves into a posture of defence, beat up the drum,
+gather together in warlike manner, that our foes may know that,
+before they shall conquer this corporation, there are valiant men
+in the town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I will leave off now to chide, and will not further
+rebuke you; but I charge you, that henceforwards you let me see
+no more such actions.&nbsp; Let not henceforward a man of you,
+without order first obtained from me, so much as show his head
+over the wall of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; You have now heard
+me; do as I have commanded, and you shall cause me that I dwell
+securely with you, and that I take care, as for myself, so for
+your safety and honour also.&nbsp; Farewell.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Now were the townsmen strangely altered; they were as men
+stricken with a panic fear; they ran to and fro through the
+streets of the town of Mansoul, crying out, &lsquo;Help, help!
+the men that turn the world upside down are come hither
+also.&rsquo;&nbsp; Nor could any of them be quiet after; but
+still, as men bereft of wit, they cried out, &lsquo;The
+destroyers of our peace and people are come.&rsquo;&nbsp; This
+went down with Diabolus.&nbsp; &lsquo;Ah,&rsquo; quoth he to
+himself, &lsquo;this I like well: now it is as I would have it;
+now you show your obedience to your prince.&nbsp; Hold you but
+here, and then let them take the town if they can.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Well, before the King&rsquo;s forces had sat before Mansoul
+three days, Captain Boanerges commanded his trumpeter to go down
+to Ear-gate, and there, in the name of the great Shaddai, to
+summon Mansoul to give audience to the message that he, in his
+Master&rsquo;s name, was to them commanded to deliver.&nbsp; So
+the trumpeter, whose name was Take-heed-what-you-hear, went up,
+as he was commanded, to Ear-gate, and there sounded his trumpet
+for a hearing; but there was none that appeared that gave answer
+or regard, for so had Diabolus commanded.&nbsp; So the trumpeter
+returned to his captain, and told him what he had done, and also
+how he had sped; whereat the captain was grieved, but bid the
+trumpeter go to his tent.</p>
+<p>Again Captain Boanerges sendeth his trumpeter to Ear-gate, to
+sound as before for a hearing; but they again kept close, came
+not out, nor would they give him an answer, so observant were
+they of the command of Diabolus their king.</p>
+<p>Then the captains and other field officers called a council of
+war, to consider what further was to be done for the gaining of
+the town of Mansoul; and, after some close and thorough debate
+upon the contents of their commissions, they concluded yet to
+give to the town, by the hand of the fore-named trumpeter,
+another summons to hear; but if that shall be refused, said they,
+and that the town shall stand it out still, then they determined,
+and bid the trumpeter tell them so, that they would endeavour, by
+what means they could, to compel them by force to the obedience
+of their King.</p>
+<p>So Captain Boanerges commanded his trumpeter to go up to
+Ear-gate again, and, in the name of the great King Shaddai, to
+give it a very loud summons to come down without delay to
+Ear-gate, there to give audience to the King&rsquo;s most noble
+captains.&nbsp; So the trumpeter went, and did as he was
+commanded: he went up to Ear-gate, and sounded his trumpet, and
+gave a third summons to Mansoul.&nbsp; He said, moreover, that if
+this they should still refuse to do, the captains of his prince
+would with might come down upon them, and endeavour to reduce
+them to their obedience by force.</p>
+<p>Then stood up my Lord Willbewill, who was the governor of the
+town, (this Willbewill was that apostate of whom mention was made
+before,) and the keeper of the gates of Mansoul.&nbsp; He
+therefore, with big and ruffling words, demanded of the trumpeter
+who he was, whence he came, and what was the cause of his making
+so hideous a noise at the gate, and speaking such insufferable
+words against the town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>The trumpeter answered, &lsquo;I am servant to the most noble
+captain, Captain Boanerges, general of the forces of the great
+King Shaddai, against whom both thyself, with the whole town of
+Mansoul, have rebelled, and lift up the heel; and my master, the
+captain, hath a special message to this town, and to thee, as a
+member thereof; the which if you of Mansoul shall peaceably hear,
+so; and if not, you must take what follows.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said the Lord Willbewill, &lsquo;I will carry thy words
+to my lord, and will know what he will say.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>But the trumpeter soon replied, saying.&nbsp; &lsquo;Our
+message is not to the giant Diabolus, but to the miserable town
+of Mansoul; nor shall we at all regard what answer by him is
+made, nor yet by any for him.&nbsp; We are sent to this town to
+recover it from under his cruel tyranny, and to persuade it to
+submit, as in former times it did, to the most excellent King
+Shaddai.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said the Lord Willbewill, &lsquo;I will do your errand to
+the town.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The trumpeter then replied, &lsquo;Sir, do not deceive us,
+lest, in so doing, you deceive yourselves much more.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+He added, moreover, &lsquo;For we are resolved, if in peaceable
+manner you do not submit yourselves, then to make a war upon you,
+and to bring you under by force.&nbsp; And of the truth of what I
+now say, this shall be a sign unto you,&mdash;you shall see the
+black flag, with its hot, burning thunder-bolts, set upon the
+mount to-morrow, as a token of defiance against your prince, and
+of our resolutions to reduce you to your Lord and rightful
+King.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>So the said Lord Willbewill returned from off the wall, and
+the trumpeter came into the camp.&nbsp; When the trumpeter was
+come into the camp, the captains and officers of the mighty King
+Shaddai came together to know if he had obtained a hearing, and
+what was the effect of his errand.&nbsp; So the trumpeter told,
+saying, &lsquo;When I had sounded my trumpet, and had called
+aloud to the town for a hearing, my Lord Willbewill, the governor
+of the town, and he that hath charge of the gates, came up when
+he heard me sound, and, looking over the wall, he asked me what I
+was, whence I came, and what was the cause of my making this
+noise.&nbsp; So I told him my errand, and by whose authority I
+brought it.&nbsp; &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I will tell
+it to the governor and to Mansoul;&rdquo; and then I returned to
+my lords.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said the brave Boanerges, &lsquo;Let us yet for a while
+lie still in our trenches, and see what these rebels will
+do.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Now when the time drew nigh that audience by Mansoul must be
+given to the brave Boanerges and his companions, it was commanded
+that all the men of war throughout the whole camp of Shaddai
+should as one man stand to their arms, and make themselves ready,
+if the town of Mansoul shall hear, to receive it forthwith to
+mercy; but if not, to force a subjection.&nbsp; So the day being
+come, the trumpeters sounded, and that throughout the whole camp,
+that the men of war might be in a readiness for that which then
+should be the work of the day.&nbsp; But when they that were in
+the town of Mansoul heard the sound of the trumpets throughout
+the camp of Shaddai, and thinking no other but that it must be in
+order to storm the corporation, they at first were put to great
+consternation of spirit; but after they a little were settled
+again, they also made what preparation they could for a war, if
+they did storm; else, to secure themselves.</p>
+<p>Well, when the utmost time was come, Boanerges was resolved to
+hear their answer; wherefore he sent out his trumpeter again to
+summon Mansoul to a hearing of the message that they had brought
+from Shaddai.</p>
+<p>So he went and sounded, and the townsmen came up, but made
+Ear-gate as sure as they could.&nbsp; Now when they were come up
+to the top of the wall, Captain Boanerges desired to see the Lord
+Mayor; but my Lord Incredulity was then Lord Mayor, for he came
+in the room of my Lord Lustings.&nbsp; So Incredulity came up and
+showed himself over the wall; but when the Captain Boanerges had
+set his eyes upon him, he cried out aloud, &lsquo;This is not he:
+where is my Lord Understanding, the ancient Lord Mayor of the
+town of Mansoul? for to him I would deliver my
+message.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said the giant (for Diabolus was also come down) to the
+captain, &lsquo;Mr. Captain, you have by your boldness given to
+Mansoul at least four summonses to subject herself to your King,
+by whose authority I know not, nor will I dispute that now.&nbsp;
+I ask, therefore, what is the reason of all this ado, or what
+would you be at if you knew yourselves?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then Captain Boanerges, whose were the black colours, and
+whose scutcheon was the three burning thunderbolts, taking no
+notice of the giant or of his speech, thus addressed himself to
+the town of Mansoul: &lsquo;Be it known unto you, O unhappy and
+rebellious Mansoul, that the most gracious King, the great King
+Shaddai, my Master, hath sent me unto you with commission&rsquo;
+(and so he showed to the town his broad seal) &lsquo;to reduce
+you to his obedience; and he hath commanded me, in case you yield
+upon my summons, to carry it to you as if you were my friends or
+brethren; but he also hath bid, that if, after summons to submit
+you still stand out and rebel, we should endeavour to take you by
+force.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then stood forth Captain Conviction, and said, (his were the
+pale colours, and for a scutcheon he had the book of the law wide
+open, etc.,) &lsquo;Hear, O Mansoul!&nbsp; Thou, O Mansoul, wast
+once famous for innocency, but now thou art degenerated into lies
+and deceit.&nbsp; Thou hast heard what my brother, the Captain
+Boanerges, hath said; and it is your wisdom, and will be your
+happiness, to stoop to, and accept of conditions of peace and
+mercy when offered, specially when offered by one against whom
+thou hast rebelled, and one who is of power to tear thee in
+pieces, for so is Shaddai, our King; nor, when he is angry, can
+anything stand before him.&nbsp; If you say you have not sinned,
+or acted rebellion against our King, the whole of your doings
+since the day that you cast off his service (and there was the
+beginning of your sin) will sufficiently testify against
+you.&nbsp; What else means your hearkening to the tyrant, and
+your receiving him for your king?&nbsp; What means else your
+rejecting of the laws of Shaddai, and your obeying of
+Diabolus?&nbsp; Yea, what means this your taking up of arms
+against, and the shutting of your gates upon us, the faithful
+servants of your King?&nbsp; Be ruled then, and accept of my
+brother&rsquo;s invitation, and overstand not the time of mercy,
+but agree with thine adversary quickly.&nbsp; Ah, Mansoul! suffer
+not thyself to be kept from mercy, and to be run into a thousand
+miseries, by the flattering wiles of Diabolus.&nbsp; Perhaps that
+piece of deceit may attempt to make you believe that we seek our
+own profit in this our service, but know it is obedience to our
+King, and love to your happiness, that is the cause of this
+undertaking of ours.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Again I say to thee, O Mansoul, consider if it be not
+amazing grace that Shaddai should so humble himself as he doth:
+now he, by us, reasons with you, in a way of entreaty and sweet
+persuasions, that you would subject yourselves to him.&nbsp; Has
+he that need of you that we are sure you have of him?&nbsp; No,
+no; but he is merciful, and will not that Mansoul should die, but
+turn to him and live.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then stood forth Captain Judgment, whose were the red colours,
+and for a scutcheon he had the burning fiery furnace, and he
+said, &lsquo;O ye, the inhabitants of the town of Mansoul, that
+have lived so long in rebellion and acts of treason against the
+King Shaddai, know that we come not to-day to this place, in this
+manner, with our message of our own minds, or to revenge our own
+quarrel; it is the King, my Master, that hath sent us to reduce
+you to your obedience to him; the which if you refuse in a
+peaceable way to yield, we have commission to compel you
+thereto.&nbsp; And never think of yourselves, nor yet suffer the
+tyrant Diabolus to persuade you to think, that our King, by his
+power, is not able to bring you down, and to lay you under his
+feet; for he is the former of all things, and if he touches the
+mountains, they smoke.&nbsp; Nor will the gate of the
+King&rsquo;s clemency stand always open; for the day that shall
+burn like an oven is before him; yea, it hasteth greatly, it
+slumbereth not.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;O Mansoul, is it little in thine eyes that our King
+doth offer thee mercy, and that after so many provocations?&nbsp;
+Yea, he still holdeth out his golden sceptre to thee, and will
+not yet suffer his gate to be shut against thee: wilt thou
+provoke him to do it?&nbsp; If so, consider of what I say; to
+thee it is opened no more for ever.&nbsp; If thou sayest thou
+shalt not see him, yet judgment is before him; therefore trust
+thou in him.&nbsp; Yea, because there is wrath, beware lest he
+take thee away with his stroke; then a great ransom cannot
+deliver thee.&nbsp; Will he esteem thy riches?&nbsp; No, not
+gold, nor all the forces of strength.&nbsp; He hath prepared his
+throne for judgment, for he will come with fire, and with his
+chariots like a whirlwind, to render his anger with fury, and his
+rebukes with flames of fire.&nbsp; Therefore, O Mansoul, take
+heed lest, after thou hast fulfilled the judgment of the wicked,
+justice and judgment should take hold of thee.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Now while the Captain Judgment was making this oration to the
+town of Mansoul, it was observed by some that Diabolus trembled;
+but he proceeded in his parable and said, &lsquo;O thou woful
+town of Mansoul, wilt thou not yet set open thy gate to receive
+us, the deputies of thy King, and those that would rejoice to see
+thee live?&nbsp; Can thine heart endure, or can thy hands be
+strong, in the day that he shall deal in judgment with
+thee?&nbsp; I say, canst thou endure to be forced to drink, as
+one would drink sweet wine, the sea of wrath that our King has
+prepared for Diabolus and his angels?&nbsp; Consider, betimes
+consider.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then stood forth the fourth captain, the noble Captain
+Execution, and said, &lsquo;O town of Mansoul, once famous, but
+now like the fruitless bough, once the delight of the high ones,
+but now a den for Diabolus, hearken also to me, and to the words
+that I shall speak to thee in the name of the great
+Shaddai.&nbsp; Behold, the axe is laid to the root of the trees:
+every tree, therefore, that bringeth not forth good fruit, is
+hewn down and cast into the fire.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Thou, O town of Mansoul, hast hitherto been this
+fruitless tree; thou bearest nought but thorns and briars.&nbsp;
+Thy evil fruit bespeaks thee not to be a good tree; thy grapes
+are grapes of gall, thy clusters are bitter.&nbsp; Thou hast
+rebelled against thy King; and, lo! we, the power and force of
+Shaddai, are the axe that is laid to thy root.&nbsp; What sayest
+thou?&nbsp; Wilt thou turn?&nbsp; I say again, tell me, before
+the first blow is given, wilt thou turn?&nbsp; Our axe must first
+be laid <i>to</i> thy root before it be laid <i>at</i> thy root;
+it must first be laid <i>to</i> thy root in a way of threatening,
+before it is laid <i>at</i> thy root by way of execution; and
+between these two is required thy repentance, and this is all the
+time that thou hast.&nbsp; What wilt thou do?&nbsp; Wilt thou
+turn, or shall I smite?&nbsp; If I fetch my blow, Mansoul, down
+you go; for I have commission to lay my axe <i>at</i> as well as
+<i>to</i> thy roots, nor will anything but yielding to our King
+prevent doing of execution.&nbsp; What art thou fit for, O
+Mansoul, if mercy preventeth not, but to be hewn down, and cast
+into the fire and burned?</p>
+<p>&lsquo;O Mansoul, patience and forbearance do not act for
+ever: a year, or two, or three, they may; but if thou provoke by
+a three years&rsquo; rebellion, (and thou hast already done more
+than this,) then what follows but, &lsquo;Cut it down&rsquo;?
+nay, &lsquo;After that thou shalt cut it down.&rsquo;&nbsp; And
+dost thou think that these are but threatenings, or that our King
+has not power to execute his words?&nbsp; O Mansoul, thou wilt
+find that in the words of our King, when they are by sinners made
+little or light of, there is not only threatening, but burning
+coals of fire.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Thou hast been a cumber-ground long already, and wilt
+thou continue so still?&nbsp; Thy sin has brought this army to
+thy walls, and shall it bring it in judgment to do execution into
+thy town?&nbsp; Thou hast heard what the captains have said, but
+as yet thou shuttest thy gates.&nbsp; Speak out, Mansoul; wilt
+thou do so still, or wilt thou accept of conditions of
+peace?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>These brave speeches of these four noble captains the town of
+Mansoul refused to hear; yet a sound thereof did beat against
+Ear-gate, though the force thereof could not break it open.&nbsp;
+In fine, the town desired a time to prepare their answer to these
+demands.&nbsp; The captains then told them, that if they would
+throw out to them one Ill-Pause that was in the town, that they
+might reward him according to his works, then they would give
+them time to consider; but if they would not cast him to them
+over the wall of Mansoul, then they would give them none;
+&lsquo;for,&rsquo; said they, &lsquo;we know that, so long as
+Ill-Pause draws breath in Mansoul, all good consideration will be
+confounded, and nothing but mischief will come
+thereon.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then Diabolus, who was there present, being loath to lose his
+Ill-Pause, because he was his orator, (and yet be sure he had,
+could the captains have laid their fingers on him,) was resolved
+at this instant to give them answer by himself; but then changing
+his mind, he commanded the then Lord Mayor, the Lord Incredulity,
+to do it, saying, &lsquo;My lord, do you give these runagates an
+answer, and speak out, that Mansoul may hear and understand
+you.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>So Incredulity, at Diabolus&rsquo; command, began, and said,
+&lsquo;Gentlemen, you have here, as we do behold, to the
+disturbance of our prince and the molestation of the town of
+Mansoul, camped against it: but from whence you come, we will not
+know; and what you are, we will not believe.&nbsp; Indeed, you
+tell us in your terrible speech that you have this authority from
+Shaddai, but by what right he commands you to do it, of that we
+shall yet be ignorant.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;You have also, by the authority aforesaid, summoned
+this town to desert her lord, and, for protection, to yield up
+herself to the great Shaddai, your King; flatteringly telling
+her, that if she will do it, he will pass by and not charge her
+with her past offences.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Further, you have also, to the terror of the town of
+Mansoul, threatened with great and sore destructions to punish
+this corporation, if she consents not to do as your wills would
+have her.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Now, captains, from whencesoever you come, and though
+your designs be ever so right, yet know ye that neither my Lord
+Diabolus, nor I, his servant, Incredulity, nor yet our brave
+Mansoul, doth regard either your persons, message, or the King
+that you say hath sent you.&nbsp; His power, his greatness, his
+vengeance, we fear not; nor will we yield at all to your
+summons.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;As for the war that you threaten to make upon us, we
+must therein defend ourselves as well as we can; and know ye,
+that we are not without wherewithal to bid defiance to you; and,
+in short, (for I will not be tedious,) I tell you, that we take
+you to be some vagabond runagate crew, that having shaken off all
+obedience to your King, have gotten together in tumultuous
+manner, and are ranging from place to place to see if, through
+the flatteries you are skilled to make on the one side, and
+threats wherewith you think to fright on the other, to make some
+silly town, city, or country, desert their place, and leave it to
+you; but Mansoul is none of them.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;To conclude: we dread you not, we fear you not, nor
+will we obey your summons.&nbsp; Our gates we will shut upon you,
+our place we will keep you out of.&nbsp; Nor will we long thus
+suffer you to sit down before us: our people must live in quiet:
+your appearance doth disturb them.&nbsp; Wherefore arise with bag
+and baggage, and begone, or we will let fly from the walls
+against you.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>This oration, made by old Incredulity, was seconded by
+desperate Willbewill, in words to this effect: &lsquo;Gentlemen,
+we have heard your demands, and the noise of your threats, and
+have heard the sound of your summons; but we fear not your force,
+we regard not your threats, but will still abide as you found
+us.&nbsp; And we command you, that in three days&rsquo; time you
+cease to appear in these parts, or you shall know what it is once
+to dare offer to rouse the lion Diabolus when asleep in his town
+of Mansoul.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The Recorder, whose name was Forget-Good, he also added as
+followeth: &lsquo;Gentlemen, my lords, as you see, have with mild
+and gentle words answered your rough and angry speeches: they
+have, moreover, in my hearing, given you leave quietly to depart
+as you came; wherefore, take their kindness and be gone.&nbsp; We
+might have come out with force upon you, and have caused you to
+feel the dint of our swords; but as we love ease and quiet
+ourselves, so we love not to hurt or molest others.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then did the town of Mansoul shout for joy, as if by Diabolus
+and his crew some great advantage had been gotten of the
+captains.&nbsp; They also rang the bells, and made merry, and
+danced upon the walls.</p>
+<p>Diabolus also returned to the castle, and the Lord Mayor and
+Recorder to their place; but the Lord Willbewill took special
+care that the gates should be secured with double guards, double
+bolts, and double locks and bars; and that Ear-gate especially
+might the better be looked to, for that was the gate in at which
+the King&rsquo;s forces sought most to enter.&nbsp; The Lord
+Willbewill made one old Mr. Prejudice, an angry and
+ill-conditioned fellow, captain of the ward at that gate, and put
+under his power sixty men, called deaf men; men advantageous for
+that service, forasmuch as they mattered no words of the
+captains, nor of the soldiers.</p>
+<p>Now when the captains saw the answer of the great ones, and
+that they could not get a hearing from the old natives of the
+town, and that Mansoul was resolved to give the King&rsquo;s army
+battle, they prepared themselves to receive them, and to try it
+out by the power of the arm.&nbsp; And, first, they made their
+force more formidable against Ear-gate; for they knew that,
+unless they could penetrate that, no good could be done upon the
+town.&nbsp; This done, they put the rest of their men in their
+places; after which, they gave out the word, which was,
+&lsquo;<span class="smcap">Ye must be born
+again</span>.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then they sounded the trumpet; then
+they in the town made them answer, with shout against shout,
+charge against charge, and so the battle began.&nbsp; Now they in
+the town had planted upon the tower over Ear-gate two great guns,
+the one called High-mind, and the other Heady.&nbsp; Unto these
+two guns they trusted much; they were cast in the castle by
+Diabolus&rsquo; founder, whose name was Mr. Puff-up, and
+mischievous pieces they were.&nbsp; But so vigilant and watchful,
+when the captains saw them, were they, that though sometimes
+their shot would go by their ears with a whiz, yet they did them
+no harm.&nbsp; By these two guns the townsfolk made no question
+but greatly to annoy the camp of Shaddai, and well enough to
+secure the gate; but they had not much cause to boast of what
+execution they did, as by what follows will be gathered.</p>
+<p>The famous Mansoul had also some other small pieces in it, of
+the which they made use against the camp of Shaddai.</p>
+<p>They from the camp also did as stoutly, and with as much of
+that as may in truth be called valour, let fly as fast at the
+town and at Ear-gate; for they saw that, unless they could break
+open Ear-gate, it would be but in vain to batter the wall.&nbsp;
+Now the King&rsquo;s captains had brought with them several
+slings, and two or three battering-rams; with their slings,
+therefore, they battered the houses and people of the town, and
+with their rams they sought to break Ear-gate open.</p>
+<p>The camp and the town had several skirmishes and brisk
+encounters, while the captains with their engines made many brave
+attempts to break open or beat down the tower that was over
+Ear-gate, and at the said gate to make their entrance; but
+Mansoul stood it out so lustily, through the rage of Diabolus,
+the valour of the Lord Willbewill, and the conduct of old
+Incredulity, the Mayor, and Mr. Forget-Good, the Recorder, that
+the charge and expense of that summer&rsquo;s wars, on the
+King&rsquo;s side, seemed to be almost quite lost, and the
+advantage to return to Mansoul.&nbsp; But when the captains saw
+how it was they made a fair retreat, and entrenched themselves in
+their winter quarters.&nbsp; Now, in this war, you must needs
+think there was much loss on both sides, of which be pleased to
+accept of this brief account following.</p>
+<p>The King&rsquo;s captains, when they marched from the court to
+come up against Mansoul to war, as they came crossing over the
+country, they happened to light upon three young fellows that had
+a mind to go for soldiers: proper men they were, and men of
+courage and skill, to appearance.&nbsp; Their names were Mr.
+Tradition, Mr. Human-Wisdom, and Mr. Man&rsquo;s-Invention.&nbsp;
+So they came up to the captains, and proffered their service to
+Shaddai.&nbsp; The captains then told them of their design, and
+bid them not to be rash in their offers; but the young men told
+them they had considered the thing before, and that hearing they
+were upon their march for such a design, came hither on purpose
+to meet them, that they might be listed under their
+excellencies.&nbsp; Then Captain Boanerges, for that they were
+men of courage, listed them into his company, and so away they
+went to the war.</p>
+<p>Now, when the war was begun, in one of the briskest
+skirmishes, so it was, that a company of the Lord
+Willbewill&rsquo;s men sallied out at the sallyport or postern of
+the town, and fell in upon the rear of Captain Boanerges&rsquo;
+men, where these three fellows happened to be; so they took them
+prisoners, and away they carried them into the town, where they
+had not lain long in durance, but it began to be noised about the
+streets of the town what three notable prisoners the Lord
+Willbewill&rsquo;s men had taken, and brought in prisoners out of
+the camp of Shaddai.&nbsp; At length tidings thereof were carried
+to Diabolus to the castle, to wit what my Lord Willbewill&rsquo;s
+men had done, and whom they had taken prisoners.</p>
+<p>Then Diabolus called for Willbewill, to know the certainty of
+this matter.&nbsp; So he asked him, and he told him.&nbsp; Then
+did the giant send for the prisoners, and, when they were come,
+demanded of them who they were, whence they came, and what they
+did in the camp of Shaddai; and they told him.&nbsp; Then he sent
+them to ward again.&nbsp; Not many days after, he sent for them
+to him again, and then asked them if they would be willing to
+serve him against their former captains.&nbsp; They then told him
+that they did not so much live by religion as by the fates of
+fortune; and that since his lordship was willing to entertain
+them, they should be willing to serve him.&nbsp; Now while things
+were thus in hand, there was one Captain Anything, a great doer,
+in the town of Mansoul; and to this Captain Anything did Diabolus
+send these men, and a note under his hand, to receive them into
+his company, the contents of which letter were thus:</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Anything, my darling,&mdash;The three men that are the
+bearers of this letter have a desire to serve me in the war; nor
+know I better to whose conduct to commit them than to
+thine.&nbsp; Receive them, therefore, in my name, and, as need
+shall require, make use of them against Shaddai and his
+men.&nbsp; Farewell.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>So they came, and he received them; and he made of two of them
+sergeants; but he made Mr. Man&rsquo;s-Invention his
+ancient-bearer.&nbsp; But thus much for this, and now to return
+to the camp.</p>
+<p>They of the camp did also some execution upon the town; for
+they did beat down the roof of the Lord Mayor&rsquo;s house, and
+so laid him more open than he was before.&nbsp; They had almost,
+with a sling, slain my Lord Willbewill outright; but he made a
+shift to recover again.&nbsp; But they made a notable slaughter
+among the aldermen, for with one only shot they cut off six of
+them; to wit, Mr. Swearing, Mr. Whoring, Mr. Fury, Mr.
+Stand-to-Lies, Mr. Drunkenness, and Mr. Cheating.</p>
+<p>They also dismounted the two guns that stood upon the tower
+over Ear-gate, and laid them flat in the dirt.&nbsp; I told you
+before that the King&rsquo;s noble captains had drawn off to
+their winter quarters, and had there entrenched themselves and
+their carriages, so as with the best advantage to their King, and
+the greatest annoyance to the enemy, they might give seasonable
+and warm alarms to the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; And this design of
+them did so hit, that I may say they did almost what they would
+to the molestation of the corporation.&nbsp; For now could not
+Mansoul sleep securely as before, nor could they now go to their
+debaucheries with that quietness as in times past; for they had
+from the camp of Shaddai such frequent, warm, and terrifying
+alarms, yea, alarms upon alarms, first at one gate and then at
+another, and again at all the gates at once, that they were
+broken as to former peace.&nbsp; Yea, they had their alarms so
+frequently, and that when the nights were at longest, the weather
+coldest, and so consequently the season most unseasonable, that
+that winter was to the town of Mansoul a winter by itself.&nbsp;
+Sometimes the trumpets would sound, and sometimes the slings
+would whirl the stones into the town.&nbsp; Sometimes ten
+thousand of the King&rsquo;s soldiers would be running round the
+walls of Mansoul at midnight, shouting and lifting up the voice
+for the battle.&nbsp; Sometimes, again, some of them in the town
+would be wounded, and their cry and lamentable voice would be
+heard, to the great molestation of the now languishing town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; Yea, so distressed with those that laid siege
+against them were they, that, I dare say, Diabolus, their king,
+had in these days his rest much broken.</p>
+<p>In these days, as I was informed, new thoughts, and thoughts
+that began to run counter one to another, began to possess the
+minds of the men of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Some would say,
+&lsquo;There is no living thus.&rsquo;&nbsp; Others would then
+reply, &lsquo;This will be over shortly.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then would
+a third stand up and answer, &lsquo;Let us turn to the King
+Shaddai, and so put an end to these troubles.&rsquo;&nbsp; And a
+fourth would come in with a fear, saying, &lsquo;I doubt he will
+not receive us.&rsquo;&nbsp; The old gentleman, too, the
+Recorder, that was so before Diabolus took Mansoul, he also began
+to talk aloud, and his words were now to the town of Mansoul as
+if they were great claps of thunder.&nbsp; No noise now so
+terrible to Mansoul as was his, with the noise of the soldiers
+and shoutings of the captains.</p>
+<p>Also things began to grow scarce in Mansoul; now the things
+that her soul lusted after were departing from her.&nbsp; Upon
+all her pleasant things there was a blast, and burning instead of
+beauty.&nbsp; Wrinkles now, and some shows of the shadow of
+death, were upon the inhabitants of Mansoul.&nbsp; And now, O how
+glad would Mansoul have been to have enjoyed quietness and
+satisfaction of mind, though joined with the meanest condition in
+the world!</p>
+<p>The captains also, in the deep of this winter, did send by the
+mouth of Boanerges&rsquo; trumpeter a summons to Mansoul to yield
+up herself to the King, the great King Shaddai.&nbsp; They sent
+it once, and twice, and thrice; not knowing but that at some
+times there might be in Mansoul some willingness to surrender up
+themselves unto them, might they but have the colour of an
+invitation to do it under.&nbsp; Yea, so far as I could gather,
+the town had been surrendered up to them before now, had it not
+been for the opposition of old Incredulity, and the fickleness of
+the thoughts of my Lord Willbewill.&nbsp; Diabolus also began to
+rave; wherefore Mansoul, as to yielding, was not yet all of one
+mind; therefore they still lay distressed under these perplexing
+fears.</p>
+<p>I told you but now that they of the King&rsquo;s army had this
+winter sent three times to Mansoul to submit herself.</p>
+<p>The first time the trumpeter went he went with words of peace,
+telling them that the captains, the noble captains of Shaddai,
+did pity and bewail the misery of the now perishing town of
+Mansoul, and were troubled to see them so much to stand in the
+way of their own deliverance.&nbsp; He said, moreover, that the
+captains bid him tell them, that if now poor Mansoul would humble
+herself and turn, her former rebellions and most notorious
+treasons should by their merciful King be forgiven them, yea, and
+forgotten too.&nbsp; And having bid them beware that they stood
+not in their own way, that they opposed not themselves, nor made
+themselves their own losers, he returned again into the camp.</p>
+<p>The second time the trumpeter went, he did treat them a little
+more roughly; for, after sound of trumpet, he told them that
+their continuing in their rebellion did but chafe and heat the
+spirit of the captains, and that they were resolved to make a
+conquest of Mansoul, or to lay their bones before the town
+walls.</p>
+<p>He went again the third time, and dealt with them yet more
+roughly; telling them that now, since they had been so horribly
+profane, he did not know, not certainly know, whether the
+captains were inclining to mercy or judgment.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Only,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;they commanded me to give you
+a summons to open the gates unto them.&rsquo;&nbsp; So he
+returned, and went into the camp.</p>
+<p>These three summonses, and especially the last two, did so
+distress the town that they presently call a consultation, the
+result of which was this&mdash;That my Lord Willbewill should go
+up to Ear-gate, and there, with sound of trumpet, call to the
+captains of the camp for a parley.&nbsp; Well, the Lord
+Willbewill sounded upon the wall; so the captains came up in
+their harness, with their ten thousands at their feet.&nbsp; The
+townsmen then told the captains that they had heard and
+considered their summons, and would come to an agreement with
+them, and with their King Shaddai, upon such certain terms,
+articles, and propositions as, with and by the order of their
+prince, they to them were appointed to propound; to wit, they
+would agree upon these grounds to be one people with them.</p>
+<p>1. If that those of their own company, as the now Lord Mayor
+and their Mr. Forget-Good, with then brave Lord Willbewill,
+might, under Shaddai, be still the governors of the town, castle,
+and gates of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>2. Provided that no man that now serveth under their great
+giant Diabolus be by Shaddai cast out of house, harbour, or the
+freedom that he hath hitherto enjoyed in the famous town of
+Mansoul.</p>
+<p>3. That it shall be granted them, that they of the town of
+Mansoul shall enjoy certain of their rights and privileges; to
+wit, such as have formerly been granted them, and that they have
+long lived in the enjoyment of, under the reign of their king
+Diabolus, that now is, and long has been, their only lord and
+great defender.</p>
+<p>4. That no new law, officer, or executioner of law or office,
+shall have any power over them, without their own choice and
+consent.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;These be our propositions, or conditions of peace; and
+upon these terms,&rsquo; said they, &lsquo;we will submit to your
+King.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>But when the captains had heard this weak and feeble offer of
+the town of Mansoul, and their high and bold demands, they made
+to them again, by their noble captain, the Captain Boanerges,
+this speech following:</p>
+<p>&lsquo;O ye inhabitants of the town of Mansoul, when I heard
+your trumpet sound for a parley with us, I can truly say I was
+glad; but when you said you were willing to submit yourselves to
+our King and Lord, then I was yet more glad; but when, by your
+silly provisos and foolish cavils, you laid the stumbling-block
+of your iniquity before your own faces, then was my gladness
+turned into sorrows, and my hopeful beginnings of your return,
+into languishing fainting fears.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I count that old Ill-Pause, the ancient enemy of
+Mansoul, did draw up those proposals that now you present us with
+as terms of an agreement; but they deserve not to be admitted to
+sound in the ear of any man that pretends to have service for
+Shaddai.&nbsp; We do therefore jointly, and that with the highest
+disdain, refuse and reject such things, as the greatest of
+iniquities.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;But, O Mansoul, if you will give yourselves into our
+hands, or rather into the hands of our King, and will trust him
+to make such terms with and for you as shall seem good in his
+eyes, (and I dare say they shall be such as you shall find to be
+most profitable to you,) then we will receive you, and be at
+peace with you; but if you like not to trust yourselves in the
+arms of Shaddai our King, then things are but where they were
+before, and we know also what we have to do.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then cried out old Incredulity, the Lord Mayor, and said,
+&lsquo;And who, being out of the hands of their enemies, as ye
+see we are now, will be so foolish as to put the staff out of
+their own hands into the hands of they know not who?&nbsp; I, for
+my part, will never yield to so unlimited a proposition.&nbsp; Do
+we know the manner and temper of their King?&nbsp; It is said by
+some that he will be angry with his subjects if but the breadth
+of an hair they chance to step out of the way; and by others,
+that he requireth of them much more than they can perform.&nbsp;
+Wherefore, it seems, O Mansoul, to be thy wisdom to take good
+heed what thou dost in this matter; for if you once yield, you
+give up yourselves to another, and so you are no more your
+own.&nbsp; Wherefore, to give up yourselves to an unlimited
+power, is the greatest folly in the world; for now you indeed may
+repent, but can never justly complain.&nbsp; But do you indeed
+know, when you are his, which of you he will kill, and which of
+you he will save alive; or whether he will not cut off every one
+of us, and send out of his own country another new people, and
+cause them to inhabit this town?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>This speech of the Lord Mayor undid all, and threw flat to the
+ground their hopes of an accord.&nbsp; Wherefore the captains
+returned to their trenches, to their tents, and to their men, as
+they were; and the Mayor to the castle and to his King.</p>
+<p>Now Diabolus had waited for his return, for he had heard that
+they had been at their points.&nbsp; So, when he was come into
+the chamber of state, Diabolus saluted him
+with&mdash;&lsquo;Welcome, my lord.&nbsp; How went matters
+betwixt you to-day?&rsquo;&nbsp; So the Lord Incredulity, with a
+low congee, told him the whole of the matter, saying, &lsquo;Thus
+and thus said the captains of Shaddai, and thus and thus said
+I.&rsquo;&nbsp; The which when it was told to Diabolus, he was
+very glad to hear it, and said, &lsquo;My Lord Mayor, my faithful
+Incredulity, I have proved thy fidelity above ten times already,
+but never yet found thee false.&nbsp; I do promise thee, if we
+rub over this brunt, to prefer thee to a place of honour, a place
+far better than to be Lord Mayor of Mansoul.&nbsp; I will make
+thee my universal deputy, and thou shalt, next to me, have all
+nations under thy hand; yea, and thou shalt lay bands upon them,
+that they may not resist thee; nor shall any of our vassals walk
+more at liberty, but those that shall be content to walk in thy
+fetters.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Now came the Lord Mayor out from Diabolus, as if he had
+obtained a favour indeed.&nbsp; Wherefore to his habitation he
+goes in great state, and thinks to feed himself well enough with
+hopes, until the time came that his greatness should be
+enlarged.</p>
+<p>But now, though the Lord Mayor and Diabolus did thus well
+agree, yet this repulse to the brave captains put Mansoul into a
+mutiny.&nbsp; For while old Incredulity went into the castle to
+congratulate his lord with what had passed, the old Lord Mayor,
+that was so before Diabolus came to the town, to wit, my Lord
+Understanding, and the old Recorder, Mr. Conscience, getting
+intelligence of what had passed at Ear-gate, (for you must know
+that they might not be suffered to be at that debate, lest they
+should then have mutinied for the captains; but, I say, they got
+intelligence of what had passed there, and were much concerned
+therewith,) wherefore they, getting some of the town together,
+began to possess them with the reasonableness of the noble
+captains&rsquo; demands, and with the bad consequences that would
+follow upon the speech of old Incredulity, the Lord Mayor; to wit
+how little reverence he showed therein either to the captains or
+to their King; also how he implicitly charged them with
+unfaithfulness and treachery.&nbsp; &lsquo;For what less,&rsquo;
+quoth they, &lsquo;could be made of his words, when he said he
+would not yield to their proposition; and added, moreover, a
+supposition that he would destroy us, when before he had sent us
+word that he would show us mercy!&rsquo;&nbsp; The multitude,
+being now possessed with the conviction of the evil that old
+Incredulity had done, began to run together by companies in all
+places, and in every corner of the streets of Mansoul; and first
+they began to mutter, then to talk openly, and after that they
+run to and fro, and cried as they run, &lsquo;Oh the brave
+captains of Shaddai! would we were under the government of the
+captains, and of Shaddai their King!&rsquo;&nbsp; When the Lord
+Mayor had intelligence that Mansoul was in an uproar, down he
+comes to appease the people, and thought to have quashed their
+heat with the bigness and the show of his countenance; but when
+they saw him, they came running upon him, and had doubtless done
+him a mischief, had he not betaken himself to house.&nbsp;
+However, they strongly assaulted the house where he was, to have
+pulled it down about his ears; but the place was too strong, so
+they failed of that.&nbsp; So he, taking some courage, addressed
+himself, out at a window, to the people in this manner:</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Gentlemen, what is the reason that there is here such
+an uproar to-day?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then answered my Lord Understanding, &lsquo;It is even because
+that thou and thy master have carried it not rightly, and as you
+should, to the captains of Shaddai; for in three things you are
+faulty.&nbsp; First, in that you would not let Mr. Conscience and
+myself be at the hearing of your discourse.&nbsp; Secondly, in
+that you propounded such terms of peace to the captains that by
+no means could be granted, unless they had intended that their
+Shaddai should have been only a titular prince, and that Mansoul
+should still have had power by law to have lived in all lewdness
+and vanity before him, and so by consequence Diabolus should
+still here be king in power, and the other only king in
+name.&nbsp; Thirdly, for that thou didst thyself, after the
+captains had showed us upon what conditions they would have
+received us to mercy, even undo all again with thy unsavoury,
+unseasonable, and ungodly speech.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>When old Incredulity had heard this speech, he cried out,
+&lsquo;Treason! treason!&nbsp; To your arms! to your arms!&nbsp;
+O ye, the trusty friends of Diabolus in Mansoul.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>Und.</i>&mdash;Sir, you may put upon my words what meaning
+you please; but I am sure that the captains of such an high lord
+as theirs is, deserved a better treatment at your hands.</p>
+<p>Then said old Incredulity, &lsquo;This is but little
+better.&nbsp; But, Sir,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;what I spake I
+spake for my prince, for his government, and the quieting of the
+people, whom by your unlawful actions you have this day set to
+mutiny against us.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then replied the old Recorder, whose name was Mr. Conscience,
+and said, &lsquo;Sir, you ought not thus to retort upon what my
+Lord Understanding hath said.&nbsp; It is evident enough that he
+hath spoken the truth, and that you are an enemy to
+Mansoul.&nbsp; Be convinced, then, of the evil of your saucy and
+malapert language, and of the grief that you have put the
+captains to; yea, and of the damages that you have done to
+Mansoul thereby.&nbsp; Had you accepted of the conditions, the
+sound of the trumpet and the alarm of war had now ceased about
+the town of Mansoul; but that dreadful sound abides, and your
+want of wisdom in your speech has been the cause of
+it.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said old Incredulity, &lsquo;Sir, if I live, I will do
+your errand to Diabolus, and there you shall have an answer to
+your words.&nbsp; Meanwhile we will seek the good of the town,
+and not ask counsel of you.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>Und.</i>&mdash;Sir, your prince and you are both foreigners
+to Mansoul, and not the natives thereof; and who can tell but
+that, when you have brought us into greater straits, (when you
+also shall see that yourselves can be safe by no other means than
+by flight,) you may leave us and shift for yourselves, or set us
+on fire, and go away in the smoke, or by the light of our
+burning, and so leave us in our ruins?</p>
+<p><i>Incred.</i>&mdash;Sir, you forget that you are under a
+governor, and that you ought to demean yourself like a subject;
+and know ye, when my lord the king shall hear of this day&rsquo;s
+work, he will give you but little thanks for your labour.</p>
+<p>Now while these gentlemen were thus in their chiding words,
+down come from the walls and gates of the town the Lord
+Willbewill, Mr. Prejudice, old Ill-Pause, and several of the
+new-made aldermen and burgesses, and they asked the reason of the
+hubbub and tumult; and with that every man began to tell his own
+tale, so that nothing could be heard distinctly.&nbsp; Then was a
+silence commanded, and the old fox Incredulity began to
+speak.&nbsp; &lsquo;My lord,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;here are a
+couple of peevish gentlemen, that have, as a fruit of their bad
+dispositions, and, as I fear, through the advice of one Mr.
+Discontent, tumultuously gathered this company against me this
+day, and also attempted to run the town into acts of rebellion
+against our prince.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then stood up all the Diabolonians that were present, and
+affirmed these things to be true.</p>
+<p>Now when they that took part with my Lord Understanding and
+with Mr. Conscience perceived that they were like to come to the
+worst, for that force and power was on the other side, they came
+in for their help and relief; so a great company was on both
+sides.&nbsp; Then they on Incredulity&rsquo;s side would have had
+the two old gentlemen presently away to prison; but they on the
+other side said they should not.&nbsp; Then they began to cry up
+parties again: the Diabolonians cried up old Incredulity,
+Forget-Good, the new aldermen, and their great one Diabolus; and
+the other party, they as fast cried up Shaddai, the captains, his
+laws, their mercifulness, and applauded their conditions and
+ways.&nbsp; Thus the bickerment went awhile; at last they passed
+from words to blows, and now there were knocks on both
+sides.&nbsp; The good old gentleman, Mr. Conscience, was knocked
+down twice by one of the Diabolonians, whose name was Mr.
+Benumbing; and my Lord Understanding had like to have been slain
+with an arquebuse, but that he that shot did not take his aim
+aright.&nbsp; Nor did the other side wholly escape; for there was
+one Mr. Rashhead, a Diabolonian, that had his brains beaten out
+by Mr. Mind, the Lord Willbewill&rsquo;s servant; and it made me
+laugh to see how old Mr. Prejudice was kicked and tumbled about
+in the dirt; for though, a while since, he was made captain of a
+company of the Diabolonians, to the hurt and damage of the town,
+yet now they had got him under their feet, and, I&rsquo;ll assure
+you, he had, by some of the Lord Understanding&rsquo;s party, his
+crown cracked to boot.&nbsp; Mr. Anything also, he became a brisk
+man in the broil; but both sides were against him, because he was
+true to none.&nbsp; Yet he had, for his malapertness, one of his
+legs broken, and he that did it wished it had been his
+neck.&nbsp; Much more harm was done on both sides, but this must
+not be forgotten; it was now a wonder to see my Lord Willbewill
+so indifferent as he was: he did not seem to take one side more
+than another, only it was perceived that he smiled to see how old
+Prejudice was tumbled up and down in the dirt.&nbsp; Also, when
+Captain Anything came halting up before him, he seemed to take
+but little notice of him.</p>
+<p>Now, when the uproar was over, Diabolus sends for my Lord
+Understanding and Mr. Conscience, and claps them both up in
+prison as the ringleaders and managers of this most heavy,
+riotous rout in Mansoul.&nbsp; So now the town began to be quiet
+again, and the prisoners were used hardly; yea, he thought to
+have made them away, but that the present juncture did not serve
+for that purpose, for that war was in all their gates.</p>
+<p>But let us return again to our story.&nbsp; The captains, when
+they were gone back from the gate, and were come into the camp
+again, called a council of war, to consult what was further for
+them to do.&nbsp; Now, some said, &lsquo;Let us go up presently,
+and fall upon the town;&rsquo; but the greatest part thought
+rather better it would be to give them another summons to yield;
+and the reason why they thought this to be best was, because
+that, so far as could be perceived, the town of Mansoul now was
+more inclinable than heretofore.&nbsp; &lsquo;And if,&rsquo; said
+they, &lsquo;while some of them are in a way of inclination, we
+should by ruggedness give them distaste, we may set them further
+from closing with our summons than we would be willing they
+should.&rsquo;&nbsp; Wherefore to this advice they agreed, and
+called a trumpeter, put words into his mouth, set him his time,
+and bid him God speed.&nbsp; Well, many hours were not expired
+before the trumpeter addressed himself to his journey.&nbsp;
+Wherefore, coming up to the wall of the town, he steereth his
+course to Ear-gate, and there sounded, as he was commanded.&nbsp;
+They then that were within came out to see what was the matter,
+and the trumpeter made them this speech following:</p>
+<p>&lsquo;O hard-hearted and deplorable town of Mansoul, how long
+wilt thou love thy sinful, sinful simplicity, and, ye fools,
+delight in your scorning?&nbsp; As yet despise you the offers of
+peace and deliverance?&nbsp; As yet will ye refuse the golden
+offers of Shaddai, and trust to the lies and falsehoods of
+Diabolus?&nbsp; Think you, when Shaddai shall have conquered you,
+that the remembrance of these your carriages towards him will
+yield you peace and comfort, or that by ruffling language you can
+make him afraid as a grasshopper?&nbsp; Doth he entreat you for
+fear of you?&nbsp; Do you think that you are stronger than
+he?&nbsp; Look to the heavens, and behold and consider the stars,
+how high are they?&nbsp; Can you stop the sun from running his
+course, and hinder the moon from giving her light?&nbsp; Can you
+count the number of the stars, or stay the bottles of
+heaven?&nbsp; Can you call for the waters of the sea, and cause
+them to cover the face of the ground?&nbsp; Can you behold every
+one that is proud, and abase him, and bind their faces in
+secret?&nbsp; Yet these are some of the works of our King, in
+whose name this day we come up unto you, that you may be brought
+under his authority.&nbsp; In his name, therefore, I summon you
+again to yield up yourselves to his captains.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>At this summons the Mansoulians seemed to be at a stand, and
+knew not what answer to make.&nbsp; Wherefore Diabolus forthwith
+appeared, and took upon him to do it himself; and thus he begins,
+but turns his speech to them of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Gentlemen,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;and my faithful
+subjects, if it is true that this summoner hath said concerning
+the greatness of their King, by his terror you will always be
+kept in bondage, and so be made to sneak.&nbsp; Yea, how can you
+now, though he is at a distance, endure to think of such a mighty
+one?&nbsp; And if not to think of him while at a distance, how
+can you endure to be in his presence?&nbsp; I, your prince, am
+familiar with you, and you may play with me as you would with a
+grasshopper.&nbsp; Consider, therefore, what is for your profit,
+and remember the immunities that I have granted you.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Farther, if all be true that this man hath said, how
+comes it to pass that the subjects of Shaddai are so enslaved in
+all places where they come?&nbsp; None in the universe so unhappy
+as they, none so trampled upon as they.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Consider, my Mansoul: would thou wert as loath to leave
+me as I am loath to leave thee.&nbsp; But consider, I say, the
+ball is yet at thy foot; liberty you have, if you know how to use
+it; yea, a king you have too, if you can tell how to love and
+obey him.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Upon this speech, the town of Mansoul did again harden their
+hearts yet more against the captains of Shaddai.&nbsp; The
+thoughts of his greatness did quite quash them, and the thoughts
+of his holiness sunk them in despair.&nbsp; Wherefore, after a
+short consult, they (of the Diabolonian party they were) sent
+back this word by the trumpeter, That, for their parts, they were
+resolved to stick to their king, but never to yield to Shaddai;
+so it was but in vain to give them any further summons, for they
+had rather die upon the place than yield.&nbsp; And now things
+seemed to be gone quite back, and Mansoul to be out of reach or
+call, yet the captains who knew what their Lord could do, would
+not yet be beat out of heart; they therefore sent them another
+summons, more sharp and severe than the last; but the oftener
+they were sent to, to reconcile to Shaddai, the further off they
+were.&nbsp; &lsquo;As they called them, so they went from
+them&mdash;yea, though they called them to the Most
+High.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>So they ceased that way to deal with them any more, and
+inclined to think of another way.&nbsp; The captains, therefore,
+did gather themselves together, to have free conference among
+themselves, to know what was yet to be done to gain the town, and
+to deliver it from the tyranny of Diabolus; and one said after
+this manner, and another after that.&nbsp; Then stood up the
+right noble the Captain Conviction, and said, &lsquo;My brethren,
+mine opinion is this:</p>
+<p>&lsquo;First, that we continually play our slings into the
+town, and keep it in a continual alarm, molesting them day and
+night.&nbsp; By thus doing, we shall stop the growth of their
+rampant spirit; for a lion may be tamed by continual
+molestation.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Secondly, this done, I advise that, in the next place,
+we with one consent draw up a petition to our Lord Shaddai, by
+which, after we have showed our King the condition of Mansoul and
+of affairs here, and have begged his pardon for our no better
+success, we will earnestly implore his Majesty&rsquo;s help, and
+that he will please to send us more force and power, and some
+gallant and well-spoken commander to head them, that so his
+Majesty may not lose the benefit of these his good beginnings,
+but may complete his conquest upon the town of
+Mansoul.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>To this speech of the noble Captain Conviction they as one man
+consented, and agreed that a petition should forthwith be drawn
+up, and sent by a fit man away to Shaddai with speed.&nbsp; The
+contents of the petition were thus:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Most gracious and glorious King, the Lord of the best
+world, and the builder of the town of Mansoul, we have, dread
+Sovereign, at thy commandment, put our lives in jeopardy, and at
+thy bidding made a war upon the famous town of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+When we went up against it, we did, according to our commission,
+first offer conditions of peace unto it.&nbsp; But they, great
+King, set light by our counsel, and would none of our
+reproof.&nbsp; They were for shutting their gates, and for
+keeping us out of the town.&nbsp; They also mounted their guns,
+they sallied out upon us, and have done us what damage they
+could; but we pursued them with alarm upon alarm, requiting them
+with such retribution as was meet, and have done some execution
+upon the town.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Diabolus, Incredulity, and Willbewill are the great
+doers against us: now we are in our winter quarters, but so as
+that we do yet with an high hand molest and distress the
+town.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Once, as we think, had we had but one substantial
+friend in the town, such as would but have seconded the sound of
+our summons as they ought, the people might have yielded
+themselves; but there were none but enemies there, nor any to
+speak in behalf of our Lord to the town.&nbsp; Wherefore, though
+we have done as we could, yet Mansoul abides in a state of
+rebellion against thee.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Now, King of kings, let it please thee to pardon the
+unsuccessfulness of thy servants, who have been no more
+advantageous in so desirable a work as the conquering of Mansoul
+is.&nbsp; And send, Lord, as we now desire, more forces to
+Mansoul, that it may be subdued; and a man to head them, that the
+town may both love and fear.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;We do not thus speak because we are willing to
+relinquish the wars, (for we are for laying of our bones against
+the place,) but that the town of Mansoul may be won for thy
+Majesty.&nbsp; We also pray thy Majesty, for expedition in this
+matter, that, after their conquest, we may be at liberty to be
+sent about other thy gracious designs.&nbsp; Amen.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The petition, thus drawn up, was sent away with haste to the
+King by the hand of that good man, Mr. Love-to-Mansoul.</p>
+<p>When this petition was come to the palace of the King, who
+should it be delivered to but to the King&rsquo;s Son?&nbsp; So
+he took it and read it, and because the contents of it pleased
+him well, he mended, and also in some things added to the
+petition himself.&nbsp; So, after he had made such amendments and
+additions as he thought convenient, with his own hand, he carried
+it in to the King; to whom, when he had with obeisance delivered
+it, he put on authority, and spake to it himself.</p>
+<p>Now the King, at the sight of the petition, was glad; but how
+much more, think you, when it was seconded by his Son!&nbsp; It
+pleased him also to hear that his servants who camped against
+Mansoul were so hearty in the work, and so steadfast in their
+resolves, and that they had already got some ground upon the
+famous town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>Wherefore the King called to him Emmanuel, his Son, who said,
+&lsquo;Here am I, my Father.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then said the King,
+&lsquo;Thou knowest, as I do myself, the condition of the town of
+Mansoul, and what we have purposed, and what thou hast done to
+redeem it.&nbsp; Come now, therefore, my Son, and prepare thyself
+for the war, for thou shalt go to my camp at Mansoul.&nbsp; Thou
+shalt also there prosper and prevail, and conquer the town of
+Mansoul.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said the King&rsquo;s Son, &lsquo;Thy law is within my
+heart: I delight to do thy will.&nbsp; This is the day that I
+have longed for, and the work that I have waited for all this
+while.&nbsp; Grant me, therefore, what force thou shalt in thy
+wisdom think meet; and I will go and will deliver from Diabolus,
+and from his power, thy perishing town of Mansoul.&nbsp; My heart
+has been often pained within me for the miserable town of
+Mansoul; but now it is rejoiced, but now it is glad.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>And with that he leaped over the mountains for joy, saying,
+&lsquo;I have not, in my heart, thought anything too dear for
+Mansoul: the day of vengeance is in mine heart for thee, my
+Mansoul: and glad am I that thou, my Father, hast made me the
+Captain of their salvation.&nbsp; And I will now begin to plague
+all those that have been a plague to my town of Mansoul, and will
+deliver it from their hand.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>When the King&rsquo;s Son had said thus to his Father, it
+presently flew like lightning round about at court; yea, it there
+became the only talk what Emmanuel was to go to do for the famous
+town of Mansoul.&nbsp; But you cannot think how the courtiers,
+too, were taken with this design of the Prince; yea, so affected
+were they with this work, and with the justness of the war, that
+the highest lord and greatest peer of the kingdom did covet to
+have commissions under Emmanuel, to go to help to recover again
+to Shaddai the miserable town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>Then was it concluded that some should go and carry tidings to
+the camp, that Emmanuel was to come to recover Mansoul, and that
+he would bring along with him so mighty, so impregnable a force,
+that he could not be resisted.&nbsp; But, oh! how ready were the
+high ones at court to run like lackeys to carry these tidings to
+the camp that was at Mansoul.&nbsp; Now, when the captains
+perceived that the King would send Emmanuel his Son, and that it
+also delighted the Son to be sent on this errand by the great
+Shaddai his Father, they also, to show how they were pleased at
+the thoughts of his coming gave a shout that made the earth rend
+at the sound thereof.&nbsp; Yea, the mountains did answer again
+by echo, and Diabolus himself did totter and shake.</p>
+<p>For you must know, that though the town of Mansoul itself was
+not much, if at all concerned with the project, (for, alas for
+them! they were wofully besotted, for they chiefly regarded their
+pleasure and their lusts,) yet Diabolus their governor was; for
+he had his spies continually abroad, who brought him intelligence
+of all things, and they told him what was doing at court against
+him, and that Emmanuel would shortly certainly come with a power
+to invade him.&nbsp; Nor was there any man at court, nor peer of
+the kingdom, that Diabolus so feared as he feared this Prince;
+for, if you remember, I showed you before that Diabolus had felt
+the weight of his hand already; so that, since it was he that was
+to come, this made him the more afraid.</p>
+<p>Well, you see how I have told you that the King&rsquo;s Son
+was engaged to come from the court to save Mansoul, and that his
+Father had made him the Captain of the forces.&nbsp; The time,
+therefore, of his setting forth being now expired, he addressed
+himself for his march, and taketh with him, for his power, five
+noble captains and their forces.</p>
+<p>1. The first was that famous captain, the noble Captain
+Credence.&nbsp; His were the red colours, and Mr. Promise bare
+them; and for a scutcheon he had the holy lamb and golden shield;
+and he had ten thousand men at his feet.</p>
+<p>2. The second was that famous captain, the Captain
+Good-Hope.&nbsp; His were the blue colours; his standard-bearer
+was Mr. Expectation, and for his scutcheon he had the three
+golden anchors; and he had ten thousand men at his feet.</p>
+<p>3. The third was that valiant captain, the Captain
+Charity.&nbsp; His standard-bearer was Mr. Pitiful: his were the
+green colours, and for his scutcheon he had three naked orphans
+embraced in the bosom; and he had ten thousand men at his
+feet.</p>
+<p>4. The fourth was that gallant commander, the Captain
+Innocent.&nbsp; His standard-bearer was Mr. Harmless: his were
+the white colours, and for his scutcheon he had the three golden
+doves.</p>
+<p>5. The fifth was the truly loyal and well-beloved captain, the
+Captain Patience.&nbsp; His standard-bearer was Mr. Suffer-Long:
+his were the black colours, and for a scutcheon he had three
+arrows through the golden heart.</p>
+<p>These were Emmanuel&rsquo;s captains; these their
+standard-bearers, their colours, and their scutcheons; and these
+the men under their command.&nbsp; So, as was said, the brave
+Prince took his march to go to the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Captain
+Credence led the van, and Captain Patience brought up the rear;
+so the other three, with their men, made up the main body, the
+Prince himself riding in his chariot at the head of them.</p>
+<p>But when they set out for their march, oh, how the trumpets
+sounded, their armour glittered, and how the colours waved in the
+wind!&nbsp; The Prince&rsquo;s armour was all of gold, and it
+shone like the sun in the firmament; the captains&rsquo; armour
+was of proof, and was in appearance like the glittering
+stars.&nbsp; There were also some from the court that rode
+reformades for the love that they had to the King Shaddai, and
+for the happy deliverance of the town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>Emmanuel also, when he had thus set forwards to go to recover
+the town of Mansoul, took with him, at the commandment of his
+Father, fifty-four battering-rams, and twelve slings to whirl
+stones withal.&nbsp; Every one of these was made of pure gold,
+and these they carried with them, in the heart and body of their
+army, all along as they went to Mansoul.</p>
+<p>So they marched till they came within less than a league of
+the town; there they lay till the first four captains came
+thither to acquaint them with matters.&nbsp; Then they took their
+journey to go to the town of Mansoul, and unto Mansoul they came;
+but when the old soldiers that were in the camp saw that they had
+new forces to join with, they again gave such a shout before the
+walls of the town of Mansoul, that it put Diabolus into another
+fright.&nbsp; So they sat down before the town, not now as the
+other four captains did, to wit, against the gates of Mansoul
+only; but they environed it round on every side, and beset it
+behind and before; so that now, let Mansoul look which way it
+will, it saw force and power lie in siege against it.&nbsp;
+Besides, there were mounts cast up against it.&nbsp; The Mount
+Gracious was on the one side, and Mount Justice was on the
+other.&nbsp; Further, there were several small banks and
+advance-grounds, as Plain-Truth Hill and No-Sin Banks, where many
+of the slings were placed against the town.&nbsp; Upon Mount
+Gracious were planted four, and upon Mount Justice were placed as
+many, and the rest were conveniently placed in several parts
+round about the town.&nbsp; Five of the best battering-rams, that
+is, of the biggest of them, were placed upon Mount Hearken, a
+mount cast up hard by Ear-gate, with intent to break that
+open.</p>
+<p>Now when the men of the town saw the multitude of the soldiers
+that were come up against the place, and the rams and slings, and
+the mounts on which they were planted, together with the
+glittering of the armour and the waving of their colours, they
+were forced to shift, and shift, and again to shift their
+thoughts; but they hardly changed for thoughts more stout, but
+rather for thoughts more faint; for though before they thought
+themselves sufficiently guarded, yet now they began to think that
+no man knew what would be their hap or lot.</p>
+<p>When the good Prince Emmanuel had thus beleaguered Mansoul, in
+the first place he hangs out the white flag, which he caused to
+be set up among the golden slings that were planted upon Mount
+Gracious.&nbsp; And this he did for two reasons: 1. To give
+notice to Mansoul that he could and would yet be gracious if they
+turned to him.&nbsp; 2. And that he might leave them the more
+without excuse, should he destroy them, they continuing in their
+rebellion.</p>
+<p>So the white flag, with the three golden doves in it, was hung
+out for two days together, to give them time and space to
+consider; but they, as was hinted before, as if they were
+unconcerned, made no reply to the favourable signal of the
+Prince.</p>
+<p>Then he commanded, and they set the red flag upon that mount
+called Mount Justice.&nbsp; It was the red flag of Captain
+Judgment, whose scutcheon was the burning fiery furnace; and this
+also stood waving before them in the wind for several days
+together.&nbsp; But look how they carried it under the white
+flag, when that was hung out, so did they also when the red one
+was; and yet he took no advantage of them.</p>
+<p>Then he commanded again that his servants should hang out the
+black flag of defiance against them, whose scutcheon was the
+three burning thunderbolts; but as unconcerned was Mansoul at
+this as at those that went before.&nbsp; But when the Prince saw
+that neither mercy nor judgment, nor execution of judgment, would
+or could come near the heart of Mansoul, he was touched with much
+compunction, and said, &lsquo;Surely this strange carriage of the
+town of Mansoul doth rather arise from ignorance of the manner
+and feats of war, than from a secret defiance of us, and
+abhorrence of their own lives; or if they know the manner of the
+war of their own, yet not the rites and ceremonies of the wars in
+which we are concerned, when I make wars upon mine enemy
+Diabolus.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Therefore he sent to the town of Mansoul, to let them know
+what he meant by those signs and ceremonies of the flag; and also
+to know of them which of the things they would choose, whether
+grace and mercy, or judgment and the execution of judgment.&nbsp;
+All this while they kept their gates shut with locks, bolts, and
+bars, as fast as they could.&nbsp; Their guards also were
+doubled, and their watch made as strong as they could.&nbsp;
+Diabolus also did pluck up what heart he could, to encourage the
+town to make resistance.</p>
+<p>The townsmen also made answer to the Prince&rsquo;s messenger,
+in substance according to that which follows:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Great Sir,&mdash;As to what, by your messenger, you
+have signified to us, whether we will accept of your mercy, or
+fall by your justice, we are bound by the law and custom of this
+place, and can give you no positive answer; for it is against the
+law, government, and the prerogative royal of our king, to make
+either peace or war without him.&nbsp; But this we will
+do,&mdash;we will petition that our prince will come down to the
+wall, and there give you such treatment as he shall think fit and
+profitable for us.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>When the good Prince Emmanuel heard this answer, and saw the
+slavery and bondage of the people, and how much content they were
+to abide in the chains of the tyrant Diabolus, it grieved him at
+the heart; and, indeed, when at any time he perceived that any
+were contented under the slavery of the giant, he would be
+affected with it.</p>
+<p>But to return again to our purpose.&nbsp; After the town had
+carried this news to Diabolus, and had told him, moreover, that
+the Prince, that lay in the leaguer without the wall, waited upon
+them for an answer, he refused, and huffed as well as he could;
+but in heart he was afraid.</p>
+<p>Then said he, &lsquo;I will go down to the gates myself, and
+give him such an answer as I think fit.&rsquo;&nbsp; So he went
+down to Mouth-gate, and there addressed himself to speak to
+Emmanuel, (but in such language as the town understood not,) the
+contents whereof were as follows:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;O thou great Emmanuel, Lord of all the world, I know
+thee, that thou art the Son of the great Shaddai!&nbsp; Wherefore
+art thou come to torment me, and to cast me out of my
+possession?&nbsp; This town of Mansoul, as thou very well
+knowest, is mine, and that by a twofold right. 1. It is mine by
+right of conquest; I won it in the open field; and shall the prey
+be taken from the mighty, or the lawful captive be
+delivered?&nbsp; 2. This town of Mansoul is mine also by their
+subjection.&nbsp; They have opened the gates of their town unto
+me; they have sworn fidelity to me, and have openly chosen me to
+be their king; they have also given their castle into my hands;
+yea, they have put the whole strength of Mansoul under me.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Moreover, this town of Mansoul hath disavowed thee,
+yea, they have cast thy law, thy name, thy image, and all that is
+thine, behind their back, and have accepted and set up in their
+room my law, my name, my image, and all that ever is mine.&nbsp;
+Ask else thy captains, and they will tell thee that Mansoul hath,
+in answer to all their summonses, shown love and loyalty to me,
+but always disdain, despite, contempt, and scorn to thee and
+thine.&nbsp; Now, thou art the Just One and the Holy, and
+shouldest do no iniquity.&nbsp; Depart, then, I pray thee,
+therefore, from me, and leave me to my just inheritance
+peaceably.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>This oration was made in the language of Diabolus himself; for
+although he can, to every man, speak in their own language, (else
+he could not tempt them all as he does,) yet he has a language
+proper to himself, and it is the language of the infernal cave,
+or black pit.</p>
+<p>Wherefore the town of Mansoul (poor hearts!) understood him
+not; nor did they see how he crouched and cringed while he stood
+before Emmanuel, their Prince.</p>
+<p>Yea, they all this while took him to be one of that power and
+force that by no means could be resisted.&nbsp; Wherefore, while
+he was thus entreating that he might have yet his residence
+there, and that Emmanuel would not take it from him by force, the
+inhabitants boasted even of his valour, saying, &lsquo;Who is
+able to make war with him?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Well, when this pretended king had made an end of what he
+would say, Emmanuel, the golden Prince, stood up and spake; the
+contents of whose words follow:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Thou deceiving one,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;I have, in
+my Father&rsquo;s name, in mine own name, and on the behalf and
+for the good of this wretched town of Mansoul, somewhat to say
+unto thee.&nbsp; Thou pretendest a right, a lawful right, to the
+deplorable town of Mansoul, when it is most apparent to all my
+Father&rsquo;s court that the entrance which thou hast obtained
+in at the gates of Mansoul was through thy lie and falsehood;
+thou beliedst my Father, thou beliedst his law, and so deceivedst
+the people of Mansoul.&nbsp; Thou pretendest that the people have
+accepted thee for their king, their captain, and right liege
+lord; but that also was by the exercise of deceit and
+guile.&nbsp; Now, if lying, wiliness, sinful craft, and all
+manner of horrible hypocrisy, will go in my Father&rsquo;s court
+(in which court thou must be tried) for equity and right, then
+will I confess unto thee that thou hast made a lawful
+conquest.&nbsp; But, alas! what thief, what tyrant, what devil is
+there that may not conquer after this sort?&nbsp; But I can make
+it appear, O Diabolus, that thou, in all thy pretences to a
+conquest of Mansoul, hast nothing of truth to say.&nbsp; Thinkest
+thou this to be right, that that didst put the lie upon my
+Father, and madest him (to Mansoul) the greatest deluder in the
+world?&nbsp; And what sayest thou to thy perverting knowingly the
+right purport and intent of the law?&nbsp; Was it good also that
+thou madest a prey of the innocency and simplicity of the now
+miserable town of Mansoul?&nbsp; Yea, thou didst overcome Mansoul
+by promising to them happiness in their transgressions against my
+Father&rsquo;s law, when thou knewest, and couldest not but know,
+hadst thou consulted nothing but thine own experience, that that
+was the way to undo them.&nbsp; Thou hast also thyself, O thou
+master of enmity, of spite defaced my Father&rsquo;s image in
+Mansoul, and set up thy own in its place, to the great contempt
+of my Father, the heightening of thy sin, and to the intolerable
+damage of the perishing town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Thou hast, moreover, (as if all these were but little
+things with thee,) not only deluded and undone this place, but,
+by thy lies and fradulent carriage, hast set them against their
+own deliverance.&nbsp; How hast thou stirred them up against my
+Father&rsquo;s captains, and made them to fight against those
+that were sent of him to deliver them from their bondage!&nbsp;
+All these things, and very many more, thou hast done against thy
+light, and in contempt of my Father and of his law, yea, and with
+design to bring under his displeasure for ever the miserable town
+of Mansoul.&nbsp; I am therefore come to avenge the wrong that
+thou hast done to my Father, and to deal with thee for the
+blasphemies wherewith thou hast made poor Mansoul blaspheme his
+name.&nbsp; Yea, upon thy head, thou prince of the infernal cave,
+will I requite it.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;As for myself, O Diabolus, I am come against thee by
+lawful power, and to take, by strength of hand, this town of
+Mansoul out of thy burning fingers; for this town of Mansoul is
+mine, O Diabolus, and that by undoubted right, as all shall see
+that will diligently search the most ancient and most authentic
+records, and I will plead my title to it, to the confusion of thy
+face.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;First, for the town of Mansoul, my Father built and did
+fashion it with his hand.&nbsp; The palace also that is in the
+midst of that town, he built it for his own delight.&nbsp; This
+town of Mansoul, therefore, is my Father&rsquo;s, and that by the
+best of titles, and he that gainsays the truth of this must lie
+against his soul.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Secondly, O thou master of the lie, this town of
+Mansoul is mine.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;1. For that I am my Father&rsquo;s heir, his firstborn,
+and the only delight of his heart.&nbsp; I am therefore come up
+against thee in mine own right, even to recover mine own
+inheritance out of thine hand.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;2. But further, as I have a right and title to Mansoul
+by being my Father&rsquo;s heir, so I have also by my
+Father&rsquo;s donation.&nbsp; His it was, and he gave it me; nor
+have I at any time offended my Father, that he should take it
+from me, and give it to thee.&nbsp; Nor have I been forced, by
+playing the bankrupt, to sell or set to sale to thee my beloved
+town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Mansoul is my desire, my delight, and the
+joy of my heart.&nbsp; But,</p>
+<p>&lsquo;3. Mansoul is mine by right of purchase.&nbsp; I have
+bought it, O Diabolus, I have bought it to myself.&nbsp; Now,
+since it was my Father&rsquo;s and mine, as I was his heir, and
+since also I have made it mine by virtue of a great purchase, it
+followeth that, by all lawful right, the town of Mansoul is mine,
+and that thou art an usurper, a tyrant, and traitor, in thy
+holding possession thereof.&nbsp; Now, the cause of my purchasing
+of it was this: Mansoul had trespassed against my Father; now my
+Father had said, that in the day that they broke his law they
+should die.&nbsp; Now, it is more possible for heaven and earth
+to pass away than for my Father to break his word.&nbsp;
+Wherefore when Mansoul had sinned indeed by hearkening to thy
+lie, I put in and became a surety to my Father, body for body,
+and soul for soul, that I would make amends for Mansoul&rsquo;s
+transgressions, and my Father did accept thereof.&nbsp; So, when
+the time appointed was come, I gave body for body, soul for soul,
+life for life, blood for blood, and so redeemed my beloved
+Mansoul.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;4. Nor did I do this by halves: my Father&rsquo;s law
+and justice, that were both concerned in the threatening upon
+transgression, are both now satisfied, and very well content that
+Mansoul should be delivered.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;5. Nor am I come out this day against thee, but by
+commandment of my Father; it was he that said unto me, &ldquo;Go
+down and deliver Mansoul.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Wherefore be it known unto thee, O thou fountain of
+deceit, and be it also known to the foolish town of Mansoul, that
+I am not come against thee this day without my Father.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;And now,&rsquo; said the golden-headed Prince, &lsquo;I
+have a word to the town of Mansoul.&rsquo;&nbsp; But so soon as
+mention was made that he had a word to speak to the besotted town
+of Mansoul, the gates were double-guarded, and all men commanded
+not to give him audience.&nbsp; So he proceeded and said,
+&lsquo;O unhappy town of Mansoul, I cannot but be touched with
+pity and compassion for thee.&nbsp; Thou hast accepted of
+Diabolus for thy king, and art become a nurse and minister of
+Diabolonians against thy sovereign Lord.&nbsp; Thy gates thou
+hast opened to him, but hast shut them fast against me; thou hast
+given him an hearing, but hast stopped thine ears at my
+cry.&nbsp; He brought to thee thy destruction, and thou didst
+receive both him and it: I am come to thee bringing salvation,
+but thou regardest me not.&nbsp; Besides, thou hast, as with
+sacrilegious hands, taken thyself, with all that was mine in
+thee, and hast given all to my foe, and to the greatest enemy my
+Father has.&nbsp; You have bowed and subjected yourselves to him,
+you have vowed and sworn yourselves to be his.&nbsp; Poor
+Mansoul! what shall I do unto thee?&nbsp; Shall I save
+thee?&mdash;shall I destroy thee?&nbsp; What shall I do unto
+thee?&nbsp; Shall I fall upon thee, and grind thee to powder, or
+make thee a monument of the richest grace?&nbsp; What shall I do
+unto thee?&nbsp; Hearken, therefore, thou town of Mansoul,
+hearken to my word, and thou shalt live.&nbsp; I am merciful,
+Mansoul, and thou shalt find me so: shut me not out of thy
+gates.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;O Mansoul, neither is my commission nor inclination at
+all to do thee hurt.&nbsp; Why fliest thou so fast from thy
+friend, and stickest so close to thine enemy?&nbsp; Indeed, I
+would have thee, because it becomes thee to be sorry for thy sin,
+but do not despair of life; this great force is not to hurt thee,
+but to deliver thee from thy bondage, and to reduce thee to thy
+obedience.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;My commission, indeed, is to make a war upon Diabolus
+thy king, and upon all Diabolonians with him; for he is the
+strong man armed that keeps the house, and I will have him out:
+his spoils I must divide, his armour I must take from him, his
+hold I must cast him out of, and must make it a habitation for
+myself.&nbsp; And this, O Mansoul, shall Diabolus know when he
+shall be made to follow me in chains, and when Mansoul shall
+rejoice to see it so.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I could, would I now put forth my might, cause that
+forthwith he should leave you and depart; but I have it in my
+heart so to deal with him, as that the justice of the war that I
+shall make upon him may be seen and acknowledged by all.&nbsp; He
+hath taken Mansoul by fraud, and keeps it by violence and deceit,
+and I will make him bare and naked in the eyes of all
+observers.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;All my words are true.&nbsp; I am mighty to save, and
+will deliver my Mansoul out of his hand.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>This speech was intended chiefly for Mansoul, but Mansoul
+would not have the hearing of it.&nbsp; They shut up Ear-gate,
+they barricaded it up, they kept it locked and bolted, they set a
+guard thereat, and commanded that no Mansoulonian should go out
+to him, nor that any from the camp should be admitted into the
+town.&nbsp; All this they did, so horribly had Diabolus enchanted
+them to do, and seek to do for him, against their rightful Lord
+and Prince; wherefore no man, nor voice, nor sound of man that
+belonged to the glorious host, was to come into the town.</p>
+<p>So when Emmanuel saw that Mansoul was thus involved in sin, he
+calls his army together, (since now also his words were
+despised,) and gave out a commandment throughout all his host to
+be ready against the time appointed.&nbsp; Now, forasmuch as
+there was no way lawfully to take the town of Mansoul but to get
+in by the gates, and at Ear-gate as the chief, therefore he
+commanded his captains and commanders to bring their rams, their
+slings and their men, and place them at Eye-gate and Ear-gate, in
+order to his taking the town.</p>
+<p>When Emmanuel had put all things in a readiness to give
+Diabolus battle, he sent again to know of the town of Mansoul, if
+in peaceable manner they would yield themselves, or whether they
+were yet resolved to put him to try the utmost extremity?&nbsp;
+They then, together with Diabolus their king, called a council of
+war, and resolved upon certain propositions that should be
+offered to Emmanuel, if he will accept thereof, so they agreed;
+and then the next was, who should be sent on this errand.&nbsp;
+Now, there was in the town of Mansoul an old man, a Diabolonian,
+and his name was Mr. Loth-to-stoop, a stiff man in his way, and a
+great doer for Diabolus; him, therefore, they sent, and put into
+his mouth what he should say.&nbsp; So he went and came to the
+camp to Emmanuel, and when he was come, a time was appointed to
+give him audience.&nbsp; So at the time he came, and after a
+Diabolonian ceremony or two, he thus began and said, &lsquo;Great
+sir, that it may be known unto all men how good-natured a prince
+my master is, he has sent me to tell your lordship that he is
+very willing, rather than go to war, to deliver up into your
+hands one half of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; I am therefore to
+know if your Mightiness will accept of this
+proposition.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said Emmanuel, &lsquo;The whole is mine by gift and
+purchase, wherefore I will never lose one half.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said Mr. Loth-to-stoop, &lsquo;Sir, my master hath said
+that he will be content that you shall be the nominal and titular
+Lord of all, if he may possess but a part.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then Emmanuel answered, &lsquo;The whole is mine really, not
+in name and word only; wherefore I will be the sole lord and
+possessor of all, or of none at all, of Mansoul.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then Mr. Loth-to-stoop said again, &lsquo;Sir, behold the
+condescension of my master!&nbsp; He says, that he will be
+content, if he may but have assigned to him some place in Mansoul
+as a place to live privately in, and you shall be Lord of all the
+rest.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said the golden Prince, &lsquo;All that the Father giveth
+me shall come to me; and of all that he giveth me I will lose
+nothing&mdash;no, not a hoof nor a hair.&nbsp; I will not,
+therefore, grant him, no, not the least corner of Mansoul to
+dwell in; I will have all to myself.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then Loth-to-stoop said again, &lsquo;But, sir, suppose that
+my Lord should resign the whole town to you, only with this
+proviso, that he sometimes, when he comes into this country, may,
+for old acquaintance&rsquo; sake, be entertained as a wayfaring
+man for two days, or ten days or a month, or so.&nbsp; May not
+this small matter be granted?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said Emmanuel, &lsquo;No.&nbsp; He came as a wayfaring
+man to David, nor did he stay long with him, and yet it had like
+to have cost David his soul.&nbsp; I will not consent that he
+ever should have any harbour more there.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said Mr. Loth-to-stoop, &lsquo;Sir, you seem to be very
+hard.&nbsp; Suppose my master should yield to all that your
+lordship hath said, provided that his friends and kindred in
+Mansoul may have liberty to trade in the town, and to enjoy their
+present dwellings.&nbsp; May not that be granted, sir?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said Emmanuel, &lsquo;No; that is contrary to my
+Father&rsquo;s will; for all, and all manner of Diabolonians that
+now are, or that at any time shall be found in Mansoul, shall not
+only lose their lands and liberties, but also their
+lives.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said Mr. Loth-to-stoop again, &lsquo;But, sir, may not my
+master and great lord, by letters, by passengers, by accidental
+opportunities, and the like, maintain, if he shall deliver up all
+unto thee, some kind of old friendship with Mansoul?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Emmanuel answered, &lsquo;No, by no means; forasmuch as any
+such fellowship, friendship, intimacy, or acquaintance, in what
+way, sort, or mode soever maintained, will tend to the corrupting
+of Mansoul, the alienating of their affections from me, and the
+endangering of their peace with my Father.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Mr. Loth-to-stoop yet added further, saying, &lsquo;But, great
+sir, since my master hath many friends, and those that are dear
+to him, in Mansoul, may he not, if he shall depart from them,
+even of his bounty and good-nature, bestow upon them, as he sees
+fit, some tokens of his love and kindness that he had for them,
+to the end that Mansoul, when he is gone, may look upon such
+tokens of kindness once received from their old friend, and
+remember him who was once their king, and the merry times that
+they sometimes enjoyed one with another, while he and they lived
+in peace together?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said Emmanuel, &lsquo;No; for if Mansoul come to be mine,
+I shall not admit of nor consent that there should be the least
+scrap, shred, or dust of Diabolus left behind, as tokens of gifts
+bestowed upon any in Mansoul, thereby to call to remembrance the
+horrible communion that was betwixt them and him.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Well, sir,&rsquo; said Mr. Loth-to-stoop, &lsquo;I have
+one thing more to propound, and then I am got to the end of my
+commission.&nbsp; Suppose that, when my master is gone from
+Mansoul, any that shall yet live in the town should have such
+business of high concerns to do, that if they be neglected the
+party shall be undone; and suppose, sir, that nobody can help in
+that case so well as my master and lord, may not now my master be
+sent for upon so urgent an occasion as this?&nbsp; Or if he may
+not be admitted into the town, may not he and the person
+concerned meet in some of the villages near Mansoul, and there
+lay their heads together, and there consult of
+matters?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>This was the last of those ensnaring propositions that Mr.
+Loth-to-stoop had to propound to Emmanuel on behalf of his master
+Diabolus; but Emmanuel would not grant it; for he said,
+&lsquo;There can be no case, or thing, or matter fall out in
+Mansoul, when thy master shall be gone, that may not be solved by
+my Father; besides, it will be a great disparagement to my
+Father&rsquo;s wisdom and skill to admit any from Mansoul to go
+out to Diabolus for advice, when they are bid before, in
+everything, by prayer and supplication to let their requests be
+made known to my Father.&nbsp; Further, this, should it be
+granted, would be to grant that a door should be set open for
+Diabolus, and the Diabolonians in Mansoul, to hatch, and plot,
+and bring to pass treasonable designs, to the grief of my Father
+and me, and to the utter destruction of Mansoul.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>When Mr. Loth-to-stoop had heard this answer, he took his
+leave of Emmanuel, and departed, saying that he would carry word
+to his master concerning this whole affair.&nbsp; So he departed,
+and came to Diabolus to Mansoul, and told him the whole of the
+matter, and how Emmanuel would not admit, no, not by any means,
+that he, when he was once gone out, should for ever have anything
+more to do either in, or with any that are of the town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; When Mansoul and Diabolus had heard this relation
+of things, they with one consent concluded to use their best
+endeavour to keep Emmanuel out of Mansoul, and sent old
+Ill-Pause, of whom you have heard before, to tell the Prince and
+his captains so.&nbsp; So the old gentleman came up to the top of
+Ear-gate, and called to the camp for a hearing, who when they
+gave audience, he said, &lsquo;I have in commandment from my high
+lord to bid you tell it to your Prince Emmanuel, that Mansoul and
+their king are resolved to stand and fall together; and that it
+is in vain for your Prince to think of ever having Mansoul in his
+hand, unless he can take it by force.&rsquo;&nbsp; So some went
+and told to Emmanuel what old Ill-Pause, a Diabolonian in
+Mansoul, had said.&nbsp; Then said the Prince, &lsquo;I must try
+the power of my sword, for I will not (for all the rebellions and
+repulses that Mansoul has made against me) raise my siege and
+depart, but will assuredly take my Mansoul, and deliver it from
+the hand of her enemy.&rsquo;&nbsp; And with that he gave out a
+commandment that Captain Boanerges, Captain Conviction, Captain
+Judgment, and Captain Execution should forthwith march up to
+Ear-gate with trumpets sounding, colours flying, and with
+shouting for the battle.&nbsp; Also he would that Captain
+Credence should join himself with them.&nbsp; Emmanuel, moreover,
+gave order that Captain Good-Hope and Captain Charity should draw
+themselves up before Eye-gate.&nbsp; He bid also that the rest of
+his captains and their men should place themselves for the best
+of their advantage against the enemy round about the town; and
+all was done as he had commanded.</p>
+<p>Then he bid that the word should be given forth, and the word
+was at that time, &lsquo;<span
+class="smcap">Emmanuel</span>.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then was an alarm
+sounded, and the battering-rams were played, and the slings did
+whirl stones into the town amain, and thus the battle
+began.&nbsp; Now Diabolus himself did manage the townsmen in the
+war, and that at every gate; wherefore their resistance was the
+more forcible, hellish, and offensive to Emmanuel.&nbsp; Thus was
+the good Prince engaged and entertained by Diabolus and Mansoul
+for several days together; and a sight worth seeing it was to
+behold how the captains of Shaddai behaved themselves in this
+war.</p>
+<p>And first for Captain Boanerges, (not to under-value the
+rest,) he made three most fierce assaults, one after another,
+upon Ear-gate, to the shaking of the posts thereof.&nbsp; Captain
+Conviction, he also made up as fast with Boanerges as possibly he
+could, and both discerning that the gate began to yield, they
+commanded that the rams should still be played against it.&nbsp;
+Now, Captain Conviction, going up very near to the gate, was with
+great force driven back, and received three wounds in the
+mouth.&nbsp; And those that rode reformades, they went about to
+encourage the captains.</p>
+<p>For the valour of the two captains, made mention of before,
+the Prince sent for them to his pavilion, and commanded that a
+while they should rest themselves, and that with somewhat they
+should be refreshed.&nbsp; Care also was taken for Captain
+Conviction, that he should be healed of his wounds.&nbsp; The
+Prince also gave to each of them a chain of gold, and bid them
+yet be of good courage.</p>
+<p>Nor did Captain Good-Hope nor Captain Charity come behind in
+this most desperate fight, for they so well did behave themselves
+at Eye-gate, that they had almost broken it quite open.&nbsp;
+These also had a reward from their Prince, as also had the rest
+of the captains, because they did valiantly round about the
+town.</p>
+<p>In this engagement several of the officers of Diabolus were
+slain, and some of the townsmen wounded.&nbsp; For the officers,
+there was one Captain Boasting slain.&nbsp; This Boasting thought
+that nobody could have shaken the posts of Ear-gate, nor have
+shaken the heart of Diabolus.&nbsp; Next to him there was one
+Captain Secure slain: this Secure used to say that the blind and
+lame in Mansoul were able to keep the gates of the town against
+Emmanuel&rsquo;s army.&nbsp; This Captain Secure did Captain
+Conviction cleave down the head with a two-handed sword, when he
+received himself three wounds in his mouth.</p>
+<p>Besides these there was one Captain Bragman, a very desperate
+fellow, and he was captain over a band of those that threw
+firebrands, arrows, and death: he also received, by the hand of
+Captain Good-Hope at Eye-gate, a mortal wound in the breast.</p>
+<p>There was, moreover, one Mr. Feeling; but he was no captain,
+but a great stickler to encourage Mansoul to rebellion.&nbsp; He
+received a wound in the eye by the hand of one of
+Boanerges&rsquo; soldiers, and had by the captain himself been
+slain, but that he made a sudden retreat.</p>
+<p>But I never saw Willbewill so daunted in all my life; he was
+not able to do as he was wont, and some say that he also received
+a wound in the leg, and that some of the men in the
+Prince&rsquo;s army have certainly seen him limp as he afterwards
+walked on the wall.</p>
+<p>I shall not give you a particular account of the names of the
+soldiers that were slain in the town, for many were maimed, and
+wounded, and slain; for when they saw that the posts of Ear-gate
+did shake, and Eye-gate was well-nigh broken quite open, and also
+that their captains were slain, this took away the hearts of many
+of the Diabolonians; they fell also by the force of the shot that
+were sent by the golden slings into the midst of the town of
+Mansoul.</p>
+<p>Of the townsmen, there was one Love-no-Good; he was a
+townsman, but a Diabolonian; he also received his mortal wound in
+Mansoul, but he died not very soon.</p>
+<p>Mr. Ill-Pause also, who was the man that came along with
+Diabolus when at first he attempted the taking of Mansoul, he
+also received a grievous wound in the head; some say that his
+brain-pan was cracked.&nbsp; This I have taken notice of, that he
+was never after this able to do that mischief to Mansoul as he
+had done in times past.&nbsp; Also old Prejudice and Mr. Anything
+fled.</p>
+<p>Now, when the battle was over, the Prince commanded that yet
+once more the white flag should be set upon Mount Gracious in
+sight of the town of Mansoul, to show that yet Emmanuel had grace
+for the wretched town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>When Diabolus saw the white flag hung out again, and knowing
+that it was not for him, but Mansoul, he cast in his mind to play
+another prank, to wit, to see if Emmanuel would raise his siege
+and begone, upon promise of reformation.&nbsp; So he comes down
+to the gate one evening, a good while after the sun was gone
+down, and calls to speak with Emmanuel, who presently came down
+to the gate, and Diabolus saith unto him:</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Forasmuch as thou makest it appear by thy white flag
+that thou art wholly given to peace and quiet, I thought meet to
+acquaint thee that we are ready to accept thereof upon terms
+which thou mayest admit.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I know that thou art given to devotion, and that
+holiness pleaseth thee; yea, that thy great end in making a war
+upon Mansoul is, that it may be a holy habitation.&nbsp; Well,
+draw off thy forces from the town, and I will bend Mansoul to thy
+bow.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;First, I will lay down all acts of hostility against
+thee, and will be willing to become thy deputy, and will, as I
+have formerly been against thee, now serve thee in the town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; And more particularly,</p>
+<p>&lsquo;1. I will persuade Mansoul to receive thee for their
+Lord; and I know that they will do it the sooner when they shall
+understand that I am thy deputy.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;2. I will show them wherein they have erred, and that
+transgression stands in the way to life.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;3. I will show them the holy law unto which they must
+conform, even that which they have broken.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;4. I will press upon them the necessity of a
+reformation according to thy law.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;5. And, moreover, that none of these things may fail, I
+myself, at my own proper cost and charge, will set up and
+maintain a sufficient ministry, besides lectures, in Mansoul.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;6. Thou shalt receive, as a token of our subjection to
+thee, year by year, what thou shalt think fit to lay and levy
+upon us in token of our subjection to thee.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said Emmanuel to him, &lsquo;O full of deceit, how
+movable are thy ways!&nbsp; How often hast thou changed and
+rechanged, if so be thou mightest still keep possession of my
+Mansoul, though, as has been plainly declared before, I am the
+right heir thereof!&nbsp; Often hast thou made thy proposals
+already, nor is this last a whit better than they.&nbsp; And
+failing to deceive when thou showedst thyself in thy black, thou
+hast now transformed thyself into an angel of light, and wouldst,
+to deceive, be now as a minister of righteousness.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;But know thou, O Diabolus, that nothing must be
+regarded that thou canst propound, for nothing is done by thee
+but to deceive.&nbsp; Thou neither hast conscience to God, nor
+love to the town of Mansoul; whence, then, should these thy
+sayings arise but from sinful craft and deceit?&nbsp; He that can
+of list and will propound what he pleases, and that wherewith he
+may destroy them that believe him, is to be abandoned, with all
+that he shall say.&nbsp; But if righteousness be such a
+beauty-spot in thine eyes now, how is it that wickedness was so
+closely stuck to by thee before?&nbsp; But this is
+by-the-bye.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Thou talkest now of a reformation in Mansoul, and that
+thou thyself, if I will please, wilt be at the head of that
+reformation; all the while knowing that the greatest proficiency
+that man can make in the law, and the righteousness thereof, will
+amount to no more, for the taking away of the curse from Mansoul,
+than just nothing at all; for a law being broken by Mansoul, that
+had before, upon a supposition of the breach thereof, a curse
+pronounced against him for it of God, can never, by his obeying
+of the law, deliver himself therefrom (to say nothing of what a
+reformation is like to be set up in Mansoul when the devil is
+become corrector of vice).&nbsp; Thou knowest that all that thou
+hast now said in this matter is nothing but guile and deceit; and
+is, as it was the first, so is it the last card that thou hast to
+play.&nbsp; Many there be that do soon discern thee when thou
+showest them thy cloven foot; but in thy white, thy light, and in
+thy transformation, thou art seen but of a few.&nbsp; But thou
+shalt not do thus with my Mansoul, O Diabolus; for I do still
+love my Mansoul.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Besides, I am not come to put Mansoul upon works to
+live thereby; should I do so, I should be like unto thee: but I
+am come that by me, and by what I have and shall do for Mansoul,
+they may to my Father be reconciled, though by their sin they
+have provoked him to anger, and though by the law they cannot
+obtain mercy.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Thou talkest of subjecting of this town to good, when
+none desireth it at thy hands.&nbsp; I am sent by my Father to
+possess it myself, and to guide it by the skilfulness of my hands
+into such a conformity to him as shall be pleasing in his
+sight.&nbsp; I will therefore possess it myself; I will
+dispossess and cast thee out; I will set up mine own standard in
+the midst of them; I will also govern them by new laws, new
+officers, new motives, and new ways; yea, I will pull down this
+town, and build it again; and it shall be as though it had not
+been, and it shall then be the glory of the whole
+universe.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>When Diabolus heard this, and perceived that he was discovered
+in all his deceits, he was confounded, and utterly put to a
+nonplus; but having in himself the fountain of iniquity, rage,
+and malice against both Shaddai and his Son, and the beloved town
+of Mansoul, what doth he but strengthen himself what he could to
+give fresh battle to the noble Prince Emmanuel?&nbsp; So, then,
+now we must have another fight before the town of Mansoul is
+taken.&nbsp; Come up, then, to the mountains, you that love to
+see military actions, and behold by both sides how the fatal blow
+is given, while one seeks to hold, and the other seeks to make
+himself master of the famous town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>Diabolus, therefore, having withdrawn himself from the wall to
+his force that was in the heart of the town of Mansoul, Emmanuel
+also returned to the camp; and both of them, after their divers
+ways, put themselves into a posture fit to give battle one to
+another.</p>
+<p>Diabolus, as filled with despair of retaining in his hands the
+famous town of Mansoul, resolved to do what mischief he could
+(if, indeed, he could do any) to the army of the Prince and to
+the famous town of Mansoul; for, alas! it was not the happiness
+of the silly town of Mansoul that was designed by Diabolus, but
+the utter ruin and overthrow thereof, as now is enough in
+view.&nbsp; Wherefore, he commands his officers that they should
+then, when they see that they could hold the town no longer, do
+it what harm and mischief they could, rendering and tearing men,
+women, and children.&nbsp; &lsquo;For,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;we
+had better quite demolish the place, and leave it like a ruinous
+heap, than so leave it that it may be an habitation for
+Emmanuel.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Emmanuel again, knowing that the next battle would issue in
+his being made master of the place, gave out a royal commandment
+to all his officers, high captains, and men of war, to be sure to
+show themselves men of war against Diabolus and all Diabolonians;
+but favourable, merciful, and meek to the old inhabitants of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; &lsquo;Bend, therefore,&rsquo; said the noble
+Prince, &lsquo;the hottest front of the battle against Diabolus
+and his men.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>So the day being come, the command was given, and the
+Prince&rsquo;s men did bravely stand to their arms, and did, as
+before, bend their main force against Ear-gate and
+Eye-gate.&nbsp; The word was then, &lsquo;Mansoul is won!&rsquo;
+so they made their assault upon the town.&nbsp; Diabolus also, as
+fast as he could, with the main of his power, made resistance
+from within; and his high lords and chief captains for a time
+fought very cruelly against the Prince&rsquo;s army.</p>
+<p>But after three or four notable charges by the Prince and his
+noble captains, Ear-gate was broken open, and the bars and bolts
+wherewith it was used to be fast shut up against the Prince, were
+broken into a thousand pieces.&nbsp; Then did the Prince&rsquo;s
+trumpets sound, the captains shout, the town shake, and Diabolus
+retreat to his hold.&nbsp; Well, when the Prince&rsquo;s forces
+had broken open the gate, himself came up and did set his throne
+in it; also he set his standard thereby, upon a mount that before
+by his men was cast up to place the mighty slings thereon.&nbsp;
+The mount was called Mount Hear-well.&nbsp; There, therefore, the
+Prince abode, to wit, hard by the going in at the gate.&nbsp; He
+commanded also that the golden slings should yet be played upon
+the town, especially against the castle, because for shelter
+thither was Diabolus retreated.&nbsp; Now, from Ear-gate the
+street was straight even to the house of Mr. Recorder that so was
+before Diabolus took the town; and hard by his house stood the
+castle, which Diabolus for a long time had made his irksome
+den.&nbsp; The captains, therefore, did quickly clear that street
+by the use of their slings, so that way was made up to the heart
+of the town.&nbsp; Then did the Prince command that Captain
+Boanerges, Captain Conviction, and Captain Judgment, should
+forthwith march up the town to the old gentleman&rsquo;s
+gate.&nbsp; Then did the captains in the most warlike manner
+enter into the town of Mansoul, and marching in with flying
+colours, they came up to the Recorder&rsquo;s house, and that was
+almost as strong as was the castle.&nbsp; Battering-rams they
+took also with them, to plant against the castle gates.&nbsp;
+When they were come to the house of Mr. Conscience, they knocked,
+and demanded entrance.&nbsp; Now, the old gentleman, not knowing
+as yet fully their design, kept his gates shut all the time of
+this fight.&nbsp; Wherefore Boanerges demanded entrance at his
+gates; and no man making answer, he gave it one stroke with the
+head of a ram, and this made the old gentleman shake, and his
+house to tremble and totter.&nbsp; Then came Mr. Recorder down to
+the gates, and, as he could, with quivering lips he asked who was
+there?&nbsp; Boanerges answered, &lsquo;We are the captains and
+commanders of the great Shaddai and of the blessed Emmanuel, his
+Son, and we demand possession of your house for the use of our
+noble Prince.&rsquo;&nbsp; And with that the battering-ram gave
+the gate another shake.&nbsp; This made the old gentleman tremble
+the more, yet durst he not but open the gate: then the
+King&rsquo;s forces marched in, namely, the three brave captains
+mentioned before.&nbsp; Now, the Recorder&rsquo;s house was a
+place of much convenience for Emmanuel, not only because it was
+near to the castle and strong, but also because it was large, and
+fronted the castle, the den where now Diabolus was, for he was
+now afraid to come out of his hold.&nbsp; As for Mr. Recorder,
+the captains carried it very reservedly to him; as yet he knew
+nothing of the great designs of Emmanuel, so that he did not know
+what judgment to make, nor what would be the end of such
+thundering beginnings.&nbsp; It was also presently noised in the
+town how the Recorder&rsquo;s house was possessed, his rooms
+taken up, and his palace made the seat of the war; and no sooner
+was it noised abroad, but they took the alarm as warmly, and gave
+it out to others of his friends, and you know, as a snowball
+loses nothing by rolling, so in little time the whole town was
+possessed that they must expect nothing from the Prince but
+destruction; and the ground of the business was this, the
+Recorder was afraid, the Recorder trembled, and the captains
+carried it strangely to the Recorder.&nbsp; So many came to see,
+but when they with their own eyes did behold the captains in the
+palace, and their battering-rams ever playing at the castle gates
+to beat them down, they were riveted in their fears, and it made
+them all in amaze.&nbsp; And, as I said, the man of the house
+would increase all this; for whoever came to him, or discoursed
+with him, nothing would he talk of, tell them, or hear, but that
+death and destruction now attended Mansoul.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;For,&rsquo; quoth the old gentleman, &lsquo;you are all
+of you sensible that we all have been traitors to that once
+despised, but now famously victorious and glorious Prince
+Emmanuel; for he now, as you see, doth not only lie in close
+siege about us, but hath forced his entrance in at our
+gates.&nbsp; Moreover, Diabolus flees before him; and he hath, as
+you behold, made of my house a garrison against the castle where
+he is.&nbsp; I, for my part, have transgressed greatly, and he
+that is clean, it is well for him.&nbsp; But I say I have
+transgressed greatly in keeping silence when I should have
+spoken, and in perverting justice when I should have executed the
+same.&nbsp; True, I have suffered something at the hand of
+Diabolus for taking part with the laws of King Shaddai; but that,
+alas! what will that do? Will that make compensation for the
+rebellions and treasons that I have done, and have suffered
+without gainsaying to be committed in the town of Mansoul? Oh! I
+tremble to think what will be the end of this so dreadful and so
+ireful a beginning!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Now, while these brave captains were thus busy in the house of
+the old Recorder, Captain Execution was as busy in other parts of
+the town, in securing the back streets and the walls.&nbsp; He
+also hunted the Lord Willbewill sorely; he suffered him not to
+rest in any corner; he pursued him so hard that he drove his men
+from him, and made him glad to thrust his head into a hole.&nbsp;
+Also this mighty warrior did cut three of the Lord
+Willbewill&rsquo;s officers down to the ground: one was old Mr.
+Prejudice, he that had his crown cracked in the mutiny.&nbsp;
+This man was made by Lord Willbewill keeper of the Ear-gate, and
+fell by the hand of Captain Execution.&nbsp; There was also one
+Mr. Backward-to-all-but-naught, and he also was one of Lord
+Willbewill&rsquo;s officers, and was the captain of the two guns
+that once were mounted on the top of Ear-gate; he also was cut
+down to the ground by the hands of Captain Execution.&nbsp;
+Besides these two there was another, a third, and his name was
+Captain Treacherous; a vile man this was, but one that Willbewill
+did put a great deal of confidence in; but him also did this
+Captain Execution cut down to the ground with the rest.</p>
+<p>He also made a very great slaughter among my Lord
+Willbewill&rsquo;s soldiers, killing many that were stout and
+sturdy, and wounding many that for Diabolus were nimble and
+active.&nbsp; But all these were Diabolonians; there was not a
+man, a native of Mansoul, hurt.</p>
+<p>Other feats of war were also likewise performed by other of
+the captains, as at Eye-gate, where Captain Good-Hope and Captain
+Charity had a charge, was great execution done; for the Captain
+Good-Hope, with his own hands, slew one Captain Blindfold, the
+keeper of that gate.&nbsp; This Blindfold was captain of a
+thousand men, and they were they that fought with mauls; he also
+pursued his men, slew many, and wounded more, and made the rest
+hide their heads in corners.</p>
+<p>There was also at that gate Mr. Ill-Pause, of whom you have
+heard before.&nbsp; He was an old man, and had a beard that
+reached down to his girdle: the same was he that was orator to
+Diabolus: he did much mischief in the town of Mansoul, and fell
+by the hand of Captain Good-Hope.</p>
+<p>What shall I say?&nbsp; The Diabolonians in these days lay
+dead in every corner, though too many yet were alive in
+Mansoul.</p>
+<p>Now, the old Recorder and my Lord Understanding, with some
+others of the chief of the town, to wit, such as knew they must
+stand and fall with the famous town of Mansoul, came together
+upon a day, and after consultation had, did jointly agree to draw
+up a petition, and to send it to Emmanuel, now while he sat in
+the gate of Mansoul.&nbsp; So they drew up their petition to
+Emmanuel, the contents whereof were these: That they, the old
+inhabitants of the now deplorable town of Mansoul, confessed
+their sin, and were sorry that they had offended his princely
+Majesty, and prayed that he would spare their lives.</p>
+<p>Unto this petition he gave no answer at all, and that did
+trouble them yet so much the more.&nbsp; Now, all this while the
+captains that were in the Recorder&rsquo;s house were playing
+with the battering-rams at the gates of the castle, to beat them
+down.&nbsp; So after some time, labour, and travail, the gate of
+the castle that was called Impregnable was beaten open, and
+broken into several splinters, and so a way made to go up to the
+hold in which Diabolus had hid himself.&nbsp; Then were tidings
+sent down to Ear-gate, for Emmanuel still abode there, to let him
+know that a way was made in at the gates of the castle of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; But, oh! how the trumpets at the tidings sounded
+throughout the Prince&rsquo;s camp, for that now the war was so
+near an end, and Mansoul itself of being set free.</p>
+<p>Then the Prince arose from the place where he was, and took
+with him such of his men of war as were fittest for that
+expedition, and marched up the street of Mansoul to the old
+Recorder&rsquo;s house.</p>
+<p>Now, the Prince himself was clad all in armour of gold, and so
+he marched up the town with his standard borne before him; but he
+kept his countenance much reserved all the way as he went, so
+that the people could not tell how to gather to themselves love
+or hatred by his looks.&nbsp; Now, as he marched up the street,
+the townsfolk came out at every door to see, and could not but be
+taken with his person and the glory thereof, but wondered at the
+reservedness of his countenance; for as yet he spake more to them
+by his actions and works than he did by words or smiles.&nbsp;
+But also poor Mansoul, (as in such cases all are apt to do,) they
+interpreted the carriage of Emmanuel to them as did
+Joseph&rsquo;s brethren his to them, even all the quite contrary
+way.&nbsp; &lsquo;For,&rsquo; thought they, &lsquo;if Emmanuel
+loved us, he would show it to us by word of carriage; but none of
+these he doth, therefore Emmanuel hates us.&nbsp; Now, if
+Emmanuel hates us, then Mansoul shall be slain, then Mansoul
+shall become a dunghill.&rsquo;&nbsp; They knew that they had
+transgressed his Father&rsquo;s law, and that against him they
+had been in with Diabolus, his enemy.&nbsp; They also knew that
+the Prince Emmanuel knew all this; for they were convinced that
+he was an angel of God, to know all things that are done in the
+earth; and this made them think that their condition was
+miserable, and that the good Prince would make them desolate.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;And,&rsquo; thought they, &lsquo;what time so fit to do
+this in as now, when he has the bridle of Mansoul in his
+hand?&rsquo;&nbsp; And this I took special notice of, that the
+inhabitants, notwithstanding all this, could not&mdash;no, they
+could not, when they see him march through the town, but cringe,
+bow, bend, and were ready to lick the dust of his feet.&nbsp;
+They also wished a thousand times over that he would become their
+Prince and Captain, and would become their protection.&nbsp; They
+would also one to another talk of the comeliness of his person,
+and how much for glory and valour he outstripped the great ones
+of the world.&nbsp; But, poor hearts, as to themselves, their
+thoughts would chance, and go upon all manner of extremes.&nbsp;
+Yea, through the working of them backward and forward, Mansoul
+became as a ball tossed, and as a rolling thing before the
+whirlwind.</p>
+<p>Now, when he was come to the castle gates, he commanded
+Diabolus to appear, and to surrender himself into his
+hands.&nbsp; But, oh! how loath was the beast to appear! how he
+stuck at it! how he shrank! how he cringed! yet out he came to
+the Prince.&nbsp; Then Emmanuel commanded, and they took Diabolus
+and bound him fast in chains, the better to reserve him to the
+judgment that he had appointed for him.&nbsp; But Diabolus stood
+up to entreat for himself that Emmanuel would not send him into
+the deep, but suffer him to depart out of Mansoul in peace.</p>
+<p>When Emmanuel had taken him and bound him in chains, he led
+him into the marketplace, and there, before Mansoul, stripped him
+of his armour in which he boasted so much before.&nbsp; This now
+was one of the acts of triumph of Emmanuel over his enemy; and
+all the while that the giant was stripping, the trumpets of the
+golden Prince did sound amain; the captains also shouted, and the
+soldiers did sing for joy.</p>
+<p>Then was Mansoul called upon to behold the beginning of
+Emmanuel&rsquo;s triumph over him in whom they so much had
+trusted, and of whom they so much had boasted in the days when he
+flattered them.</p>
+<p>Thus having made Diabolus naked in the eyes of Mansoul, and
+before the commanders of the Prince, in the next place, he
+commands that Diabolus should be bound with chains to his chariot
+wheels.&nbsp; Then leaving some of his forces, to wit, Captain
+Boanerges and Captain Conviction, as a guard for the
+castle-gates, that resistance might be made on his behalf, (if
+any that heretofore followed Diabolus should make an attempt to
+possess it,) he did ride in triumph over him quite through the
+town of Mansoul, and so out at and before the gate called
+Eye-gate, to the plain where his camp did lie.</p>
+<p>But you cannot think, unless you had been there, as I was,
+what a shout there was in Emmanuel&rsquo;s camp when they saw the
+tyrant bound by the hand of their noble Prince, and tied to his
+chariot wheels!</p>
+<p>And they said, &lsquo;He hath led captivity captive, he hath
+spoiled principalities and powers.&nbsp; Diabolus is subjected to
+the power of his sword, and made the object of all
+derision.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Those also that rode reformades, and that came down to see the
+battle, they shouted with that greatness of voice, and sung with
+such melodious notes, that they caused them that dwell in the
+highest orbs to open their windows, put out their heads, and look
+to see the cause of that glory.</p>
+<p>The townsmen also, so many of them as saw this sight, were, as
+it were, while they looked, betwixt the earth and the
+heavens.&nbsp; True, they could not tell what would be the issue
+of things as to them; but all things were done in such excellent
+methods, and I cannot tell how, but things in the management of
+them seemed to cast a smile towards the town, so that their eyes,
+their heads, their hearts, and their minds, and all that they
+had, were taken and held while they observed Emmanuel&rsquo;s
+order.</p>
+<p>So, when the brave Prince had finished this part of his
+triumph over Diabolus his foe, he turned him up in the midst of
+his contempt and shame, having given him a charge no more to be a
+possessor of Mansoul.&nbsp; Then went he from Emmanuel, and out
+of the midst of his camp, to inherit the parched places in a salt
+land, seeking rest, but finding none.</p>
+<p>Now, Captain Boanerges and Captain Conviction were, both of
+them, men of very great majesty; their faces were like the faces
+of lions, and their words like the roaring of the sea; and they
+still quartered in Mr. Conscience&rsquo;s house, of whom mention
+was made before.&nbsp; When, therefore, the high and mighty
+Prince had thus far finished his triumph over Diabolus, the
+townsmen had more leisure to view and to behold the actions of
+these noble captains.&nbsp; But the captains carried it with that
+terror and dread in all that they did, (and you may be sure that
+they had private instructions so to do,) that they kept the town
+under continual heart-aching, and caused (in their apprehension)
+the well-being of Mansoul for the future to hang in doubt before
+them, so that for some considerable time they neither knew what
+rest, or ease, or peace, or hope meant.</p>
+<p>Nor did the Prince himself as yet abide in the town of
+Mansoul, but in his royal pavilion in the camp, and in the midst
+of his Father&rsquo;s forces.&nbsp; So, at a time convenient, he
+sent special orders to Captain Boanerges to summons Mansoul, the
+whole of the townsmen, into the castle-yard, and then and there,
+before their faces, to take my Lord Understanding, Mr.
+Conscience, and that notable one, the Lord Willbewill, and put
+them all three in ward, and that they should set a strong guard
+upon them there, until his pleasure concerning them was further
+known: the which orders, when the captains had put them in
+execution, made no small addition to the fears of the town of
+Mansoul; for now, to their thinking, were their former fears of
+the ruin of Mansoul confirmed.&nbsp; Now, what death they should
+die, and how long they should be in dying, was that which most
+perplexed their heads and hearts; yea, they were afraid that
+Emmanuel would command them all into the deep, the place that the
+prince Diabolus was afraid of, for they knew that they had
+deserved it.&nbsp; Also to die by the sword in the face of the
+town, and in the open way of disgrace, from the hand of so good
+and so holy a prince, that, too, troubled them sore.&nbsp; The
+town was also greatly troubled for the men that were committed to
+ward, for that they were their stay and their guide, and for that
+they believed that, if those men were cut off, their execution
+would be but the beginning of the ruin of the town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; Wherefore, what do they, but, together with the
+men in prison, draw up a petition to the Prince, and sent it to
+Emmanuel by the hand of Mr. Would-live.&nbsp; So he went, and
+came to the Prince&rsquo;s quarters, and presented the petition,
+the sum of which was this:</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Great and wonderful Potentate, victor over Diabolus,
+and conqueror of the town of Mansoul, We, the miserable
+inhabitants of that most woful corporation, do humbly beg that we
+may find favour in thy sight, and remember not against us former
+transgressions, nor yet the sins of the chief of our town: but
+spare us according to the greatness of thy mercy, and let us not
+die, but live in thy sight.&nbsp; So shall we be willing to be
+thy servants, and, if thou shalt think fit, to gather our meat
+under thy table.&nbsp; Amen.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>So the petitioner went, as was said, with his petition to the
+Prince; and the Prince took it at his hand, but sent him away
+with silence.&nbsp; This still afflicted the town of Mansoul; but
+yet, considering that now they must either petition or die, for
+now they could not do anything else, therefore they consulted
+again, and sent another petition; and this petition was much
+after the form and method of the former.</p>
+<p>But when the petition was drawn up, By whom should they send
+it? was the next question; for they would not send this by him by
+whom they sent the first, for they thought that the Prince had
+taken some offence at the manner of his deportment before him: so
+they attempted to make Captain Conviction their messenger with
+it; but he said that he neither durst nor would petition Emmanuel
+for traitors, nor be to the Prince an advocate for rebels.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Yet withal,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;our Prince is good, and
+you may adventure to send it by the hand of one of your town,
+provided he went with a rope about his head, and pleaded nothing
+but mercy.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Well, they made, through fear, their delays as long as they
+could, and longer than delays were good; but fearing at last the
+dangerousness of them, they thought, but with many a fainting in
+their minds, to send their petition by Mr. Desires-awake; so they
+sent for Mr. Desires-awake.&nbsp; Now he dwelt in a very mean
+cottage in Mansoul, and he came at his neighbour&rsquo;s
+request.&nbsp; So they told him what they had done, and what they
+would do, concerning petitioning, and that they did desire of him
+that he would go therewith to the Prince.</p>
+<p>Then said Mr. Desires-awake, &lsquo;Why should not I do the
+best I can to save so famous a town as Mansoul from deserved
+destruction?&rsquo;&nbsp; They therefore delivered the petition
+to him, and told him how he must address himself to the Prince,
+and wished him ten thousand good speeds.&nbsp; So he comes to the
+Prince&rsquo;s pavilion, as the first, and asked to speak with
+his Majesty.&nbsp; So word was carried to Emmanuel, and the
+Prince came out to the man.&nbsp; When Mr. Desires-awake saw the
+Prince, he fell flat with his face to the ground, and cried out,
+&lsquo;Oh that Mansoul might live before thee!&rsquo; and with
+that he presented the petition; the which when the Prince had
+read, he turned away for a while and wept; but refraining
+himself, he turned again to the man, who all this while lay
+crying at his feet, as at the first, and said to him, &lsquo;Go
+thy way to thy place, and I will consider of thy
+requests.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Now, you may think that they of Mansoul that had sent him,
+what with guilt, and what with fear lest their petition should be
+rejected, could not but look with many a long look, and that,
+too, with strange workings of heart, to see what would become of
+their petition.&nbsp; At last they saw their messenger coming
+back.&nbsp; So, when he was come, they asked him how he fared,
+what Emmanuel said, and what was become of the petition.&nbsp;
+But he told them that he would be silent till he came to the
+prison to my Lord Mayor, my Lord Willbewill, and Mr.
+Recorder.&nbsp; So he went forwards towards the prison-house,
+where the men of Mansoul lay bound.&nbsp; But, oh! what a
+multitude flocked after, to hear what the messenger said.&nbsp;
+So, when he was come, and had shown himself at the gate of the
+prison, my Lord Mayor himself looked as white as a clout; the
+Recorder also did quake.&nbsp; But they asked and said,
+&lsquo;Come, good sir, what did the great Prince say to
+you?&rsquo;&nbsp; Then said Mr. Desires-awake, &lsquo;When I came
+to my Lord&rsquo;s pavilion, I called, and he came forth.&nbsp;
+So I fell prostrate at his feet, and delivered to him my
+petition; for the greatness of his person, and the glory of his
+countenance, would not suffer me to stand upon my legs.&nbsp;
+Now, as he received the petition, I cried, &ldquo;Oh that Mansoul
+might live before thee!&rdquo;&nbsp; So, when for a while he had
+looked thereon, he turned him about, and said to his servant,
+&ldquo;Go thy way to thy place again, and I will consider of thy
+requests.&rdquo;&rsquo;&nbsp; The messenger added, moreover, and
+said, &lsquo;The Prince to whom you sent me is such a one for
+beauty and glory, that whoso sees him must both love and fear
+him.&nbsp; I, for my part, can do no less; but I know not what
+will be the end of these things.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>At this answer they were all at a stand, both they in prison,
+and they that followed the messenger thither to hear the news;
+nor knew they what, or what manner of interpretation to put upon
+what the Prince had said.&nbsp; Now, when the prison was cleared
+of the throng, the prisoners among themselves began to comment
+upon Emmanuel&rsquo;s words.&nbsp; My Lord Mayor said, that the
+answer did not look with a rugged face; but Willbewill said that
+it betokened evil; and the Recorder, that it was a messenger of
+death.&nbsp; Now, they that were left, and that stood behind, and
+so could not so well hear what the prisoners said, some of them
+catched hold of one piece of a sentence, and some on a bit of
+another; some took hold of what the messenger said, and some of
+the prisoners&rsquo; judgment thereon; so none had the right
+understanding of things.&nbsp; But you cannot imagine what work
+these people made, and what a confusion there was in Mansoul
+now.</p>
+<p>For presently they that had heard what was said flew about the
+town, one crying one thing, and another the quite contrary; and
+both were sure enough they told true; for they did hear, they
+said, with their ears what was said, and therefore could not be
+deceived.&nbsp; One would say, &lsquo;We must all be
+killed;&rsquo; another would say, &lsquo;We must all be
+saved;&rsquo; and a third would say that the Prince would not be
+concerned with Mansoul; and a fourth, that the prisoners must be
+suddenly put to death.&nbsp; And, as I said, every one stood to
+it that he told his tale the rightest, and that all others but he
+were out.&nbsp; Wherefore Mansoul had now molestation upon
+molestation, nor could any man know on what to rest the sole of
+his foot; for one would go by now, and as he went, if he heard
+his neighbour tell his tale, to be sure he would tell the quite
+contrary, and both would stand in it that he told the
+truth.&nbsp; Nay, some of them had got this story by the end,
+that the Prince did intend to put Mansoul to the sword.&nbsp; And
+now it began to be dark, wherefore poor Mansoul was in sad
+perplexity all that night until the morning.</p>
+<p>But, so far as I could gather by the best information that I
+could get, all this hubbub came through the words that the
+Recorder said when he told them that, in his judgment, the
+Prince&rsquo;s answer was a messenger of death.&nbsp; It was this
+that fired the town, and that began the fright in Mansoul; for
+Mansoul in former times did use to count that Mr. Recorder was a
+seer, and that his sentence was equal to the best of orators; and
+thus was Mansoul a terror to itself.</p>
+<p>And now did they begin to feel what were the effects of
+stubborn rebellion, and unlawful resistance against their
+Prince.&nbsp; I say, they now began to feel the effects thereof
+by guilt and fear, that now had swallowed them up; and who more
+involved in the one but they that were most in the other, to wit,
+the chief of the town of Mansoul?</p>
+<p>To be brief: when the fame of the fright was out of the town,
+and the prisoners had a little recovered themselves, they take to
+themselves some heart, and think to petition the Prince for life
+again.&nbsp; So they did draw up a third petition, the contents
+whereof were these:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Prince Emmanuel the Great, Lord of all worlds, and
+Master of mercy, we, thy poor, wretched, miserable, dying town of
+Mansoul, do confess unto thy great and glorious Majesty that we
+have sinned against thy Father and thee, and are no more worthy
+to be called thy Mansoul, but rather to be cast into the
+pit.&nbsp; If thou wilt slay us, we have deserved it.&nbsp; If
+thou wilt condemn us to the deep, we cannot but say thou art
+righteous.&nbsp; We cannot complain whatever thou dost, or
+however thou carriest it towards us.&nbsp; But, oh! let mercy
+reign, and let it be extended to us!&nbsp; Oh! let mercy take
+hold upon us, and free us from our transgressions, and we will
+sing of thy mercy and of thy judgment.&nbsp; Amen.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>This petition, when drawn up, was designed to be sent to the
+Prince as the first.&nbsp; But who should carry it?&mdash;that
+was the question.&nbsp; Some said, &lsquo;Let him do it that went
+with the first,&rsquo; but others thought not good to do that,
+and that because he sped no better.&nbsp; Now, there was an old
+man in the town, and his name was Mr. Good-Deed; a man that bare
+only the name, but had nothing of the nature of the thing.&nbsp;
+Now, some were for sending him; but the Recorder was by no means
+for that.&nbsp; &lsquo;For,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;we now stand
+in need of, and are pleading for mercy: wherefore, to send our
+petition by a man of this name, will seem to cross the petition
+itself.&nbsp; Should we make Mr. Good-Deed our messenger, when
+our petition cries for mercy?</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Besides,&rsquo; quoth the old gentleman, &lsquo;should
+the Prince now, as he receives the petition, ask him, and say,
+&ldquo;What is thy name?&rdquo; as nobody knows but he will, and
+he should say, &ldquo;Old Good-Deed,&rdquo; what, think you,
+would Emmanuel say but this?&nbsp; &ldquo;Ay! is old Good-Deed
+yet alive in Mansoul? then let old Good-Deed save you from your
+distresses.&rdquo;&nbsp; And if he says so, I am sure we are
+lost; nor can a thousand of old Good-Deeds save
+Mansoul.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>After the Recorder had given in his reasons why old Good-Deed
+should not go with this petition to Emmanuel, the rest of the
+prisoners and chief of Mansoul opposed it also, and so old
+Good-Deed was laid aside, and they agreed to send Mr.
+Desires-awake again.&nbsp; So they sent for him, and desired him
+that he would a second time go with their petition to the Prince,
+and he readily told them he would.&nbsp; But they bid him that in
+anywise he should take heed that in no word or carriage he gave
+offence to the Prince; &lsquo;For by doing so, for ought we can
+tell, you may bring Mansoul into utter destruction,&rsquo; said
+they.</p>
+<p>Now Mr. Desires-awake, when he saw that he must go on this
+errand, besought that they would grant that Mr. Wet-Eyes might go
+with him.&nbsp; Now this Mr. Wet-Eyes was a near neighbour of Mr.
+Desires, a poor man, a man of a broken spirit, yet one that could
+speak well to a petition; so they granted that he should go with
+him.&nbsp; Wherefore, they address themselves to their business:
+Mr. Desires put a rope upon his head, and Mr. Wet-Eyes went with
+his hands wringing together.&nbsp; Thus they went to the
+Prince&rsquo;s pavilion.</p>
+<p>Now, when they went to petition this third time, they were not
+without thoughts that, by often coming, they might be a burden to
+the Prince.&nbsp; Wherefore, when they were come to the door of
+his pavilion, they first made their apology for themselves, and
+for their coming to trouble Emmanuel so often; and they said,
+that they came not hither to-day for that they delighted in being
+troublesome, or for that they delighted to hear themselves talk,
+but for that necessity caused them to come to his Majesty.&nbsp;
+They could, they said, have no rest day nor night because of
+their transgressions against Shaddai and against Emmanuel, his
+Son.&nbsp; They also thought that some misbehaviour of Mr.
+Desires-awake the last time might give distaste to his Highness,
+and so cause that he returned from so merciful a Prince empty,
+and without countenance.&nbsp; So, when they had made this
+apology, Mr. Desires-awake cast himself prostrate upon the
+ground, as at the first, at the feet of the mighty Prince,
+saying, &lsquo;Oh! that Mansoul might live before thee!&rsquo;
+and so he delivered his petition.&nbsp; The Prince then, having
+read the petition, turned aside awhile as before, and coming
+again to the place where the petitioner lay on the ground, he
+demanded what his name was, and of what esteem in the account of
+Mansoul, for that he, above all the multitude in Mansoul, should
+be sent to him upon such an errand.&nbsp; Then said the man to
+the Prince, &lsquo;Oh let not my Lord be angry; and why inquirest
+thou after the name of such a dead do&mdash;as I am?&nbsp; Pass
+by, I pray thee, and take not notice of who I am, because there
+is, as thou very well knowest, so great a disproportion between
+me and thee.&nbsp; Why the townsmen chose to send me on this
+errand to my Lord is best known to themselves, but it could not
+be for that they thought that I had favour with my Lord.&nbsp;
+For my part, I am out of charity with myself; who, then, should
+be in love with me?&nbsp; Yet live I would, and so would I that
+my townsmen should; and because both they and myself are guilty
+of great transgressions, therefore they have sent me, and I am
+come in their names to beg of my Lord for mercy.&nbsp; Let it
+please thee, therefore, to incline to mercy; but ask not what thy
+servants are.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said the Prince, &lsquo;And what is he that is become thy
+companion in this so weighty a matter?&rsquo;&nbsp; So Mr.
+Desires told Emmanuel that he was a poor neighbour of his, and
+one of his most intimate associates.&nbsp; &lsquo;And his
+name,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;may it please your most excellent
+Majesty, is Wet-Eyes, of the town of Mansoul, I know that there
+are many of that name that are naught; but I hope it will be no
+offence to my Lord that I have brought my poor neighbour with
+me.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then Mr. Wet-Eyes fell on his face to the ground, and made
+this apology for his coming with his neighbour to his
+Lord:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;O, my Lord,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;what I am I know
+not myself, nor whether my name be feigned or true, especially
+when I begin to think what some have said, namely, That this name
+was given me because Mr. Repentance was my father.&nbsp; Good men
+have bad children, and the sincere do oftentimes beget
+hypocrites.&nbsp; My mother also called me by this name from the
+cradle; but whether because of the moistness of my brain, or
+because of the softness of my heart, I cannot tell.&nbsp; I see
+dirt in mine own tears, and filthiness in the bottom of my
+prayers.&nbsp; But I pray thee (and all this while the gentleman
+wept) that thou wouldest not remember against us our
+transgressions, nor take offence at the unqualifiedness of thy
+servants, but mercifully pass by the sin of Mansoul, and refrain
+from the glorifying of thy grace no longer.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>So at his bidding they arose, and both stood trembling before
+him, and he spake to them to this purpose:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;The town of Mansoul hath grievously rebelled against my
+Father, in that they have rejected him from being their King, and
+did choose to themselves for their captain a liar, a murderer,
+and a runagate slave.&nbsp; For this Diabolus, your pretended
+prince, though once so highly accounted of by you, made rebellion
+against my Father and me, even in our palace and highest court
+there, thinking to become a prince and king.&nbsp; But being
+there timely discovered and apprehended, and for his wickedness
+bound in chains, and separated to the pit with those that were
+his companions, he offered himself to you, and you have received
+him.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Now this is, and for a long time hath been, a high
+affront to my Father; wherefore my Father sent to you a powerful
+army to reduce you to your obedience.&nbsp; But you know how
+these men, their captains and their counsels, were esteemed of
+you, and what they received at your hand.&nbsp; You rebelled
+against them, you shut your gates upon them, you bid them battle,
+you fought them, and fought for Diabolus against them.&nbsp; So
+they sent to my Father for more power, and I, with my men, are
+come to subdue you.&nbsp; But as you treated the servants, so you
+treated their Lord.&nbsp; You stood up in hostile manner against
+me, you shut up your gates against me, you turned the deaf ear to
+me, and resisted as long as you could; but now I have made a
+conquest of you.&nbsp; Did you cry me mercy so long as you had
+hopes that you might prevail against me?&nbsp; But now I have
+taken the town, you cry; but why did you not cry before, when the
+white flag of my mercy, the red flag of justice, and the black
+flag that threatened execution, were set up to cite you to
+it?&nbsp; Now I have conquered your Diabolus, you come to me for
+favour; but why did you not help me against the mighty?&nbsp; Yet
+I will consider your petition, and will answer it so as will be
+for my glory.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Go, bid Captain Boanerges and Captain Conviction bring
+the prisoners out to me into the camp to-morrow, and say you to
+Captain Judgment and Captain Execution, &ldquo;Stay you in the
+castle, and take good heed to yourselves that you keep all quiet
+in Mansoul until you shall hear further from
+me.&rdquo;&rsquo;&nbsp; And with that he turned himself from
+them, and went into his royal pavilion again.</p>
+<p>So the petitioners, having received this answer from the
+Prince, returned, as at the first, to go to their companions
+again.&nbsp; But they had not gone far, but thoughts began to
+work in their minds that no mercy as yet was intended by the
+Prince to Mansoul.&nbsp; So they went to the place where the
+prisoners lay bound; but these workings of mind about what would
+become of Mansoul had such strong power over them, that by that
+they were come unto them that sent them, they were scarce able to
+deliver their message.</p>
+<p>But they came at length to the gates of the town, (now the
+townsmen with earnestness were waiting for their return,) where
+many met them, to know what answer was made to the
+petition.&nbsp; Then they cried out to those that were sent,
+&lsquo;What news from the Prince? and what hath Emmanuel
+said?&rsquo;&nbsp; But they said that they must, as afore, go up
+to the prison, and there deliver their message.&nbsp; So away
+they went to the prison, with a multitude at their heels.&nbsp;
+Now, when they were come to the gates of the prison, they told
+the first part of Emmanuel&rsquo;s speech to the prisoners, to
+wit, how he reflected upon their disloyalty to his Father and
+himself, and how they had chosen and closed with Diabolus, had
+fought for him, hearkened to him, and been ruled by him; but had
+despised him and his men.&nbsp; This made the prisoners look
+pale; but the messengers proceeded and said, &lsquo;He, the
+Prince, said, moreover, that yet he would consider your petition,
+and give such answer thereto as would stand with his
+glory.&rsquo;&nbsp; And as these words were spoken, Mr. Wet-Eyes
+gave a great sigh.&nbsp; At this they were all of them struck
+into their dumps, and could not tell what to say: fear also
+possessed them in a marvellous manner, and death seemed to sit
+upon some of their eyebrows.&nbsp; Now, there was in the company
+a notable, sharp-witted fellow, a mean man of estate, and his
+name was old Inquisitive.&nbsp; This man asked the petitioners if
+they had told out every whit of what Emmanuel said, and they
+answered, &lsquo;Verily, no.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then said Inquisitive,
+&lsquo;I thought so, indeed.&nbsp; Pray, what was it more that he
+said unto you?&rsquo;&nbsp; Then they paused awhile; but at last
+they brought out all, saying, &lsquo;The Prince bade us bid
+Captain Boanerges and Captain Conviction bring the prisoners down
+to him to-morrow; and that Captain Judgment and Captain Execution
+should take charge of the castle and town till they should hear
+further from him.&nbsp; They said also that when the Prince had
+commanded them thus to do, he immediately turned his back upon
+them, and went into his royal pavilion.</p>
+<p>But, oh! how this return, and specially this last clause of
+it, that the prisoners must go out to the Prince into the camp,
+brake all their loins in pieces!&nbsp; Wherefore, with one voice
+they set up a cry that reached up to the heavens.&nbsp; This
+done, each of the three prepared himself to die; (and the
+Recorder said unto them, &lsquo;This was the thing that I
+feared;&rsquo;) for they concluded that to-morrow, by that the
+sun went down, they should be tumbled out of the world.&nbsp; The
+whole town also counted of no other, but that, in their time and
+order, they must all drink of the same cup.&nbsp; Wherefore the
+town of Mansoul spent that night in mourning, and sackcloth and
+ashes.&nbsp; The prisoners also, when the time was come for them
+to go down before the Prince, dressed themselves in mourning
+attire, with ropes upon their heads.&nbsp; The whole town of
+Mansoul also showed themselves upon the wall, all clad in
+mourning weeds, if, perhaps, the Prince with the sight thereof
+might be moved with compassion.&nbsp; But, oh! how the
+busy-bodies that were in the town of Mansoul did now concern
+themselves!&nbsp; They did run here and there through the streets
+of the town by companies, crying out as they ran in tumultuous
+wise, one after one manner, and another the quite contrary, to
+the almost utter distraction of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>Well, the time is come that the prisoners must go down to the
+camp, and appear before the Prince.&nbsp; And thus was the manner
+of their going down: Captain Boanerges went with a guard before
+them, and Captain Conviction came behind, and the prisoners went
+down, bound in chains, in the midst.&nbsp; So I say, the
+prisoners went in the midst, and the guard went with flying
+colours behind and before, but the prisoners went with drooping
+spirits.</p>
+<p>Or, more particularly, thus: The prisoners went down all in
+mourning: they put ropes upon themselves; they went on, smiting
+themselves on the breasts, but durst not lift up their eyes to
+heaven.&nbsp; Thus they went out at the gate of Mansoul, till
+they came into the midst of the Prince&rsquo;s army, the sight
+and glory of which did greatly heighten their affliction.&nbsp;
+Nor could they now longer forbear, but cry out aloud, &lsquo;O
+unhappy men!&nbsp; O wretched men of Mansoul!&rsquo;&nbsp; Their
+chains, still mixing their dolorous notes with the cries of the
+prisoners, made the noise more lamentable.</p>
+<p>So, when they were come to the door of the Prince&rsquo;s
+pavilion, they cast themselves prostrate upon the place; then one
+went in and told his Lord that the prisoners were come
+down.&nbsp; The Prince then ascended a throne of state, and sent
+for the prisoners in; who, when they came, did tremble before
+him, also they covered their faces with shame.&nbsp; Now, as they
+drew near to the place where he sat, they threw themselves down
+before him.&nbsp; Then said the Prince to the Captain Boanerges,
+&lsquo;Bid the prisoners stand upon their feet.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then
+they stood trembling before him, and he said, &lsquo;Are you the
+men that heretofore were the servants of Shaddai?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+And they said, &lsquo;Yes, Lord, yes.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then said the
+Prince again, &lsquo;Are you the men that did suffer yourselves
+to be corrupted and defiled by that abominable one,
+Diabolus?&rsquo;&nbsp; And they said, &lsquo;We did more than
+suffer it, Lord; for we chose it of our own mind.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+The Prince asked further, saying, &lsquo;Could you have been
+content that your slavery should have continued under his tyranny
+as long as you had lived?&rsquo;&nbsp; Then said the prisoners,
+&lsquo;Yes, Lord, yes; for his ways were pleasing to our flesh,
+and we were grown aliens to a better
+state.&rsquo;&mdash;&lsquo;And did you,&rsquo; said he,
+&lsquo;when I came up against this town of Mansoul, heartily wish
+that I might not have the victory over
+you?&rsquo;&mdash;&lsquo;Yes, Lord, yes,&rsquo; said they.&nbsp;
+Then said the Prince, &lsquo;And what punishment is it, think
+you, that you deserve at my hand, for these and other your high
+and mighty sins?&rsquo;&mdash;And they said, &lsquo;Both death
+and the deep, Lord; for we have deserved no less.&rsquo;&nbsp; He
+asked again if they had aught to say for themselves why the
+sentence, that they confessed that they had deserved, should not
+be passed upon them?&nbsp; And they said, &lsquo;We can say
+nothing, Lord: thou art just, for we have sinned.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Then said the Prince, &lsquo;And for what are those ropes on your
+heads?&rsquo;&nbsp; The prisoners answered, &lsquo;These ropes
+are to bind us withal to the place of execution, if mercy be not
+pleasing in thy sight.&rsquo;&nbsp; So he further asked if all
+the men in the town of Mansoul were in this confession, as
+they?&nbsp; And they answered, &lsquo;All the natives, Lord; but
+for the Diabolonians that came into our town when the tyrant got
+possession of us, we can say nothing for them.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then the Prince commanded that a herald should be called, and
+that he should, in the midst and throughout the camp of Emmanuel,
+proclaim, and that with sound of trumpet, that the Prince, the
+Son of Shaddai, had, in his Father&rsquo;s name, and for his
+Father&rsquo;s glory, gotten a perfect conquest and victory over
+Mansoul; and that the prisoners should follow him, and say
+Amen.&nbsp; So, this was done as he had commanded.&nbsp; And
+presently the music that was in the upper region sounded
+melodiously, the captains that were in the camp shouted, and the
+soldiers did sing songs of triumph to the Prince; the colours
+waved in the wind, and great joy was everywhere, only it was
+wanting as yet in the hearts of the men of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>Then the Prince called for the prisoners to come and to stand
+again before him, and they came and stood trembling.&nbsp; And he
+said unto them, &lsquo;The sins, trespasses, iniquities, that
+you, with the whole town of Mansoul, have from time to time
+committed against my Father and me, I have power and commandment
+from my Father to forgive to the town of Mansoul, and do forgive
+you accordingly.&rsquo;&nbsp; And having so said, he gave them,
+written in parchment, and sealed with seven seals, a large and
+general pardon, commanding my Lord Mayor, my Lord Willbewill, and
+Mr. Recorder, to proclaim and cause it to be proclaimed
+to-morrow, by that the sun is up, throughout the whole town of
+Mansoul.</p>
+<p>Moreover, the Prince stripped the prisoners of their mourning
+weeds, and gave them beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for
+mourning, and the garment of praise for the spirit of
+heaviness.</p>
+<p>Then he gave to each of the three jewels of gold and precious
+stones, and took away their ropes, and put chains of gold about
+their necks, and ear-rings in their ears.&nbsp; Now, the
+prisoners, when they did hear the gracious words of Prince
+Emmanuel, and had beheld all that was done unto them, fainted
+almost quite away; for the grace, the benefit, the pardon, was
+sudden, glorious, and so big, that they were not able, without
+staggering, to stand up under it.&nbsp; Yea, my Lord Willbewill
+swooned outright; but the Prince stepped to him, put his
+everlasting arms under him, embraced him, kissed him, and bid him
+be of good cheer, for all should be performed according to his
+word.&nbsp; He also did kiss, and embrace, and smile upon the
+other two that were Willbewill&rsquo;s companions, saying,
+&lsquo;Take these as further tokens of my love, favour, and
+compassions to you; and I charge you that you, Mr. Recorder, tell
+in the town of Mansoul what you have heard and seen.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then were their fetters broken to pieces before their faces,
+and cast into the air, and their steps were enlarged under
+them.&nbsp; Then they fell down at the feet of the Prince, and
+kissed his feet, and wetted them with tears: also they cried out
+with a mighty strong voice, saying, &lsquo;Blessed be the glory
+of the Lord from this place.&rsquo;&nbsp; So they were bid rise
+up, and go to the town, and tell to Mansoul what the Prince had
+done.&nbsp; He commanded also that one with a pipe and tabor
+should go and play before them all the way into the town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; Then was fulfilled what they never looked for, and
+they were made to possess that which they never dreamed of.</p>
+<p>The Prince also called for the noble Captain Credence, and
+commanded that he and some of his officers should march before
+the noble men of Mansoul with flying colours into the town.&nbsp;
+He gave also unto Captain Credence a charge, that about that time
+that the Recorder did read the general pardon in the town of
+Mansoul, that at that very time he should with flying colours
+march in at Eye-gate with his ten thousands at his feet and that
+he should so go until he came by the high street of the town, up
+to the castle gates, and that himself should take possession
+thereof against his Lord came thither.&nbsp; He commanded,
+moreover, that he should bid Captain Judgment and Captain
+Execution to leave the stronghold to him, and to withdraw from
+Mansoul, and to return into the camp with speed unto the
+Prince.</p>
+<p>And now was the town of Mansoul also delivered from the terror
+of the first four captains and their men.</p>
+<p>Well, I told you before how the prisoners were entertained by
+the noble Prince Emmanuel, and how they behaved themselves before
+him, and how he sent them away to their home with pipe and tabor
+going before them.&nbsp; And now you must think that those of the
+town that had all this while waited to hear of their death, could
+not but be exercised with sadness of mind, and with thoughts that
+pricked like thorns.&nbsp; Nor could their thoughts be kept to
+any one point; the wind blew with them all this while at great
+uncertainties; yea, their hearts were like a balance that had
+been disquieted with a shaking hand.&nbsp; But at last, as they
+with many a long look looked over the wall of Mansoul, they
+thought that they saw some returning to the town; and thought
+again, Who should they be, too?&nbsp; Who should they be?&nbsp;
+At last they discerned that they were the prisoners: but can you
+imagine how their hearts were surprised with wonder, specially
+when they perceived also in what equipage and with what honour
+they were sent home.&nbsp; They went down to the camp in black,
+but they came back to the town in white; they went down to the
+camp in ropes, they came back in chains of gold; they went down
+to the camp with their feet in fetters, but came back with their
+steps enlarged under them; they went also to the camp looking for
+death, but they came back from thence with assurance of life;
+they went down to the camp with heavy hearts, but came back again
+with pipe and tabor playing before them.&nbsp; So as soon as they
+were come to Eye-gate, the poor and tottering town of Mansoul
+adventured to give a shout; and they gave such a shout as made
+the captains in the Prince&rsquo;s army leap at the sound
+thereof.&nbsp; Alas! for them, poor hearts! who could blame them?
+since their dead friends were come to life again; for it was to
+them as life from the dead to see the ancients of the town of
+Mansoul shine in such splendour.&nbsp; They looked for nothing
+but the axe and the block; but, behold, joy and gladness, comfort
+and consolation, and such melodious notes attending them that was
+sufficient to make a sick man well.</p>
+<p>So, when they came up, they saluted each other with,
+&lsquo;Welcome, welcome! and blessed be he that has spared
+you!&rsquo;&nbsp; They added also, &lsquo;We see it is well with
+you; but how must it go with the town of Mansoul?&nbsp; And will
+it go well with the town of Mansoul?&rsquo; said they.&nbsp; Then
+answered them the Recorder and my Lord Mayor, &lsquo;Oh! tidings!
+glad tidings! good tidings of good, and of great joy to poor
+Mansoul!&rsquo;&nbsp; Then they gave another shout, that made the
+earth to ring again.&nbsp; After this, they inquired yet more
+particularly how things went in the camp, and what message they
+had from Emmanuel to the town.&nbsp; So they told them all
+passages that had happened to them at the camp, and everything
+that the Prince did to them.&nbsp; This made Mansoul wonder at
+the wisdom and grace of the Prince Emmanuel.&nbsp; Then they told
+them what they had received at his hands for the whole town of
+Mansoul, and the Recorder delivered it in these words:
+&lsquo;<span class="smcap">Pardon</span>, <span
+class="smcap">Pardon</span>, <span class="smcap">Pardon</span>
+for Mansoul! and this shall Mansoul know to-morrow!&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Then he commanded, and they went and summoned Mansoul to meet
+together in the market-place to-morrow, then to hear their
+general pardon read.</p>
+<p>But who can think what a turn, what a change, what an
+alteration this hint of things did make in the countenance of the
+town of Mansoul!&nbsp; No man of Mansoul could sleep that night
+for joy; in every house there was joy and music, singing and
+making merry: telling and hearing of Mansoul&rsquo;s happiness
+was then all that Mansoul had to do; and this was the burden of
+all their song: &lsquo;Oh! more of this at the rising of the sun!
+more of this to-morrow!&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Who thought
+yesterday,&rsquo; would one say, &lsquo;that this day would have
+been such a day to us?&nbsp; And who thought, that saw our
+prisoners go down in irons, that they would have returned in
+chains of gold?&nbsp; Yea, they that judged themselves as they
+went to be judged of their judge, were by his mouth acquitted,
+not for that they were innocent, but of the Prince&rsquo;s mercy,
+and sent home with pipe and tabor.&nbsp; But is this the common
+custom of princes? Do they use to show such kind of favours to
+traitors?&nbsp; No; this is only peculiar to Shaddai, and unto
+Emmanuel, his Son!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Now morning drew on apace; wherefore the Lord Mayor, the Lord
+Willbewill, and Mr. Recorder came down to the market-place at the
+time that the Prince had appointed, where the townsfolk were
+waiting for them: and when they came, they came in that attire,
+and in that glory that the Prince had put them into the day
+before, and the street was lightened with their glory.&nbsp; So
+the Mayor, Recorder, and my Lord Willbewill drew down to
+Mouth-gate, which was at the lower end of the market-place,
+because that of old time was the place where they used to read
+public matters.&nbsp; Thither, therefore, they came in their
+robes, and their tabrets went before them.&nbsp; Now, the
+eagerness of the people to know the full of the matter was
+great.</p>
+<p>Then the Recorder stood up upon his feet, and, first beckoning
+with his hand for silence, he read out with a loud voice the
+pardon.&nbsp; But when he came to these words: &lsquo;The Lord,
+the Lord God, merciful and gracious, pardoning iniquity,
+transgressions, and sins, and to them all manner of sin and
+blasphemy shall be forgiven,&rsquo; etc., they could not forbear
+leaping for joy.&nbsp; For this you must know, that there was
+conjoined herewith every man&rsquo;s name in Mansoul; also the
+seals of the pardon made a brave show.</p>
+<p>When the Recorder had made an end of reading the pardon, the
+townsmen ran up upon the walls of the town, and leaped and
+skipped thereon for joy, and bowed themselves seven times with
+their faces toward Emmanuel&rsquo;s pavilion, and shouted out
+aloud for joy, and said, &lsquo;Let Emmanuel live for
+ever!&rsquo;&nbsp; Then order was given to the young men in
+Mansoul that they should ring the bells for joy.&nbsp; So the
+bells did ring, and the people sing, and the music go in every
+house in Mansoul.</p>
+<p>When the Prince had sent home the three prisoners of Mansoul
+with joy, and pipe and tabor, he commanded his captains, with all
+the field officers and soldiers throughout his army, to be ready
+in that morning, that the Recorder should read the pardon in
+Mansoul, to do his further pleasure.&nbsp; So the morning, as I
+have showed, being come, just as the Recorder had made an end of
+reading the pardon, Emmanuel commanded that all the trumpets in
+the camp should sound, that the colours should be displayed, half
+of them upon Mount Gracious, and half of them upon Mount
+Justice.&nbsp; He commanded also that all the captains should
+show themselves in all their harness, and that the soldiers
+should shout for joy.&nbsp; Nor was Captain Credence, though in
+the castle, silent in such a day; but he, from the top of the
+hold, showed himself with sound of trumpet to Mansoul and to the
+Prince&rsquo;s camp.</p>
+<p>Thus have I showed you the manner and way that Emmanuel took
+to recover the town of Mansoul from under the hand and power of
+the tyrant Diabolus.</p>
+<p>Now, when the Prince had completed these, the outward
+ceremonies of his joy, he again commanded that his captains and
+soldiers should show unto Mansoul some feats of war: so they
+presently addressed themselves to this work.&nbsp; But oh! with
+what agility, nimbleness, dexterity, and bravery did these
+military men discover their skill in feats of war to the now
+gazing town of Mansoul!</p>
+<p>They marched, they counter-marched; they opened to the right
+and left; they divided and subdivided; they closed, they wheeled,
+made good their front and rear with their right and left wings,
+and twenty things more, with that aptness, and then were all as
+the were again, that they took&mdash;yea, ravished, the hearts
+that were in Mansoul to behold it.&nbsp; But add to this, the
+handling of their arms, the managing of their weapons of war,
+were marvellously taking to Mansoul and me.</p>
+<p>When this action was over, the whole town of Mansoul came out
+as one man to the Prince in the camp to thank him, and praise him
+for his abundant favour, and to beg that it would please his
+grace to come unto Mansoul with his men, and there to take up
+their quarters for ever: and this they did in most humble manner,
+bowing themselves seven times to the ground before him.&nbsp;
+Then said he, &lsquo;All peace be to you.&rsquo; So the town came
+nigh, and touched with the hand the top of his golden sceptre;
+and they said, &lsquo;Oh! that the Prince Emmanuel, with his
+captains and men of war, would dwell in Mansoul for ever; and
+that his battering-rams and slings might be lodged in her for the
+use and service of the Prince, and for the help and strength of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; For,&rsquo; said they, &lsquo;we have room for
+thee, we have room for thy men, we have also room for thy weapons
+of war, and a place to make a magazine for thy carriages.&nbsp;
+Do it, Emmanuel, and thou shalt be King and Captain in Mansoul
+for ever.&nbsp; Yea, govern thou also according to all the desire
+of thy soul, and make thou governors and princes under thee of
+thy captains and men of war, and we will become thy servants, and
+thy laws shall be our direction.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>They added, moreover, and prayed his Majesty to consider
+thereof; &lsquo;for,&rsquo; said they, &lsquo;if now, after all
+this grace bestowed upon us, thy miserable town of Mansoul, thou
+shouldest withdraw, thou and thy captains, from us, the town of
+Mansoul will die.&nbsp; Yea,&rsquo; said they, &lsquo;our blessed
+Emmanuel, if thou shouldest depart from us now, now thou hast
+done so much good for us, and showed so much mercy unto us, what
+will follow but that our joy will be as if it had not been, and
+our enemies will a second time come upon us with more rage than
+at the first?&nbsp; Wherefore, we beseech thee, O thou, the
+desire of our eyes, and the strength and life of our poor town,
+accept of this motion that now we have made unto our Lord, and
+come and dwell in the midst of us, and let us be thy
+people.&nbsp; Besides, Lord, we do not know but that to this day
+many Diabolonians may be yet lurking in the town of Mansoul, and
+they will betray us, when thou shalt leave us, into the hand of
+Diabolus again; and who knows what designs, plots, or
+contrivances have passed betwixt them about these things
+already?&nbsp; Loath we are to fall again into his horrible
+hands.&nbsp; Wherefore, let it please thee to accept of our
+palace for thy place of residence, and of the houses of the best
+men in our town for the reception of thy soldiers and their
+furniture.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said the Prince, &lsquo;If I come to your town, will you
+suffer me further to prosecute that which is in mine heart
+against mine enemies and yours?&mdash;yea, will you help me in
+such undertakings?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>They answered, &lsquo;We know not what we shall do; we did not
+think once that we should have been such traitors to Shaddai as
+we have proved to be.&nbsp; What, then, shall we say to our
+Lord?&nbsp; Let him put no trust in his saints; let the Prince
+dwell in our castle, and make of our town a garrison; let him set
+his noble captains and his warlike soldiers over us; yea, let him
+conquer us with his love, and overcome us with his grace, and
+then surely shall he be but with us, and help us, as he was and
+did that morning that our pardon was read unto us.&nbsp; We shall
+comply with this our Lord, and with his ways, and fall in with
+his word against the mighty.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;One word more, and thy servants have done, and in this
+will trouble our Lord no more.&nbsp; We know not the depth of the
+wisdom of thee, our Prince.&nbsp; Who could have thought, that
+had been ruled by his reason, that so much sweet as we do now
+enjoy should have come out of those bitter trials wherewith we
+were tried at the first!&nbsp; But, Lord, let light go before,
+and let love come after: yea, take us by the hand, and lead us by
+thy counsels, and let this always abide upon us, that all things
+shall be the best for thy servants, and come to our Mansoul, and
+do as it pleaseth thee.&nbsp; Or, Lord, come to our Mansoul, do
+what thou wilt, so thou keepest us from sinning, and makest us
+serviceable to thy Majesty.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said the Prince to the town of Mansoul again, &lsquo;Go,
+return to your houses in peace.&nbsp; I will willingly in this
+comply with your desires; I will remove my royal pavilion, I will
+draw up my forces before Eye-gate to-morrow, and so will march
+forwards into the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; I will possess myself of
+your castle of Mansoul, and will set my soldiers over you: yea, I
+will yet do things in Mansoul that cannot be paralleled in any
+nation, country, or kingdom under heaven.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then did
+the men of Mansoul give a shout, and returned unto their houses
+in peace; they also told to their kindred and friends the good
+that Emmanuel had promised to Mansoul.&nbsp; &lsquo;And
+to-morrow,&rsquo; said they, &lsquo;he will march into our town,
+and take up his dwelling, he and his men, in Mansoul.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then went out the inhabitants of the town of Mansoul with
+haste to the green trees and to the meadows, to gather boughs and
+flowers, therewith to strew the streets against their Prince, the
+Son of Shaddai, should come; they also made garlands and other
+fine works to betoken how joyful they were, and should be to
+receive their Emmanuel into Mansoul; yea, they strewed the street
+quite from Eye-gate to the castle-gate, the place where the
+Prince should be.&nbsp; They also prepared for his coming what
+music the town of Mansoul would afford, that they might play
+before him to the palace, his habitation.</p>
+<p>So, at the time appointed he makes his approach to Mansoul,
+and the gates were set open for him; there also the ancients and
+elders of Mansoul met him to salute him with a thousand
+welcomes.&nbsp; Then he arose and entered Mansoul, he and all his
+servants.&nbsp; The elders of Mansoul did also go dancing before
+him till he came to the castle gates.&nbsp; And this was the
+manner of his going up thither:&mdash;He was clad in his golden
+armour, he rode in his royal chariot, the trumpets sounded about
+him, the colours were displayed, his ten thousands went up at his
+feet, and the elders of Mansoul danced before him.&nbsp; And now
+were the walls of the famous town of Mansoul filled with the
+tramplings of the inhabitants thereof, who went up thither to
+view the approach of the blessed Prince and his royal army.&nbsp;
+Also the casements, windows, balconies, and tops of the houses,
+were all now filled with persons of all sorts, to behold how
+their town was to be filled with good.</p>
+<p>Now, when he was come so far into the town as to the
+Recorder&rsquo;s house, he commanded that one should go to
+Captain Credence, to know whether the castle of Mansoul was
+prepared to entertain his royal presence (for the preparation of
+that was left to that captain), and word was brought that it
+was.&nbsp; Then was Captain Credence commanded also to come forth
+with his power to meet the Prince, the which was, as he had
+commanded, done; and he conducted him into the castle.&nbsp; This
+done, the Prince that night did lodge in the castle with his
+mighty captains and men of war, to the joy of the town of
+Mansoul.</p>
+<p>Now, the next care of the townsfolk was, how the captains and
+soldiers of the Prince&rsquo;s army should be quartered among
+them; and the care was not how they should shut their hands of
+them, but how they should fill their houses with them; for every
+man in Mansoul now had that esteem of Emmanuel and his men that
+nothing grieved them more than because they were not enlarged
+enough, every one of them to receive the whole army of the
+Prince; yea, they counted it their glory to be waiting upon them,
+and would, in those days, run at their bidding like lackeys.</p>
+<p>At last they came to this result:&mdash;</p>
+<p>1. That Captain Innocency should quarter at Mr.
+Reason&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>2. That Captain Patience should quarter at Mr.
+Mind&rsquo;s.&nbsp; This Mr. Mind was formerly the Lord
+Willbewill&rsquo;s clerk in time of the late rebellion.</p>
+<p>3. It was ordered that Captain Charity should quarter at Mr.
+Affection&rsquo;s house.</p>
+<p>4. That Captain Good-Hope should quarter at my Lord
+Mayor&rsquo;s.&nbsp; Now, for the house of the Recorder, himself
+desired, because his house was next to the castle, and because
+from him it was ordered by the Prince that, if need be, the alarm
+should be given to Mansoul,&mdash;it was, I say, desired by him
+that Captain Boanerges and Captain Conviction should take up
+their quarters with him, even they and all their men.</p>
+<p>5. As for Captain Judgment and Captain Execution, my Lord
+Willbewill took them and their men to him, because he was to rule
+under the Prince for the good of the town of Mansoul now, as he
+had before under the tyrant Diabolus for the hurt and damage
+thereof.</p>
+<p>6. And throughout the rest of the town were quartered
+Emmanuel&rsquo;s forces; but Captain Credence, with his men,
+abode still in the castle.&nbsp; So the Prince, his captains, and
+his soldiers, were lodged in the town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>Now, the ancients and elders of the town of Mansoul thought
+that they never should have enough of the Prince Emmanuel; his
+person, his actions, his words, and behaviour, were so pleasing,
+so taking, so desirable to them.&nbsp; Wherefore they prayed him,
+that though the castle of Mansoul was his place of residence,
+(and they desired that he might dwell there for ever,) yet that
+he would often visit the streets, houses, and people of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; &lsquo;For,&rsquo; said they, &lsquo;dread
+Sovereign, thy presence, thy looks, thy smiles, thy words, are
+the life, and strength, and sinews of the town of
+Mansoul.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Besides this, they craved that they might have, without
+difficulty or interruption, continual access unto him, (so for
+that very purpose he commanded that the gates should stand open,)
+that they might there see the manner of his doings, the
+fortifications of the place, and the royal mansion-house of the
+Prince.</p>
+<p>When he spake, they all stopped their mouths and gave
+audience; and when he walked, it was their delight to imitate him
+in his goings.</p>
+<p>Now, upon a time, Emmanuel made a feast for the town of
+Mansoul; and upon the feasting-day the townsfolk were come to the
+castle to partake of his banquet; and he feasted them with all
+manner of outlandish food;&mdash;food that grew not in the fields
+of Mansoul; nor in all the whole Kingdom of Universe; it was food
+that came from his Father&rsquo;s court.&nbsp; And so there was
+dish after dish set before them, and they were commanded freely
+to eat.&nbsp; But still, when a fresh dish was set before them,
+they would whisperingly say to each other, &lsquo;What is
+it?&rsquo; for they wist not what to call it.&nbsp; They drank
+also of the water that was made wine, and were very merry with
+him.&nbsp; There was music also all the while at the table; and
+man did eat angels&rsquo; food, and had honey given him out of
+the rock.&nbsp; So Mansoul did eat the food that was peculiar to
+the court; yea, they had now thereof to the full.</p>
+<p>I must not forget to tell you, that as at this table there
+were musicians, so they were not those of the country, nor yet of
+the town of Mansoul; but they were the masters of the songs that
+were sung at the court of Shaddai.</p>
+<p>Now, after the feast was over, Emmanuel was for entertaining
+the town of Mansoul with some curious riddles of secrets drawn up
+by his Father&rsquo;s secretary, by the skill and wisdom of
+Shaddai; the like to these there is not in any kingdom.&nbsp;
+These riddles were made upon the King Shaddai himself, and upon
+Emmanuel his Son, and upon his wars and doings with Mansoul.</p>
+<p>Emmanuel also expounded unto them some of those riddles
+himself; but, oh! how they were lightened!&nbsp; They saw what
+they never saw; they could not have thought that such rarities
+could have been couched in so few and such ordinary words.&nbsp;
+I told you before, whom these riddles did concern; and as they
+were opened, the people did evidently see it was so.&nbsp; Yea,
+they did gather that the things themselves were a kind of a
+portraiture, and that of Emmanuel himself; for when they read in
+the scheme where the riddles were writ, and looked in the face of
+the Prince, things looked so like the one to the other, that
+Mansoul could not forbear but say, &lsquo;This is the lamb! this
+is the sacrifice! this is the rock! this is the red cow! this is
+the door! and this is the way!&rsquo; with a great many other
+things more.</p>
+<p>And thus he dismissed the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; But can you
+imagine how the people of the corporation were taken with this
+entertainment!&nbsp; Oh! they were transported with joy, they
+were drowned with wonderment, while they saw and understood, and
+considered what their Emmanuel entertained them withal, and what
+mysteries he opened to them.&nbsp; And when they were at home in
+their houses, and in their most retired places, they could not
+but sing of him and of his actions.&nbsp; Yea, so taken were the
+townsmen now with their Prince, that they would sing of him in
+their sleep.</p>
+<p>Now, it was in the heart of the Prince Emmanuel to new-model
+the town of Mansoul, and to put it into such a condition as might
+be most pleasing to him, and that might best stand with the
+profit and security of the now flourishing town of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+He provided also against insurrections at home, and invasions
+from abroad, such love had he for the famous town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>Wherefore he first of all commanded that the great slings that
+were brought from his Father&rsquo;s court, when he came to the
+war of Mansoul, should be mounted, some upon the battlements of
+the castle, some upon the towers; for there were towers in the
+town of Mansoul, towers, new-built by Emmanuel since he came
+hither.&nbsp; There was also an instrument, invented by Emmanuel,
+that was to throw stones from the castle of Mansoul, out at
+Mouth-gate; an instrument that could not be resisted, nor that
+would miss of execution.&nbsp; Wherefore, for the wonderful
+exploits that it did when used, it went without a name; and it
+was committed to the care of, and to be managed by the brave
+captain, the Captain Credence, in case of war.</p>
+<p>This done, Emmanuel called the Lord Willbewill to him, and
+gave him in commandment to take care of the gates, the wall, and
+towers in Mansoul; also the Prince gave him the militia into his
+hand, and a special charge to withstand all insurrections and
+tumults that might be made in Mansoul against the peace of our
+Lord the King, and the peace and tranquillity of the town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; He also gave him in commission, that if he found
+any of the Diabolonians lurking in any corner of the famous town
+of Mansoul, he should forthwith apprehend them, and stay them, or
+commit them to safe custody, that they may be proceeded against
+according to law.</p>
+<p>Then he called unto him the Lord Understanding, who was the
+old Lord Mayor, he that was put out of place when Diabolus took
+the town, and put him into his former office again, and it became
+his place for his lifetime.&nbsp; He bid him also that he should
+build him a palace near Eye-gate; and that he should build it in
+fashion like a tower for defence.&nbsp; He bid him also that he
+should read in the Revelation of Mysteries all the days of his
+life, that he might know how to perform his office aright.</p>
+<p>He also made Mr. Knowledge the Recorder, not of contempt to
+old Mr. Conscience, who had been Recorder before, but for that it
+was in his princely mind to confer upon Mr. Conscience another
+employ, of which he told the old gentleman he should know more
+hereafter.</p>
+<p>Then he commanded that the image of Diabolus should be taken
+down from the place where it was set up, and that they should
+destroy it utterly, beating it into powder, and casting it into
+the wind without the town wall; and that the image of Shaddai,
+his Father, should be set up again, with his own, upon the castle
+gates; and that it should be more fairly drawn than ever,
+forasmuch as both his Father and himself were come to Mansoul in
+more grace and mercy than heretofore.&nbsp; He would also that
+his name should be fairly engraven upon the front of the town,
+and that it should be done in the best of gold, for the honour of
+the town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>After this was done, Emmanuel gave out a commandment that
+those three great Diabolonians should be apprehended, namely, the
+two late Lord Mayors, to wit, Mr. Incredulity, Mr. Lustings, and
+Mr. Forget-Good, the Recorder.&nbsp; Besides these, there were
+some of them that Diabolus made burgesses and aldermen in
+Mansoul, that were committed to ward by the hand of the now
+valiant and now right noble, the brave Lord Willbewill.</p>
+<p>And these were their names: Alderman Atheism, Alderman
+Hard-Heart, and Alderman False-Peace.&nbsp; The burgesses were,
+Mr. No-Truth, Mr. Pitiless, Mr. Haughty, with the like.&nbsp;
+These were committed to close custody, and the gaoler&rsquo;s
+name was Mr. True-Man.&nbsp; This True-Man was one of those that
+Emmanuel brought with him from his Father&rsquo;s court when at
+the first he made a war upon Diabolus in the town or Mansoul.</p>
+<p>After this, the Prince gave a charge that the three
+strongholds that, at the command of Diabolus, the Diabolonians
+built in Mansoul, should be demolished and utterly pulled down;
+of which holds and their names, with their captains and
+governors, you read a little before.&nbsp; But this was long in
+doing, because of the largeness of the places, and because the
+stones, the timber, the iron, and all rubbish, was to be carried
+without the town.</p>
+<p>When this was done, the Prince gave order that the Lord Mayor
+and aldermen of Mansoul should call a court of judicature for the
+trial and execution of the Diabolonians in the corporation now
+under the charge of Mr. True-Man, the gaoler.</p>
+<p>Now, when the time was come, and the court set, commandment
+was sent to Mr. True-Man, the gaoler, to bring the prisoners down
+to the bar.&nbsp; Then were the prisoners brought down, pinioned
+and chained together, as the custom of the town of Mansoul
+was.&nbsp; So, when they were presented before the Lord Mayor,
+the Recorder, and the rest of the honourable bench, first, the
+jury was empannelled, and then the witnesses sworn.&nbsp; The
+names of the jury were these: Mr. Belief, Mr. True-Heart, Mr.
+Upright, Mr. Hate-Bad, Mr. Love-God, Mr. See-Truth, Mr.
+Heavenly-Mind, Mr. Moderate, Mr. Thankful, Mr. Good-Work, Mr.
+Zeal-for-God, and Mr. Humble.</p>
+<p>The names of the witnesses were&mdash;Mr. Know-All, Mr.
+Tell-True, Mr. Hate-Lies, with my Lord Willbewill and his man, if
+need were.</p>
+<p>So the prisoners were set to the bar.&nbsp; Then said Mr.
+Do-Right, (for he was the Town-Clerk,) &lsquo;Set Atheism to the
+bar, gaoler.&rsquo;&nbsp; So he was set to the bar.&nbsp; Then
+said the Clerk, &lsquo;Atheism, hold up thy hand.&nbsp; Thou art
+here indicted by the name of Atheism, (an intruder upon the town
+of Mansoul,) for that thou hast perniciously and doltishly taught
+and maintained that there is no God, and so no heed to be taken
+to religion.&nbsp; This thou hast done against the being, honour,
+and glory of the King, and against the peace and safety of the
+town of Mansoul.&nbsp; What sayest thou?&nbsp; Art thou guilty of
+this indictment, or not?</p>
+<p><i>Atheism</i>.&nbsp; Not guilty.</p>
+<p><i>Crier</i>.&nbsp; Call Mr. Know-All, Mr. Tell-True, and Mr.
+Hate-Lies into the court.</p>
+<p>So they were called, and they appeared.</p>
+<p>Then said the Clerk, &lsquo;You, the witnesses for the King,
+look upon the prisoner at the bar; do you know him?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said Mr. Know-All, &lsquo;Yes, my lord, we know him; his
+name is Atheism; he has been a very pestilent fellow for many
+years in the miserable town of Mansoul.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; You are sure you know him?</p>
+<p><i>Know</i>.&nbsp; Know him!&nbsp; Yes my lord; I have
+heretofore too often been in his company to be at this time
+ignorant of him.&nbsp; He is a Diabolonian, the son of a
+Diabolonian: I knew his grandfather and his father.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Well said.&nbsp; He standeth here indicted
+by the name of Atheism, etc., and is charged that he hath
+maintained and taught that there is no God, and so no heed need
+be taken to any religion.&nbsp; What say you, the King&rsquo;s
+witnesses, to this?&nbsp; Is he guilty or not?</p>
+<p><i>Know</i>.&nbsp; My lord, I and he were once in
+Villain&rsquo;s Lane together, and he at that time did briskly
+talk of divers opinions; and then and there I heard him say,
+that, for his part, he did believe that there was no God.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;But,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;I can profess one, and be as
+religious too, if the company I am in, and the circumstances of
+other things,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;shall put me upon
+it.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; You are sure you heard him say thus?</p>
+<p><i>Know</i>.&nbsp; Upon mine oath, I heard him say thus.</p>
+<p>Then said the Clerk, &lsquo;Mr. Tell-True, what say you to the
+King&rsquo;s judges touching the prisoner at the bar?&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>Tell</i>.&nbsp; My lord, I formerly was a great companion
+of his, for the which I now repent me, and I have often heard him
+say, and that with very great stomachfulness, that he believed
+there was neither God, angel, nor spirit.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Where did you hear him say so?</p>
+<p><i>Tell</i>.&nbsp; In Blackmouth Lane and in
+Blasphemer&rsquo;s Row, and in many other places besides.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Have you much knowledge of him?</p>
+<p><i>Tell</i>.&nbsp; I know him to be a Diabolonian, the son of
+a Diabolonian, and a horrible man to deny a Deity.&nbsp; His
+father&rsquo;s name was Never-be-good, and he had more children
+than this Atheism.&nbsp; I have no more to say.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Mr. Hate-Lies, look upon the prisoner at
+the bar; do you know him?</p>
+<p><i>Hate</i>.&nbsp; My lord, this Atheism is one of the vilest
+wretches that ever I came near, or had to do with in my
+life.&nbsp; I have heard him say that there is no God; I have
+heard him say that there is no world to come, no sin, nor
+punishment hereafter, and, moreover, I have heard him say that it
+was as good to go to a whore-house as to go to hear a sermon.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Where did you hear him say these
+things?</p>
+<p><i>Hate</i>.&nbsp; In Drunkard&rsquo;s Row, just at
+Rascal-Lane&rsquo;s End, at a house in which Mr. Impiety
+lived.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Set him by, gaoler, and set Mr. Lustings
+to the bar.&nbsp; Mr. Lustings, thou art here indicted by the
+name of Lustings, (an intruder upon the town of Mansoul,) for
+that thou hast devilishly and traitorously taught, by practice
+and filthy words, that it is lawful and profitable to man to give
+way to his carnal desires; and that thou, for thy part, hast not,
+nor never wilt, deny thyself of any sinful delight as long as thy
+name is Lustings.&nbsp; How sayest thou?&nbsp; Art thou guilty of
+this indictment, or not?</p>
+<p>Then said Mr. Lustings, &lsquo;My lord, I am a man of high
+birth, and have been used to pleasures and pastimes of
+greatness.&nbsp; I have not been wont to be snubbed for my
+doings, but have been left to follow my will as if it were
+law.&nbsp; And it seems strange to me that I should this day be
+called into question for that, that not only I, but almost all
+men, do either secretly or openly countenance, love, and approve
+of.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Sir, we concern not ourselves with your
+greatness; (though the higher, the better you should have been;)
+but we are concerned, and so are you now, about an indictment
+preferred against you.&nbsp; How say you?&nbsp; Are you guilty of
+it, or not?</p>
+<p><i>Lust</i>.&nbsp; Not guilty.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Crier, call upon the witnesses to stand
+forth and give their evidence.</p>
+<p><i>Crier</i>.&nbsp; Gentlemen, you, the witnesses for the
+King, come in and give in your evidence for our Lord the King
+against the prisoner at the bar.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Come, Mr. Know-All, look upon the prisoner
+at the bar; do you know him?</p>
+<p><i>Know</i>.&nbsp; Yes, my lord, I know him.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; What is his name?</p>
+<p><i>Know</i>.&nbsp; His name is Lustings; he was the son of one
+Beastly, and his mother bare him in Flesh Street: she was one
+Evil-Concupiscence&rsquo;s daughter.&nbsp; I knew all the
+generation of them.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Well said.&nbsp; You have heard his
+indictment; what say you to it?&nbsp; Is he guilty of the things
+charged against him, or not?</p>
+<p><i>Know</i>.&nbsp; My lord, he has, as he saith, been a great
+man indeed, and greater in wickedness than by pedigree more than
+a thousandfold.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; But what do you know of his particular
+actions, and especially with reference to his indictment?</p>
+<p><i>Know</i>.&nbsp; I know him to be a swearer, a liar, a
+Sabbath-breaker; I know him to be a fornicator and an unclean
+person; I know him to be guilty of abundance of evils.&nbsp; He
+has been, to my knowledge, a very filthy man.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; But where did he use to commit his
+wickedness? in some private corners, or more open and
+shamelessly?</p>
+<p><i>Know</i>.&nbsp; All the town over, my lord.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Come, Mr. Tell-True, what have you to say
+for our Lord the King against the prisoner at the bar?</p>
+<p><i>Tell</i>.&nbsp; My lord, all that the first witness has
+said I know to be true, and a great deal more besides.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Mr. Lustings, do you hear what these
+gentlemen say?</p>
+<p><i>Lust</i>.&nbsp; I was ever of opinion that the happiest
+life that a man could live on earth was to keep himself back from
+nothing that he desired in the world; nor have I been false at
+any time to this opinion of mine, but have lived in the love of
+my notions all my days.&nbsp; Nor was I ever so churlish, having
+found such sweetness in them myself, as to keep the commendations
+of them from others.</p>
+<p>Then said the Court, &lsquo;There hath proceeded enough from
+his own mouth to lay him open to condemnation; wherefore, set him
+by, gaoler, and set Mr. Incredulity to the bar.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Incredulity set to the bar.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Mr. Incredulity, thou art here indicted by
+the name of Incredulity, (an intruder upon the town of Mansoul,)
+for that thou hast feloniously and wickedly, and that when thou
+wert an officer in the town of Mansoul, made head against the
+captains of the great King Shaddai when they came and demanded
+possession of Mansoul; yea, thou didst bid defiance to the name,
+forces, and cause of the King, and didst also, as did Diabolus
+thy captain, stir up and encourage the town of Mansoul to make
+head against and resist the said force of the King.&nbsp; What
+sayest thou to this indictment?&nbsp; Art thou guilty of it, or
+not?</p>
+<p>Then said Incredulity, &lsquo;I know not Shaddai; I love my
+old prince; I thought it my duty to be true to my trust, and to
+do what I could to possess the minds of the men of Mansoul to do
+their utmost to resist strangers and foreigners, and with might
+to fight against them.&nbsp; Nor have I, nor shall I, change mine
+opinion for fear of trouble, though you at present are possessed
+of place and power.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said the Court, &lsquo;The man, as you see, is
+incorrigible; he is for maintaining his villainies by stoutness
+of words, and his rebellion with impudent confidence; and
+therefore set him by, gaoler, and set Mr. Forget-Good to the
+bar.</p>
+<p>Forget-Good set to the bar.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Mr. Forget-Good, thou art here indicted by
+the name of Forget-Good, (an intruder upon the town of Mansoul,)
+for that thou, when the whole affairs of the town of Mansoul were
+in thy hand, didst utterly forget to serve them in what was good,
+and didst fall in with the tyrant Diabolus against Shaddai the
+King, against his captains, and all his host, to the dishonour of
+Shaddai, the breach of his law, and the endangering of the
+destruction of the famous town of Mansoul.&nbsp; What sayest thou
+to this indictment?&nbsp; Art thou guilty or not guilty?</p>
+<p>Then said Forget-Good: &lsquo;Gentlemen, and at this time my
+judges, as to the indictment by which I stand of several crimes
+accused before you, pray attribute my forgetfulness to mine age,
+and not to my wilfulness; to the craziness of my brain, and not
+to the carelessness of my mind; and then I hope I may be by your
+charity excused from great punishment, though I be
+guilty.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said the Court, &lsquo;Forget-Good, Forget-Good, thy
+forgetfulness of good was not simply of frailty, but of purpose,
+and for that thou didst loathe to keep virtuous things in thy
+mind.&nbsp; What was bad thou couldst retain, but what was good
+thou couldst not abide to think of; thy age, therefore, and thy
+pretended craziness, thou makest use of to blind the court
+withal, and as a cloak to cover thy knavery.&nbsp; But let us
+hear what the witnesses have to say for the King against the
+prisoner at the bar.&nbsp; Is he guilty of this indictment, or
+not?&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>Hate</i>.&nbsp; My lord, I have heard this Forget-Good say,
+that he could never abide to think of goodness, no, not for a
+quarter of an hour.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Where did you hear him say so?</p>
+<p><i>Hate</i>.&nbsp; In All-base Lane, at a house next door to
+the sign of the Conscience seared with a hot iron.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Mr. Know-All, what can you say for our
+Lord the King against the prisoner at the bar?</p>
+<p><i>Know</i>.&nbsp; My lord, I know this man well.&nbsp; He is
+a Diabolonian, the son of a Diabolonian: his father&rsquo;s name
+was Love-Naught; and for him, I have often heard him say, that he
+counted the very thoughts of goodness the most burdensome thing
+in the world.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Where have you heard him say these
+words?</p>
+<p><i>Know</i>.&nbsp; In Flesh Lane, right opposite to the
+church.</p>
+<p>Then said the Clerk, &lsquo;Come, Mr. Tell-True, give in your
+evidence concerning the prisoner at the bar, about that for which
+he stands here, as you see, indicted by this honourable
+Court.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>Tell</i>.&nbsp; My lord, I have heard him often say he had
+rather think of the vilest thing than of what is contained in the
+Holy Scriptures.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Where did you hear him say such grievous
+words?</p>
+<p><i>Tell</i>.&nbsp; Where?&mdash;in a great many places,
+particularly in Nauseous Street, in the house of one Shameless,
+and in Filth Lane, at the sign of the Reprobate, next door to the
+Descent into the Pit.</p>
+<p><i>Court</i>.&nbsp; Gentlemen, you have heard the indictment,
+his plea, and the testimony of the witnesses.&nbsp; Gaoler, set
+Mr. Hard-Heart to the bar.</p>
+<p>He is set to the bar.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Mr. Hard-Heart, thou art here indicted by
+the name of Hard-Heart, (an intruder upon the town of Mansoul,)
+for that thou didst most desperately and wickedly possess the
+town of Mansoul with impenitency and obdurateness; and didst keep
+them from remorse and sorrow for their evils, all the time of
+their apostacy from and rebellion against the blessed King
+Shaddai.&nbsp; What sayest thou to this indictment?&nbsp; Art
+thou guilty, or not guilty?</p>
+<p><i>Hard</i>.&nbsp; My lord, I never knew what remorse or
+sorrow meant in all my life.&nbsp; I am impenetrable.&nbsp; I
+care for no man; nor can I be pierced with men&rsquo;s griefs;
+their groans will not enter into my heart.&nbsp; Whomsoever I
+mischief, whomsoever I wrong, to me it is music, when to others
+mourning.</p>
+<p><i>Court</i>.&nbsp; You see the man is a right Diabolonian,
+and has convicted himself.&nbsp; Set him by, gaoler, and set Mr.
+False-Peace to the bar.</p>
+<p>False-Peace set to the bar.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Mr. False-Peace, thou art here indicted by the name of
+False-Peace, (an intruder upon the town of Mansoul,) for that
+thou didst most wickedly and satanically bring, hold, and keep
+the town of Mansoul, both in her apostacy and in her hellish
+rebellion, in a false, groundless, and dangerous peace, and
+damnable security, to the dishonour of the King, the
+transgression of his law, and the great damage of the town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; What sayest thou?&nbsp; Art thou guilty of this
+indictment, or not?</p>
+<p>Then said Mr. False-Peace: &lsquo;Gentlemen, and you now
+appointed to be my judges, I acknowledge that my name is Mr.
+Peace; but that my name is False-Peace I utterly deny.&nbsp; If
+your honours shall please to send for any that do intimately know
+me, or for the midwife that laid my mother of me, or for the
+gossips that were at my christening, they will, any or all of
+them, prove that my name is not False-Peace, but Peace.&nbsp;
+Wherefore I cannot plead to this indictment, forasmuch as my name
+is not inserted therein; and as is my true name, so are also my
+conditions.&nbsp; I was always a man that loved to live at quiet,
+and what I loved myself, that I thought others might love
+also.&nbsp; Wherefore, when I saw any of my neighbours to labour
+under a disquieted mind, I endeavoured to help them what I could;
+and instances of this good temper of mine many I could give;
+as,</p>
+<p>&lsquo;1. When, at the beginning, our town of Mansoul did
+decline the ways of Shaddai, they, some of them, afterwards began
+to have disquieting reflections upon themselves for what they had
+done; but I, as one troubled to see them disquieted, presently
+sought out means to get them quiet again.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;2. When the ways of the old world, and of Sodom, were
+in fashion, if anything happened to molest those that were for
+the customs of the present times, I laboured to make them quiet
+again, and to cause them to act without molestation.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;3. To come nearer home: when the wars fell out between
+Shaddai and Diabolus, if at any time I saw any of the town of
+Mansoul afraid of destruction, I often used, by some way, device,
+invention, or other, to labour to bring them to peace
+again.&nbsp; Wherefore, since I have been always a man of so
+virtuous a temper as some say a peace-maker is, and if a
+peace-maker be so deserving a man as some have been bold to
+attest he is, then let me, gentlemen, be accounted by you, who
+have a great name for justice and equity in Mansoul, for a man
+that deserveth not this inhuman way of treatment, but liberty,
+and also a license to seek damage of those that have been my
+accusers.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said the clerk, &lsquo;Crier, make a
+proclamation.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>Crier</i>.&nbsp; Oyes!&nbsp; Forasmuch as the prisoner at
+the bar hath denied his name to be that which is mentioned in the
+indictment, the Court requireth that if there be any in this
+place that can give information to the Court of the original and
+right name of the prisoner, they would come forth and give in
+their evidence; for the prisoner stands upon his own
+innocency.</p>
+<p>Then came two into the court, and desired that they might have
+leave to speak what they knew concerning the prisoner at the bar:
+the name of the one was Search-Truth, and the name of the other
+Vouch-Truth.&nbsp; So the Court demanded of these men if they
+knew the prisoner, and what they could say concerning him,
+&lsquo;for he stands,&rsquo; said they, &lsquo;upon his own
+vindication.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said Mr. Search-Truth, &lsquo;My Lord,
+I&mdash;&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>Court</i>.&nbsp; Hold! give him his oath.</p>
+<p>Then they sware him.&nbsp; So he proceeded.</p>
+<p><i>Search</i>.&nbsp; My lord, I know and have known this man
+from a child, and can attest that his name is False-Peace.&nbsp;
+I know his father; his name was Mr. Flatter: and his mother,
+before she was married, was called by the name of Mrs. Sooth-Up:
+and these two, when they came together, lived not long without
+this son; and when he was born, they called his name
+False-Peace.&nbsp; I was his play-fellow, only I was somewhat
+older than he; and when his mother did use to call him home from
+his play, she used to say, &lsquo;False-Peace, False-Peace, come
+home quick, or I&rsquo;ll fetch you.&rsquo;&nbsp; Yea, I knew him
+when he sucked; and though I was then but little, yet I can
+remember that when his mother did use to sit at the door with
+him, or did play with him in her arms, she would call him, twenty
+times together, &lsquo;My little False-Peace! my pretty
+False-Peace!&rsquo; and, &lsquo;Oh! my sweet rogue,
+False-Peace!&rsquo; and again, &lsquo;Oh! my little bird,
+False-Peace!&rsquo; and &lsquo;How do I love my
+child!&rsquo;&nbsp; The gossips also know it is thus, though he
+has had the face to deny it in open court.</p>
+<p>Then Mr. Vouch-Truth was called upon to speak what he knew of
+him.&nbsp; So they sware him.</p>
+<p>Then said Mr. Vouch-Truth, &lsquo;My lord, all that the former
+witness hath said is true.&nbsp; His name is False-Peace, the son
+of Mr. Flatter, and of Mrs. Sooth-Up, his mother: and I have in
+former times seen him angry with those that have called him
+anything else but False-Peace, for he would say that all such did
+mock and nickname him; but this was in the time when Mr.
+False-Peace was a great man, and when the Diabolonians were the
+brave men in Mansoul.</p>
+<p><i>Court</i>.&nbsp; Gentlemen, you have heard what these two
+men have sworn against the prisoner at the bar.&nbsp; And now,
+Mr. False-Peace, to you: you have denied your name to be
+False-Peace, yet you see that these honest men have sworn that
+that is your name.&nbsp; As to your plea, in that you are quite
+besides the matter of your indictment, you are not by it charged
+for evil-doing because you are a man of peace, or a peace-maker
+among your neighbours; but for that you did wickedly and
+satanically bring, keep, and hold the town of Mansoul, both under
+its apostasy from, and in its rebellion against its King, in a
+false, lying, and damnable peace, contrary to the law of Shaddai,
+and to the hazard of the destruction of the then miserable town
+of Mansoul.&nbsp; All that you have pleaded for yourself is, that
+you have denied your name, etc.; but here, you see, we have
+witnesses to prove that you are the man.&nbsp; For the peace that
+you so much boast of making among your neighbours, know that
+peace that is not a companion of truth and holiness, but that
+which is without this foundation, is grounded upon a lie, and is
+both deceitful and damnable, as also the great Shaddai hath
+said.&nbsp; Thy plea, therefore, has not delivered thee from what
+by the indictment thou art charged with, but rather it doth
+fasten all upon thee.&nbsp; But thou shalt have very fair
+play.&nbsp; Let us call the witnesses that are to testify as to
+matter of fact, and see what they have to say for our Lord the
+King against the prisoner at the bar.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Mr. Know-All, what say you for our Lord
+the King against the prisoner at the bar?</p>
+<p><i>Know</i>.&nbsp; My lord, this man hath of a long time made
+it, to my knowledge, his business to keep the town of Mansoul in
+a sinful quietness in the midst of all her lewdness, filthiness,
+and turmoils, and hath said, and that in my hearing, Come, come,
+let us fly from all trouble, on what ground soever it comes, and
+let us be for a quiet and peaceable life, though it wanteth a
+good foundation.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Come, Mr. Hate-Lies, what have you to
+say?</p>
+<p><i>Hate</i>.&nbsp; My lord, I have heard him say, that peace,
+though in a way of unrighteousness, is better than trouble with
+truth.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Where did you hear him say this?</p>
+<p><i>Hate</i>.&nbsp; I heard him say it in Folly-yard, at the
+house of one Mr. Simple, next door to the sign of the
+Self-deceiver.&nbsp; Yea, he hath said this to my knowledge
+twenty times in that place.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; We may spare further witness; this
+evidence is plain and full.&nbsp; Set him by, gaoler, and set Mr.
+No-Truth to the bar.&nbsp; Mr. No-Truth, thou art here indicted
+by the name of No-Truth, (an intruder upon the town of Mansoul,)
+for that thou hast always, to the dishonour of Shaddai, and the
+endangering of the utter ruin of the famous town of Mansoul, set
+thyself to deface, and utterly to spoil, all the remainders of
+the law and image of Shaddai that have been found in Mansoul
+after her deep apostasy from her king to Diabolus, the envious
+tyrant.&nbsp; What sayest thou, art thou guilty of this
+indictment, or not?</p>
+<p><i>No</i>.&nbsp; Not guilty, my lord.</p>
+<p>Then the witnesses were called, and Mr. Know-All did first
+give in his evidence against him.</p>
+<p><i>Know</i>.&nbsp; My lord, this man was at the pulling down
+of the image of Shaddai; yea, this is he that did it with his own
+hands.&nbsp; I myself stood by and saw him do it, and he did it
+at the commandment of Diabolus.&nbsp; Yea, this Mr. No-Truth did
+more than this, he did also set up the horned image of the beast
+Diabolus in the same place.&nbsp; This also is he that, at the
+bidding of Diabolus, did rend and tear, and cause to be consumed,
+all that he could of the remainders of the law of the King, even
+whatever he could lay his hands on in Mansoul.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Who saw him do this besides yourself?</p>
+<p><i>Hate</i>.&nbsp; I did, my lord, and so did many more
+besides; for this was not done by stealth, or in a corner, but in
+the open view of all; yea, he chose himself to do it publicly,
+for he delighted in the doing of it.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Mr. No-Truth, how could you have the face
+to plead not guilty, when you were so manifestly the doer of all
+this wickedness?</p>
+<p><i>No</i>.&nbsp; Sir, I thought I must say something, and as
+my name is, so I speak.&nbsp; I have been advantaged thereby
+before now, and did not know but by speaking no truth, I might
+have reaped the same benefit now.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Set him by, gaoler, and set Mr. Pitiless
+to the bar.&nbsp; Mr. Pitiless, thou art here indicted by the
+name of Pitiless, (an intruder upon the town of Mansoul,) for
+that thou didst most traitorously and wickedly shut up all bowels
+of compassion, and wouldest not suffer poor Mansoul to condole
+her own misery when she had apostatised from her rightful King,
+but didst evade, and at all times turn her mind awry from those
+thoughts that had in them a tendency to lead her to
+repentance.&nbsp; What sayest thou to this indictment?&nbsp;
+Guilty or not guilty?</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Not guilty of pitilessness: all I did was to cheer up,
+according to my name, for my name is not Pitiless, but Cheer-up;
+and I could not abide to see Mansoul inclined to
+melancholy.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; How! do you deny your name, and say it is
+not Pitiless, but Cheer-up? Call for the witnesses.&nbsp; What
+say you, the witnesses, to this plea?</p>
+<p><i>Know</i>.&nbsp; My lord, his name is Pitiless; so he hath
+written himself in all papers of concern wherein he has had to
+do.&nbsp; But these Diabolonians love to counterfeit their names:
+Mr. Covetousness covers himself with the name of Good-Husbandry,
+or the like; Mr. Pride can, when need is, call himself Mr. Neat,
+Mr. Handsome, or the like; and so of all the rest of them.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Mr. Tell-True, what say you?</p>
+<p><i>Tell</i>.&nbsp; His name is Pitiless, my lord.&nbsp; I have
+known him from a child, and he hath done all that wickedness
+whereof he stands charged in the indictment; but there is a
+company of them that are not acquainted with the danger of
+damning, therefore they call all those melancholy that have
+serious thoughts how that state should be shunned by them.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Set Mr. Haughty to the bar, gaoler.&nbsp;
+Mr. Haughty, thou art here indicted by the name of Haughty, (an
+intruder upon the town of Mansoul,) for that thou didst most
+traitorously and devilishly teach the town of Mansoul to carry it
+loftily and stoutly against the summons that was given them by
+the captains of the King Shaddai.&nbsp; Thou didst also teach the
+town of Mansoul to speak contemptuously and vilifyingly of their
+great King Shaddai; and didst moreover encourage, both by words
+and examples, Mansoul, to take up arms both against the King and
+his son Emmanuel.&nbsp; How sayest thou, art thou guilty of this
+indictment, or not?</p>
+<p><i>Haughty</i>.&nbsp; Gentlemen, I have always been a man of
+courage and valour, and have not used, when under the greatest
+clouds, to sneak or hang down the head like a bulrush; nor did it
+at all at any time please me to see men veil their bonnets to
+those that have opposed them; yea, though their adversaries
+seemed to have ten times the advantage of them.&nbsp; I did not
+use to consider who was my foe, nor what the cause was in which I
+was engaged.&nbsp; It was enough to me if I carried it bravely,
+fought like a man, and came off a victor.</p>
+<p><i>Court</i>.&nbsp; Mr. Haughty, you are not here indicted for
+that you have been a valiant man, nor for your courage and
+stoutness in times of distress, but for that you have made use of
+this your pretended valour to draw the town of Mansoul into acts
+of rebellion both against the great King, and Emmanuel his
+Son.&nbsp; This is the crime and the thing wherewith thou art
+charged in and by the indictment.</p>
+<p>But he made no answer to that.</p>
+<p>Now when the Court had thus far proceeded against the
+prisoners at the bar, then they put them over to the verdict of
+their jury, to whom they did apply themselves after this
+manner:</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Gentlemen of the jury, you have been here, and have
+seen these men; you have heard their indictments, their pleas,
+and what the witnesses have testified against them: now what
+remains, is, that you do forthwith withdraw yourselves to some
+place, where without confusion you may consider of what verdict,
+in a way of truth and righteousness, you ought to bring in for
+the King against them, and so bring it in accordingly.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then the jury, to wit, Mr. Belief, Mr. True-Heart, Mr.
+Upright, Mr. Hate-bad, Mr. Love-God, Mr. See-Truth, Mr.
+Heavenly-Mind, Mr. Moderate, Mr. Thankful, Mr. Humble, Mr.
+Good-Work, and Mr. Zeal-for-God, withdrew themselves in order to
+their work.&nbsp; Now when they were shut up by themselves, they
+fell to discourse among themselves in order to the drawing up of
+their verdict.</p>
+<p>And thus Mr. Belief (for he was the foreman) began:
+&lsquo;Gentlemen,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;for the men, the
+prisoners at the bar, for my part I believe that they all deserve
+death.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Very right,&rsquo; said Mr.
+True-Heart; &lsquo;I am wholly of your opinion.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Oh what a mercy is it,&rsquo; said Mr. Hate-Bad,
+&lsquo;that such villains as these are apprehended!&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Ay! ay!&rsquo; said Mr. Love-God, &lsquo;this is one of
+the joyfullest days that ever I saw in my life.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then
+said Mr. See-Truth, &lsquo;I know that if we judge them to death,
+our verdict shall stand before Shaddai himself&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Nor do I at all question it,&rsquo; said Mr.
+Heavenly-Mind; he said, moreover, &lsquo;When all such beasts as
+these are cast out of Mansoul, what a goodly town will it be
+then!&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Then,&rsquo; said Mr. Moderate,
+&lsquo;it is not my manner to pass my judgment with rashness; but
+for these their crimes are so notorious, and the witness so
+palpable, that that man must be wilfully blind who saith the
+prisoners ought not to die.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Blessed be
+God,&rsquo; said Mr. Thankful, &lsquo;that the traitors are in
+safe custody.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;And I join with you in this
+upon my bare knees,&rsquo; said Mr. Humble.&nbsp; &lsquo;I am
+glad also,&rsquo; said Mr. Good-Work.&nbsp; Then said the warm
+man, and true-hearted Mr. Zeal-for-God, &lsquo;Cut them off; they
+have been the plague, and have sought the destruction of
+Mansoul.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Thus, therefore, being all agreed in their verdict, they come
+instantly into the Court.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Gentlemen of the jury, answer all to your
+names: Mr. Belief, one; Mr. True-Heart, two; Mr. Upright, three;
+Mr. Hate-Bad, four; Mr. Love-God, five; Mr. See-Truth, six; Mr.
+Heavenly-mind, seven; Mr. Moderate, eight; Mr. Thankful, nine;
+Mr. Humble, ten; Mr. Good-Work, eleven; and Mr. Zeal-for-God,
+twelve.&nbsp; Good men and true, stand together in your verdict:
+are you all agreed?</p>
+<p><i>Jury</i>.&nbsp; Yes, my lord.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Who shall speak for you?</p>
+<p><i>Jury</i>.&nbsp; Our foreman.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; You, the gentlemen of the jury, being
+empannelled for our Lord the King, to serve here in a matter of
+life and death, have heard the trials of each of these men, the
+prisoners at the bar: what say you? are they guilty of that, and
+those crimes for which they stand here indicted, or are they not
+guilty?</p>
+<p><i>Foreman</i>.&nbsp; Guilty, my lord.</p>
+<p><i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Look to your prisoners, gaoler.</p>
+<p>This was done in the morning, and in the afternoon they
+received the sentence of death according to the law.</p>
+<p>The gaoler, therefore, having received such a charge, put them
+all in the inward prison, to preserve them there till the day of
+execution, which was to be the next day in the morning.</p>
+<p>But now to see how it happened, one of the prisoners,
+Incredulity by name, in the interim betwixt the sentence and the
+time of execution, brake prison and made his escape, and gets him
+away quite out of the town of Mansoul, and lay lurking in such
+places and holes as he might, until he should again have
+opportunity to do the town of Mansoul a mischief for their thus
+handling of him as they did.</p>
+<p>Now when Mr. Trueman, the gaoler, perceived that he had lost
+his prisoner, he was in a heavy taking, because that prisoner
+was, to speak on, the very worst of all the gang: wherefore first
+he goes and acquaints my Lord Mayor, Mr. Recorder, and my Lord
+Willbewill, with the matter, and to get of them an order to make
+search for him throughout the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; So an order
+he got, and search was made, but no such man could now be found
+in all the town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>All that could be gathered was, that he had lurked a while
+about the outside of the town, and that here and there one or
+other had a glimpse of him as he did make his escape out of
+Mansoul; one or two also did affirm that they saw him without the
+town, going apace quite over the plain.&nbsp; Now when he was
+quite gone, it was affirmed by one Mr. Did-see, that he ranged
+all over dry places, till he met with Diabolus, his friend, and
+where should they meet one another but just upon Hell-gate
+hill.</p>
+<p>But oh! what a lamentable story did the old gentleman tell to
+Diabolus concerning what sad alteration Emmanuel had made in
+Mansoul!</p>
+<p>As, first, how Mansoul had, after some delays, received a
+general pardon at the hands of Emmanuel, and that they had
+invited him into the town, and that they had given him the castle
+for his possession.&nbsp; He said, moreover, that they had called
+his soldiers into the town, coveted who should quarter the most
+of them; they also entertained him with the timbrel, song, and
+dance.&nbsp; &lsquo;But that,&rsquo; said Incredulity,
+&lsquo;which is the sorest vexation to me is, that he hath pulled
+down, O father, thy image, and set up his own; pulled down thy
+officers and set up his own.&nbsp; Yea, and Willbewill, that
+rebel, who, one would have thought, should never have turned from
+us, he is now in as great favour with Emmanuel as ever he was
+with thee.&nbsp; But, besides all this, this Willbewill has
+received a special commission from his master to search for, to
+apprehend, and to put to death all, and all manner of
+Diabolonians that he shall find in Mansoul: yea, and this
+Willbewill has taken and committed to prison already eight of my
+Lord&rsquo;s most trusty friends in Mansoul.&nbsp; Nay, further,
+my Lord, with grief I speak it, they have been all arraigned,
+condemned, and, I doubt, before this executed in Mansoul.&nbsp; I
+told my Lord of eight, and myself was the ninth, who should
+assuredly have drunk of the same cup, but that through craft, I,
+as thou seest, have made mine escape from them.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>When Diabolus had heard this lamentable story, he yelled and
+snuffed up the wind like a dragon, and made the sky to look dark
+with his roaring; he also sware that he would try to be revenged
+on Mansoul for this.&nbsp; So they, both he and his old friend
+Incredulity, concluded to enter into great consultation, how they
+might get the town of Mansoul again.</p>
+<p>Now, before this time, the day was come in which the prisoners
+in Mansoul were to be executed.&nbsp; So they were brought to the
+cross, and that by Mansoul, in most solemn manner; for the Prince
+said that this should be done by the hand of the town of Mansoul,
+&lsquo;that I may see,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;the forwardness of
+my now redeemed Mansoul to keep my word, and to do my
+commandments; and that I may bless Mansoul in doing this
+deed.&nbsp; Proof of sincerity pleases me well; let Mansoul
+therefore first lay their hands upon these Diabolonians to
+destroy them.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>So the town of Mansoul slew them, according to the word of
+their Prince; but when the prisoners were brought to the cross to
+die, you can hardly believe what troublesome work Mansoul had of
+it to put the Diabolonians to death; for the men, knowing that
+they must die, and every of them having implacable enmity in
+their hearts to Mansoul, what did they but took courage at the
+cross, and there resisted the men of the town of Mansoul?&nbsp;
+Wherefore the men of Mansoul were forced to cry out for help to
+the captains and men of war.&nbsp; Now the great Shaddai had a
+secretary in the town, and he was a great lover of the men of
+Mansoul, and he was at the place of execution also; so he,
+hearing the men of Mansoul cry out against the strugglings and
+unruliness of the prisoners, rose up from his place, and came and
+put his hands upon the hands of the men of Mansoul.&nbsp; So they
+crucified the Diabolonians that had been a plague, a grief, and
+an offence to the town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>Now, when this good work was done, the Prince came down to
+see, to visit, and to speak comfortably to the men of Mansoul,
+and to strengthen their hands in such work.&nbsp; And he said to
+them that, by this act of theirs he had proved them, and found
+them to be lovers of his person, observers of his laws, and such
+as had also respect to his honour.&nbsp; He said, moreover, (to
+show them that they by this should not be losers, nor their town
+weakened by the loss of them,) that he would make them another
+captain, and that of one of themselves.&nbsp; And that this
+captain should be the ruler of a thousand, for the good and
+benefit of the now flourishing town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>So he called one to him whose name was Waiting, and bid him,
+&lsquo;Go quickly up to the castle gate, and inquire there for
+one Mr. Experience, that waiteth upon that noble captain, the
+Captain Credence, and bid him come hither to me.&rsquo;&nbsp; So
+the messenger that waited upon the good Prince Emmanuel went and
+said as he was commanded.&nbsp; Now the young gentleman was
+waiting to see the captain train and muster his men in the castle
+yard.&nbsp; Then said Mr. Waiting to him, &lsquo;Sir, the Prince
+would that you should come down to his highness
+forthwith.&rsquo;&nbsp; So he brought him down to Emmanuel, and
+he came and made obeisance before him.&nbsp; Now the men of the
+town knew Mr. Experience well, for he was born and bred in
+Mansoul; they also knew him to be a man of conduct, of valour,
+and a person prudent in matters; he was also a comely person,
+well-spoken, and very successful in his undertakings.</p>
+<p>Wherefore the hearts of the townsmen were transported with joy
+when they saw that the Prince himself was so taken with Mr.
+Experience, that he would needs make him a captain over a band of
+men.</p>
+<p>So with one consent they bowed the knee before Emmanuel, and
+with a shout said, &lsquo;Let Emmanuel live for
+ever!&rsquo;&nbsp; Then said the Prince to the young gentleman,
+whose name was Mr. Experience, &lsquo;I have thought good to
+confer upon thee a place of trust and honour in this my town of
+Mansoul.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then the young man bowed his head and
+worshipped.&nbsp; &lsquo;It is,&rsquo; said Emmanuel, &lsquo;that
+thou shouldest be a captain, a captain over a thousand men in my
+beloved town of Mansoul.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then said the captain,
+&lsquo;Let the King live!&rsquo;&nbsp; So the Prince gave out
+orders forthwith to the King&rsquo;s secretary, that he should
+draw up for Mr. Experience a commission to make him a captain
+over a thousand men.&nbsp; &lsquo;And let it be brought to
+me,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;that I may set to my
+seal.&rsquo;&nbsp; So it was done as it was commanded.&nbsp; The
+commission was drawn up, brought to Emmanuel, and he set his seal
+thereto.&nbsp; Then, by the hand of Mr. Waiting, he sent it away
+to the captain.</p>
+<p>Now as soon as the captain had received his commission, he
+sounded his trumpet for volunteers, and young men came to him
+apace; yea, the greatest and chief men in the town sent their
+sons, to be listed under his command.&nbsp; Thus Captain
+Experience came under command to Emmanuel, for the good of the
+town of Mansoul.&nbsp; He had for his lieutenant one Mr. Skilful,
+and for his cornet one Mr. Memory.&nbsp; His under officers I
+need not name.&nbsp; His colours were the white colours for the
+town of Mansoul; and his scutcheon was the dead lion and dead
+bear.&nbsp; So the Prince returned to his royal palace again.</p>
+<p>Now when he was returned thither, the elders of the town of
+Mansoul, to wit, the Lord Mayor, the Recorder, and the Lord
+Willbewill, went to congratulate him, and in special way to thank
+him for his love, care, and the tender compassion which he showed
+to his ever-obliged town of Mansoul.&nbsp; So after a while, and
+some sweet communion between them, the townsmen having solemnly
+ended their ceremony, returned to their place again.</p>
+<p>Emmanuel also at this time appointed them a day wherein he
+would renew their charter, yea, wherein he would renew and
+enlarge it, mending several faults therein, that Mansoul&rsquo;s
+yoke might be yet more easy.&nbsp; And this he did without any
+desire of theirs, even of his own frankness and noble mind.&nbsp;
+So when he had sent for and seen their old one, he laid it by,
+and said, &lsquo;Now that which decayeth and waxeth old is ready
+to vanish away.&rsquo;&nbsp; He said, moreover, &lsquo;The town
+of Mansoul shall have another, a better, a new one, more steady
+and firm by far.&rsquo;&nbsp; An epitome hereof take as
+follows:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Emmanuel, Prince of Peace, and a great lover of the
+town of Mansoul, I do in the name of my Father, and of mine own
+clemency, give, grant, and bequeath to my beloved town of
+Mansoul.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;First.&nbsp; Free, full, and everlasting forgiveness of
+all wrongs, injuries, and offences done by them against my
+Father, me, their neighbour, or themselves.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Second.&nbsp; I do give them the holy law and my
+testament, with all that therein is contained, for their
+everlasting comfort and consolation.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Third.&nbsp; I do also give them a portion of the
+self-same grace and goodness that dwells in my Father&rsquo;s
+heart and mine.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Fourth.&nbsp; I do give, grant, and bestow upon them
+freely, the world and what is therein, for their good; and they
+shall have that power over them, as shall stand with the honour
+of my Father, my glory, and their comfort: yea, I grant them the
+benefits of life and death, and of things present, and things to
+come.&nbsp; This privilege no other city, town, or corporation,
+shall have, but my Mansoul only.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Fifth.&nbsp; I do give and grant them leave, and free
+access to me in my palace at all seasons&mdash;to my palace above
+or below&mdash;there to make known their wants to me, and I give
+them, moreover, a promise that I will hear and redress all their
+grievances.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Sixth.&nbsp; I do give, grant to, and invest the town
+of Mansoul with full power and authority to seek out, take,
+enslave, and destroy all, and all manner of Diabolonians that at
+any time, from whencesoever, shall be found straggling in or
+about the town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Seventh.&nbsp; I do further grant to my beloved town of
+Mansoul, that they shall have authority not to suffer any
+foreigner, or stranger, or their seed, to be free in, and of the
+blessed town of Mansoul, nor to share in the excellent privileges
+thereof.&nbsp; But that all the grants, privileges, and
+immunities that I bestow upon the famous town of Mansoul, shall
+be for those the old natives, and true inhabitants thereof; to
+them, I say, and to their right seed after them.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;But all Diabolonians, of what sort, birth, country, or
+kingdom soever, shall be debarred a share therein.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>So when the town of Mansoul had received at the hand of
+Emmanuel their gracious charter, (which in itself is infinitely
+more large than by this lean epitome is set before you,) they
+carried it to audience, that is, to the market place, and there
+Mr. Recorder read it in the presence of all the people.&nbsp;
+This being done, it was had back to the castle gates, and there
+fairly engraven upon the doors thereof, and laid in letters of
+gold, to the end that the town of Mansoul, with all the people
+thereof, might have it always in their view, or might go where
+they might see what a blessed freedom their Prince had bestowed
+upon them, that their joy might be increased in themselves, and
+their love renewed to their great and good Emmanuel.</p>
+<p>But what joy, what comfort, what consolation, think you, did
+now possess the hearts of the men of Mansoul!&nbsp; The bells
+rung, the minstrels played, the people danced, the captains
+shouted, the colours waved in the wind, and the silver trumpets
+sounded; and the Diabolonians now were glad to hide their heads,
+for they looked like them that had been long dead.</p>
+<p>When this was over, the Prince sent again for the elders of
+the town of Mansoul, and communed with them about a ministry that
+he intended to establish among them; such a ministry that might
+open unto them, and that might instruct them in the things that
+did concern their present and future state.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;For,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;you, of yourselves, unless
+you have teachers and guides, will not be able to know, and, if
+not to know, to be sure not to do the will of my
+Father.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>At this news, when the elders of Mansoul brought it to the
+people, the whole town came running together, (for it pleased
+them well, as whatever the Prince now did pleased the people,)
+and all with one consent implored his Majesty that he would
+forthwith establish such a ministry among them as might teach
+them both law and judgment, statute and commandment; that they
+might be documented in all good and wholesome things.&nbsp; So he
+told them that he would grant them their requests, and would
+establish two among them; one that was of his Father&rsquo;s
+court, and one that was a native of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;He that is from the court,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;is a
+person of no less quality and dignity than my Father and I; and
+he is the Lord Chief Secretary of my Father&rsquo;s house: for he
+is, and always has been, the chief dictator of all my
+Father&rsquo;s laws, a person altogether well skilled in all
+mysteries, and knowledge of mysteries, as is my Father, or as
+myself is.&nbsp; Indeed he is one with us in nature, and also as
+to loving of, and being faithful to, and in the eternal concerns
+of the town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;And this is he,&rsquo; said the Prince, &lsquo;that
+must be your chief teacher; for it is he, and he only, that can
+teach you clearly in all high and supernatural things.&nbsp; He,
+and he only, it is that knows the ways and methods of my Father
+at court, nor can any like him show how the heart of my Father is
+at all times, in all things, upon all occasions, towards Mansoul;
+for as no man knows the things of a man but that spirit of a man
+which is in him, so the things of my Father knows no man but this
+his high and mighty Secretary.&nbsp; Nor can any, as he, tell
+Mansoul how and what they shall do to keep themselves in the love
+of my Father.&nbsp; He also it is that can bring lost things to
+your remembrance, and that can tell you things to come.&nbsp;
+This teacher, therefore, must of necessity have the pre-eminence,
+both in your affections and judgment, before your other teacher;
+his personal dignity, the excellency of his teaching, also the
+great dexterity that he hath to help you to make and draw up
+petitions to my Father for your help, and to his pleasing, must
+lay obligations upon you to love him, fear him, and to take heed
+that you grieve him not.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;This person can put life and vigour into all he says;
+yea, and can also put it into your heart.&nbsp; This person can
+make seers of you, and can make you tell what shall be
+hereafter.&nbsp; By this person you must frame all your petitions
+to my Father and me; and without his advice and counsel first
+obtained, let nothing enter into the town or castle of Mansoul,
+for that may disgust and grieve this noble person.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Take heed, I say, that you do not grieve this minister;
+for if you do, he may fight against you; and should he once be
+moved by you to set himself against you in battle array, that
+will distress you more than if twelve legions should from my
+Father&rsquo;s court be sent to make war upon you.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;But, as I said, if you shall hearken unto him, and
+shall love him; if you shall devote yourselves to his teaching,
+and shall seek to have converse, and to maintain communion with
+him, you shall find him ten times better than is the whole world
+to any; yea, he will shed abroad the love of my Father in your
+hearts, and Mansoul will be the wisest, and most blessed of all
+people.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then did the Prince call unto him the old gentleman, who
+before had been the Recorder of Mansoul, Mr. Conscience by name,
+and told him, That, forasmuch as he was well skilled in the law
+and government of the town of Mansoul, and was also well-spoken,
+and could pertinently deliver to them his Master&rsquo;s will in
+all terrene and domestic matters, therefore he would also make
+him a minister for, in, and to the goodly town of Mansoul, in all
+the laws, statutes, and judgments of the famous town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; &lsquo;And thou must,&rsquo; said the Prince,
+&lsquo;confine thyself to the teaching of moral virtues, to civil
+and natural duties; but thou must not attempt to presume to be a
+revealer of those high and supernatural mysteries that are kept
+close in the bosom of Shaddai, my Father: for those things knows
+no man, nor can any reveal them but my Father&rsquo;s Secretary
+only.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Thou art a native of the town of Mansoul, but the Lord
+Secretary is a native with my Father; wherefore, as thou hast
+knowledge of the laws and customs of the corporation, so he of
+the things and will of my Father.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Wherefore, O Mr. Conscience, although I have made thee
+a minister and a preacher to the town of Mansoul, yet as to the
+things which the Lord Secretary knoweth, and shall teach to this
+people, there thou must be his scholar and a learner, even as the
+rest of Mansoul are.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Thou must therefore, in all high and supernatural
+things, go to him for information and knowledge; for though there
+be a spirit in man, this person&rsquo;s inspiration must give him
+understanding.&nbsp; Wherefore, O thou Mr. Recorder, keep low and
+be humble, and remember that the Diabolonians that kept not their
+first charge, but left their own standing, are now made prisoners
+in the pit.&nbsp; Be therefore content with thy station.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I have made thee my Father&rsquo;s vicegerent on earth,
+in such things of which I have made mention before: and thou,
+take thou power to teach them to Mansoul, yea, and to impose them
+with whips and chastisements, if they shall not willingly hearken
+to do thy commandments.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;And, Mr. Recorder, because thou art old, and through
+many abuses made feeble; therefore I give thee leave and license
+to go when thou wilt to my fountain, my conduit, and there to
+drink freely of the blood of my grape, for my conduit doth always
+run wine.&nbsp; Thus doing, thou shalt drive from thine heart and
+stomach all foul, gross, and hurtful humours.&nbsp; It will also
+lighten thine eyes, and will strengthen thy memory for the
+reception and keeping of all that the King&rsquo;s most noble
+Secretary teacheth.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>When the Prince had thus put Mr. Recorder (that once so was)
+into the place and office of a minister to Mansoul, and the man
+had thankfully accepted thereof, then did Emmanuel address
+himself in a particular speech to the townsmen themselves.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Behold,&rsquo; said the Prince to Mansoul, &lsquo;my
+love and care towards you; I have added to all that is past, this
+mercy, to appoint you preachers; the most noble Secretary to
+teach you in all high and sublime mysteries; and this
+gentleman,&rsquo; pointing to Mr. Conscience, &lsquo;is to teach
+you in all things human and domestic, for therein lieth his
+work.&nbsp; He is not, by what I have said, debarred of telling
+to Mansoul anything that he hath heard and received at the mouth
+of the lord high Secretary; only he shall not attempt to presume
+to pretend to be a revealer of those high mysteries himself; for
+the breaking of them up, and the discovery of them to Mansoul
+lieth only in the power, authority, and skill of the lord high
+Secretary himself.&nbsp; Talk of them he may, and so may the rest
+of the town of Mansoul; yea, and may, as occasion gives them
+opportunity, press them upon each other for the benefit of the
+whole.&nbsp; These things, therefore, I would have you observe
+and do, for it is for your life, and the lengthening of your
+days.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;And one thing more to my beloved Mr. Recorder, and to
+all the town of Mansoul: You must not dwell in, nor stay upon,
+anything of that which he hath in commission to teach you, as to
+your trust and expectation of the next world; (of the next world,
+I say, for I purpose to give another to Mansoul, when this with
+them is worn out;) but for that you must wholly and solely have
+recourse to, and make stay upon his doctrine that is your Teacher
+after the first order.&nbsp; Yea, Mr. Recorder himself must not
+look for life from that which he himself revealeth; his
+dependence for that must be founded in the doctrine of the other
+preacher.&nbsp; Let Mr. Recorder also take heed that he receive
+not any doctrine, or point of doctrine, that is not communicated
+to him by his Superior Teacher, nor yet within the precincts of
+his own formal knowledge.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Now, after the Prince had thus settled things in the famous
+town of Mansoul, he proceeded to give to the elders of the
+corporation a necessary caution, to wit, how they should carry it
+to the high and noble captains that he had, from his
+Father&rsquo;s court, sent or brought with him, to the famous
+town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;These captains,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;do love the town
+of Mansoul, and they are picked men, picked out of abundance, as
+men that best suit, and that will most faithfully serve in the
+wars of Shaddai against the Diabolonians, for the preservation of
+the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; &lsquo;I charge you therefore,&rsquo;
+said he, &lsquo;O ye inhabitants of the now flourishing town of
+Mansoul, that you carry it not ruggedly or untowardly to my
+captains, or their men; since, as I said, they are picked and
+choice men&mdash;men chosen out of many for the good of the town
+of Mansoul.&nbsp; I say, I charge you, that you carry it not
+untowardly to them: for though they have the hearts and faces of
+lions, when at any time they shall be called forth to engage and
+fight with the King&rsquo;s foes, and the enemies of the town of
+Mansoul; yet a little discountenance cast upon them from the town
+of Mansoul will deject and cast down their faces, will weaken and
+take away their courage.&nbsp; Do not, therefore, O my beloved,
+carry it unkindly to my valiant captains and courageous men of
+war, but love them, nourish them, succour them, and lay them in
+your bosoms; and they will not only fight for you, but cause to
+fly from you all those the Diabolonians that seek, and will, if
+possible, be, your utter destruction.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;If, therefore, any of them should at any time be sick
+or weak, and so not able to perform that office of love, which,
+with all their hearts, they are willing to do (and will do also
+when well and in health), slight them not, nor despise them, but
+rather strengthen them and encourage them, though weak and ready
+to die, for they are your fence, and your guard, your wall, your
+gates, your locks, and your bars.&nbsp; And although, when they
+are weak, they can do but little, but rather need to be helped by
+you, than that you should then expect great things from them,
+yet, when well, you know what exploits, what feats and warlike
+achievements they are able to do, and will perform for you.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Besides, if they be weak, the town of Mansoul cannot be
+strong; if they be strong, then Mansoul cannot be weak; your
+safety, therefore, doth lie in their health, and in your
+countenancing them.&nbsp; Remember, also, that if they be sick,
+they catch that disease of the town of Mansoul itself.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;These things I have said unto you because I love your
+welfare and your honour: observe, therefore, O my Mansoul, to be
+punctual in all things that I have given in charge unto you, and
+that not only as a town corporate, and so to your officers and
+guard, and guides in chief, but to you as you are a people whose
+well-being, as single persons, depends on the observation of the
+orders and commandments of their Lord.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Next, O my Mansoul, I do warn you of that, of which,
+notwithstanding that reformation that at present is wrought among
+you, you have need to be warned about: wherefore hearken
+diligently unto me.&nbsp; I am now sure, and you will know
+hereafter, that there are yet of the Diabolonians remaining in
+the town of Mansoul, Diabolonians that are sturdy and implacable,
+and that do already while I am with you, and that will yet more
+when I am from you, study, plot, contrive, invent, and jointly
+attempt to bring you to desolation, and so to a state far worse
+than that of the Egyptian bondage; they are the avowed friends of
+Diabolus, therefore look about you.&nbsp; They used heretofore to
+lodge with their Prince in the Castle, when Incredulity was the
+Lord Mayor of this town; but since my coming hither, they lie
+more in the outsides and walls, and have made themselves dens,
+and caves, and holes, and strongholds therein.&nbsp; Wherefore, O
+Mansoul! thy work, as to this, will be so much the more difficult
+and hard; that is, to take, mortify, and put them to death
+according to the will of my Father.&nbsp; Nor can you utterly rid
+yourselves of them, unless you should pull down the walls of your
+town, the which I am by no means willing you should.&nbsp; Do you
+ask me, What shall we do then?&nbsp; Why, be you diligent, and
+quit you like men; observe their holes; find out their haunts;
+assault them, and make no peace with them.&nbsp; Wherever they
+haunt, lurk, or abide, and what terms of peace soever they offer
+you, abhor, and all shall be well betwixt you and me.&nbsp; And
+that you may the better know them from those that are the natives
+of Mansoul, I will give you this brief schedule of the names of
+the chief of them; and they are these that follow:&mdash;The Lord
+Fornication, the Lord Adultery, the Lord Murder, the Lord Anger,
+the Lord Lasciviousness, the Lord Deceit, the Lord Evil-Eye, Mr.
+Drunkenness, Mr. Revelling, Mr. Idolatry, Mr. Witch-craft, Mr.
+Variance, Mr. Emulation, Mr. Wrath, Mr. Strife, Mr. Sedition, and
+Mr. Heresy.&nbsp; These are some of the chief, O Mansoul! of
+those that will seek to overthrow thee for ever.&nbsp; These, I
+say, are the skulkers in Mansoul; but look thou well into the law
+of thy King, and there thou shalt find their physiognomy, and
+such other characteristical notes of them, by which they
+certainly may be known.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;These, O my Mansoul, (and I would gladly that you
+should certainly know it,) if they be suffered to run and range
+about the town as they would, will quickly, like vipers, eat out
+your bowels; yea, poison your captains, cut the sinews of your
+soldiers, break the bars and bolts of your gates, and turn your
+now most flourishing Mansoul into a barren and desolate
+wilderness, and ruinous heap.&nbsp; Wherefore, that you may take
+courage to yourselves to apprehend these villains wherever you
+find them, I give to you, my Lord Mayor, my Lord Willbewill, and
+Mr. Recorder, with all the inhabitants of the town of Mansoul,
+full power and commission to seek out, to take, and to cause to
+be put to death by the cross, all, and all manner of
+Diabolonians, when and wherever you shall find them to lurk
+within, or to range without the walls of the town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I told you before that I had placed a standing ministry
+among you; not that you have but these with you, for my first
+four captains who came against the master and lord of the
+Diabolonians that was in Mansoul, they can, and if need be, and
+if they be required, will not only privately inform, but publicly
+preach to the corporation both good and wholesome doctrine, and
+such as shall lead you in the way.&nbsp; Yea, they will set up a
+weekly, yea, if need be, a daily lecture in thee, O Mansoul! and
+will instruct thee in such profitable lessons, that, if heeded,
+will do thee good at the end.&nbsp; And take good heed that you
+spare not the men that you have a commission to take and
+crucify.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Now, as I have set before your eyes the vagrants and
+runagates by name, so I will tell you, that among yourselves,
+some of them shall creep in to beguile you, even such as would
+seem, and that in appearance are, very rife and hot for
+religion.&nbsp; And they, if you watch not, will do you a
+mischief, such an one as at present you cannot think of.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;These, as I said, will show themselves to you in
+another hue than those under description before.&nbsp; Wherefore,
+Mansoul, watch and be sober, and suffer not thyself to be
+betrayed.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>When the Prince had thus far new modelled the town of Mansoul,
+and had instructed them in such matters as were profitable for
+them to know, then he appointed another day in which he intended,
+when the townsfolk came together, to bestow a further badge of
+honour upon the town of Mansoul,&mdash;a badge that should
+distinguish them from all the people, kindreds, and tongues that
+dwell in the kingdom of Universe.&nbsp; Now it was not long
+before the day appointed was come, and the Prince and his people
+met in the King&rsquo;s palace, where first Emmanuel made a short
+speech unto them, and then did for them as he had said, and unto
+them as he had promised.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;My Mansoul,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;that which I now am
+about to do, is to make you known to the world to be mine, and to
+distinguish you also in your own eyes, from all false traitors
+that may creep in among you.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then he commanded that those that waited upon him should go
+and bring forth out of his treasury those white and glistening
+robes &lsquo;that I,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;have provided and
+laid up in store for my Mansoul.&rsquo;&nbsp; So the white
+garments were fetched out of his treasury, and laid forth to the
+eyes of the people.&nbsp; Moreover, it was granted to them that
+they should take them and put them on, &lsquo;according,&rsquo;
+said he, &lsquo;to your size and stature.&rsquo;&nbsp; So the
+people were put into white, into fine linen, white and clean.</p>
+<p>Then said the Prince unto them, &lsquo;This, O Mansoul, is my
+livery, and the badge by which mine are known from the servants
+of others.&nbsp; Yea, it is that which I grant to all that are
+mine, and without which no man is permitted to see my face.&nbsp;
+Wear them, therefore, for my sake, who gave them unto you; and
+also if you would be known by the world to be mine.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>But now! can you think how Mansoul shone?&nbsp; It was fair as
+the sun, clear as the moon, and terrible as an army with
+banners.</p>
+<p>The Prince added further, and said, &lsquo;No prince,
+potentate, or mighty one of Universe, giveth this livery but
+myself: behold, therefore, as I said before, you shall be known
+by it to be mine.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;And now,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;I have given you my
+livery, let me give you also in commandment concerning them; and
+be sure that you take good heed to my words.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;First.&nbsp; Wear them daily, day by day, lest you
+should at sometimes appear to others as if you were none of
+mine.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Second.&nbsp; Keep them always white; for if they be
+soiled, it is dishonour to me.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Third.&nbsp; Wherefore gird them up from the ground,
+and let them not lag with dust and dirt.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Fourth.&nbsp; Take heed that you lose them not, lest
+you walk naked, and they see your shame.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Fifth.&nbsp; But if you should sully them, if you
+should defile them, the which I am greatly unwilling you should,
+and the prince Diabolus will be glad if you would, then speed you
+to do that which is written in my law, that yet you may stand,
+and befall before me, and before my throne.&nbsp; Also, this is
+the way to cause that I may not leave you, nor forsake you while
+here, but may dwell in this town of Mansoul for ever.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>And now was Mansoul, and the inhabitants of it, as the signet
+upon Emmanuel&rsquo;s right hand.&nbsp; Where was there now a
+town, a city, a corporation, that could compare with Mansoul! a
+town redeemed from the hand, and from the power of Diabolus! a
+town that the King Shaddai loved, and that he sent Emmanuel to
+regain from the Prince of the infernal cave; yea, a town that
+Emmanuel loved to dwell in, and that he chose for his royal
+habitation; a town that he fortified for himself, and made strong
+by the force of his army.&nbsp; What shall I say, Mansoul has now
+a most excellent Prince, golden captains and men of war, weapons
+proved, and garments as white as snow.&nbsp; Nor are these
+benefits to be counted little, but great; can the town of Mansoul
+esteem them so, and improve them to that end and purpose for
+which they are bestowed upon them?</p>
+<p>When the Prince had thus completed the modelling of the town,
+to show that he had great delight in the work of his hands and
+took pleasure in the good that he had wrought for the famous and
+flourishing Mansoul, he commanded, and they set his standard upon
+the battlements of the castle.&nbsp; And then,</p>
+<p>First.&nbsp; He gave them frequent visits; not a day now but
+the elders of Mansoul must come to him, or he to them, into his
+palace.&nbsp; Now they must walk and talk together of all the
+great things that he had done, and yet further promised to do,
+for the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Thus would he often do with the
+Lord Mayor, my Lord Willbewill, and the honest subordinate
+preacher Mr. Conscience, and Mr. Recorder.&nbsp; But oh, how
+graciously, how lovingly, how courteously, and tenderly did this
+blessed Prince now carry it towards the town of Mansoul!&nbsp; In
+all the streets, gardens, orchards, and other places where he
+came, to be sure the poor should have his blessing and
+benediction; yea, he would kiss them, and if they were ill he
+would lay hands on them, and make them well.&nbsp; The captains,
+also, he would daily, yea, sometimes hourly, encourage with his
+presence and goodly words.&nbsp; For you must know that a smile
+from him upon them would put more vigour, more life, and
+stoutness into them, than would anything else under heaven.</p>
+<p>The Prince would now also feast them, and be with them
+continually: hardly a week would pass but a banquet must be had
+betwixt him and them.&nbsp; You may remember that, some pages
+before, we make mention of one feast that they had together; but
+now to feast them was a thing more common: every day with Mansoul
+was a feast-day now.&nbsp; Nor did he, when they returned to
+their places, send them empty away, either they must have a ring,
+a gold chain, a bracelet, a white stone, or something; so dear
+was Mansoul to him now; so lovely was Mansoul in his eyes.</p>
+<p>Second.&nbsp; When the elders and townsmen did not come to
+him, he would send in much plenty of provision unto them; meat
+that came from court, wine and bread that were prepared for his
+Father&rsquo;s table; yea, such delicates would he send unto
+them, and therewith would so cover their table, that whoever saw
+it confessed that the like could not be seen in any kingdom.</p>
+<p>Third.&nbsp; If Mansoul did not frequently visit him as he
+desired they should, he would walk out to them, knock at their
+doors, and desire entrance, that amity might be maintained
+betwixt them and him; if they did hear and open to him, as
+commonly they would, if they were at home, then would he renew
+his former love, and confirm it too with some new tokens, and
+signs of continued favour.</p>
+<p>And was it not now amazing to behold, that in that very place
+where sometimes Diabolus had his abode, and entertained his
+Diabolonians to the almost utter destruction of Mansoul, the
+Prince of princes should sit eating and drinking with them, while
+all his mighty captains, men of war, trumpeters, with the
+singing-men and singing-women of his Father, stood round about to
+wait upon them!&nbsp; Now did Mansoul&rsquo;s cup run over, now
+did her conduits run sweet wine, now did she eat the finest of
+the wheat, and drink milk and honey out of the rock!&nbsp; Now,
+she said, How great is his goodness! for since I found favour in
+his eyes, how honourable have I been!</p>
+<p>The blessed Prince did also ordain a new officer in the town,
+and a goodly person he was; his name was Mr. God&rsquo;s-Peace:
+this man was set over my Lord Willbewill, my Lord Mayor, Mr.
+Recorder, the subordinate preacher, Mr. Mind, and over all the
+natives of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Himself was not a native of
+it, but came with the Prince Emmanuel from the court.&nbsp; He
+was a great acquaintance of Captain Credence and Captain
+Good-Hope; some say they were kin, and I am of that opinion
+too.&nbsp; This man, as I said, was made governor of the town in
+general, especially over the castle, and Captain Credence was to
+help him there.&nbsp; And I made great observation of it, that so
+long as all things went in Mansoul as this sweet-natured
+gentleman would, the town was in most happy condition.&nbsp; Now
+there were no jars, no chiding, no interferings, no unfaithful
+doings in all the town of Mansoul; every man in Mansoul kept
+close to his own employment.&nbsp; The gentry, the officers, the
+soldiers, and all in place observed their order.&nbsp; And as for
+the women and children of the town, they followed their business
+joyfully; they would work and sing, work and sing, from morning
+till night: so that quite through the town of Mansoul now nothing
+was to be found but harmony, quietness, joy, and health.&nbsp;
+And this lasted all that summer.</p>
+<p>But there was a man in the town of Mansoul, and his name was
+Mr. Carnal-Security; this man did, after all this mercy bestowed
+on this corporation, bring the town of Mansoul into great and
+grievous slavery and bondage.&nbsp; A brief account of him and of
+his doings take as followeth:&mdash;</p>
+<p>When Diabolus at first took possession of the town of Mansoul,
+he brought thither, with himself, a great number of Diabolonians,
+men of his own conditions.&nbsp; Now among these there was one
+whose name was Mr. Self-Conceit, and a notable brisk man he was,
+as any that in those days did possess the town of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+Diabolus, then, perceiving this man to be active and bold, sent
+him upon many desperate designs, the which he managed better, and
+more to the pleasing of his lord, than most that came with him
+from the dens could do.&nbsp; Wherefore, finding him so fit for
+his purpose, he preferred him, and made him next to the great
+Lord Willbewill, of whom we have written so much before.&nbsp;
+Now the Lord Willbewill being in those days very well pleased
+with him, and with his achievements, gave him his daughter, the
+Lady Fear-Nothing, to wife.&nbsp; Now, of my Lady Fear-nothing,
+did this Mr. Self-Conceit beget this gentleman, Mr.
+Carnal-Security.&nbsp; Wherefore, there being then in Mansoul
+those strange kinds of mixtures, it was hard for them, in some
+cases, to find out who were natives, who not, for Mr.
+Carnal-Security sprang from my Lord Willbewill by mother&rsquo;s
+side, though he had for his father a Diabolonian by nature.</p>
+<p>Well, this Carnal-Security took much after his father and
+mother; he was self-conceited, he feared nothing, he was also a
+very busy man: nothing of news, nothing of doctrine, nothing of
+alteration, or talk of alteration, could at any time be on foot
+in Mansoul, but be sure Mr. Carnal-Security would be at the head
+or tail of it: but, to be sure, he would decline those that he
+deemed the weakest, and stood always with them in his way of
+standing, that he supposed was the strongest side.</p>
+<p>Now, when Shaddai the mighty, and Emmanuel his Son, made war
+upon Mansoul, to take it, this Mr. Carnal-Security was then in
+town, and was a great doer among the people, encouraging them in
+their rebellion, putting them upon hardening themselves in their
+resisting the King&rsquo;s forces: but when he saw that the town
+of Mansoul was taken, and converted to the use of the glorious
+Prince Emmanuel; and when he also saw what was become of
+Diabolus, and how he was unroosted, and made to quit the castle
+in the greatest contempt and scorn; and that the town of Mansoul
+was well lined with captains, engines of war, and men, and also
+provision; what doth he but slyly wheel about also; and as he had
+served Diabolus against the good Prince, so he feigned that he
+would serve the Prince against his foes.</p>
+<p>And having got some little smattering of Emmanuel&rsquo;s
+things by the end, being bold, he ventures himself into the
+company of the townsmen, any attempts also to chat among
+them.&nbsp; Now he knew that the power and strength of the town
+of Mansoul was great, and that it could not but be pleasing to
+the people, if he cried up their might and their glory.&nbsp;
+Wherefore he beginneth his tale with the power and strength of
+Mansoul, and affirmed that it was impregnable; now magnifying
+their captains and their slings, and their rams; then crying up
+their fortifications and strongholds; and, lastly, the assurances
+that they had from their Prince, that Mansoul should be happy for
+ever.&nbsp; But when he saw that some of the men of the town were
+tickled and taken with his discourse, he makes it his business,
+and walking from street to street, house to house, and man to
+man, he at last brought Mansoul to dance after his pipe, and to
+grow almost as carnally secure as himself; so from talking they
+went to feasting, and from feasting to sporting; and so to some
+other matters.&nbsp; Now Emmanuel was yet in the town of Mansoul,
+and he wisely observed their doings.&nbsp; My Lord Mayor, my Lord
+Willbewill, and Mr. Recorder were also all taken with the words
+of this tattling Diabolonian gentleman, forgetting that their
+Prince had given them warning before to take heed that they were
+not beguiled with any Diabolonian sleight; he had further told
+them that the security of the now flourishing town of Mansoul did
+not so much lie in her present fortifications and force, as in
+her so using of what she had, as might oblige her Emmanuel to
+abide within her castle.&nbsp; For the right doctrine of Emmanuel
+was, that the town of Mansoul should take heed that they forgot
+not his Father&rsquo;s love and his; also, that they should so
+demean themselves as to continue to keep themselves
+therein.&nbsp; Now this was not the way to do it, namely, to fall
+in love with one of the Diabolonians, and with such an one too as
+Mr. Carnal-Security was, and to be led up and down by the nose by
+him; they should have heard their Prince, feared their Prince,
+loved their Prince, and have stoned this naughty pack to death,
+and took care to have walked in the ways of their Prince&rsquo;s
+prescribing: for then should their peace have been as a river,
+when their righteousness had been like the waves of the sea.</p>
+<p>Now when Emmanuel perceived that through the policy of Mr.
+Carnal-Security the hearts of the men of Mansoul were chilled and
+abated in their practical love to him,</p>
+<p>First.&nbsp; He bemoans them, and, condoles their state with
+the Secretary, saying, &lsquo;Oh that my people had hearkened
+unto me, and that Mansoul had walked in my ways!&nbsp; I would
+have fed them with the finest of the wheat; and with honey out of
+the rock would I have sustained them.&rsquo;&nbsp; This done, he
+said in his heart, &lsquo;I will return to the court, and go to
+my place, till Mansoul shall consider and acknowledge their
+offence.&rsquo;&nbsp; And he did so, and the cause and manner of
+his going away from them was, that Mansoul declined him, as is
+manifest in these particulars.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;1. They left off their former way of visiting him, they
+came not to his royal palace as afore.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;2. They did not regard, nor yet take notice, that he
+came or came not to visit them.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;3. The love-feasts that had wont to be between their
+Prince and them, though he made them still, and called them to
+them, yet they neglected to come to them, or to be delighted with
+them.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;4. They waited not for his counsels, but began to be
+headstrong and confident in themselves, concluding that now they
+were strong and invincible, and that Mansoul was secure, and
+beyond all reach of the foe, and that her state must needs be
+unalterable for ever.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Now, as was said, Emmanuel perceiving that by the craft of Mr.
+Carnal-Security, the town of Mansoul was taken off from their
+dependence upon him, and upon his Father by him, and set upon
+what by them was bestowed upon it; he first, as I said, bemoaned
+their state, then he used means to make them understand that the
+way that they went on in was dangerous: for he sent my Lord High
+Secretary to them, to forbid them such ways; but twice when he
+came to them, he found them at dinner in Mr.
+Carnal-Security&rsquo;s parlour; and perceiving also that they
+were not willing to reason about matters concerning their good,
+he took grief and went his way; the which when he had told to the
+Prince Emmanuel, he took offence, and was grieved also, and so
+made provision to return to his Father&rsquo;s court.</p>
+<p>Now, the methods of his withdrawing, as I was saying before,
+were thus:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;1. Even while he was yet with them in Mansoul, he kept
+himself close, and more retired than formerly.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;2. His speech was not now, if he came in their company,
+so pleasant and familiar as formerly.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;3. Nor did he, as in times past, send to Mansoul, from
+his table, those dainty bits which he was wont to do.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;4. Nor when they came to visit him, as now and then
+they would, would he be so easily spoken with as they found him
+to be in times past.&nbsp; They might now knock once, yea, twice,
+but he would seem not at all to regard them; whereas formerly at
+the sound of their feet he would up and run, and meet them
+halfway, and take them too, and lay them in his bosom.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>But thus Emmanuel carried it now, and by this his carriage he
+sought to make them bethink themselves, and return to him.&nbsp;
+But, alas! they did not consider, they did not know his ways,
+they regarded not, they were not touched with these, nor with the
+true remembrance of former favours.&nbsp; Wherefore what does he
+but in private manner withdraw himself, first from his palace,
+then to the gate of the town, and so away from Mansoul he goes,
+till they should acknowledge their offence, and more earnestly
+seek his face.&nbsp; Mr. God&rsquo;s-Peace also laid down his
+commission, and would for the present act no longer in the town
+of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>Thus they walked contrary to him, and he again, by way of
+retaliation, walked contrary to them.&nbsp; But, alas! by this
+time they were so hardened in their way, and had so drunk in the
+doctrine of Mr. Carnal-Security, that the departing of their
+Prince touched them not, nor was he remembered by them when gone;
+and so, of consequence, his absence not condoled by them.</p>
+<p>Now, there was a day wherein this old gentleman, Mr.
+Carnal-Security, did again make a feast for the town of Mansoul;
+and there was at that time in the town one Mr. Godly-Fear, one
+now but little set by, though formerly one of great
+request.&nbsp; This man, old Carnal-Security, had a mind, if
+possible, to gull, and debauch, and abuse, as he did the rest,
+and therefore he now bids him to the feast with his
+neighbours.&nbsp; So the day being come, they prepare, and he
+goes and appears with the rest of the guests; and being all set
+at the table, they did eat and drink, and were merry, even all
+but this one man: for Mr. Godly-Fear sat like a stranger, and did
+neither eat nor was merry.&nbsp; The which, when Mr.
+Carnal-Security perceived, he presently addressed himself in a
+speech thus to him:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Mr. Godly-Fear, are you not well?&nbsp; You seem to be
+ill of body or mind, or both.&nbsp; I have a cordial of Mr.
+Forget-Good&rsquo;s making, the which, sir, if you will take a
+dram of, I hope it may make you bonny and blithe, and so make you
+more fit for us, feasting companions.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Unto whom the good old gentleman discreetly replied,
+&lsquo;Sir, I thank you for all things courteous and civil; but
+for your cordial I have no list thereto.&nbsp; But a word to the
+natives of Mansoul: You, the elders and chief of Mansoul, to me
+it is strange to see you so jocund and merry, when the town of
+Mansoul is in such woeful case.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said Mr. Carnal-Security, &lsquo;You want sleep, good
+air, I doubt.&nbsp; If you please, lie down, and take a nap, and
+we meanwhile will be merry.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said the good man as follows: &lsquo;Sir, if you were not
+destitute of an honest heart, you could not do as you have done
+and do.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said Mr. Carnal-Security, &lsquo;Why?&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>Godly</i>.&nbsp; Nay, pray interrupt me not.&nbsp; It is
+true the town of Mansoul was strong, and, with a <i>proviso</i>,
+impregnable; but you, the townsmen, have weakened it, and it now
+lies obnoxious to its foes.&nbsp; Nor is it a time to flatter, or
+be silent; it is you, Mr. Carnal-Security, that have wilily
+stripped Mansoul, and driven her glory from her; you have pulled
+down her towers, you have broken down her gates, you have spoiled
+her locks and bars.</p>
+<p>And now, to explain myself: from that time that my lords of
+Mansoul, and you, sir, grew so great, from that time the Strength
+of Mansoul has been offended, and now he is arisen and is
+gone.&nbsp; If any shall question the truth of my words, I will
+answer him by this, and suchlike questions.&nbsp; &lsquo;Where is
+the Prince Emmanuel?&nbsp; When did a man or woman in Mansoul see
+him?&nbsp; When did you hear from him, or taste any of his dainty
+bits?&rsquo;&nbsp; You are now a feasting with this Diabolonian
+monster, but he is not your Prince.&nbsp; I say, therefore,
+though enemies from without, had you taken heed, could not have
+made a prey of you, yet since you have sinned against your
+Prince, your enemies within have been too hard for you.</p>
+<p>Then said Mr. Carnal-Security, &lsquo;Fie! fie!&nbsp; Mr.
+Godly-Fear, fie!&mdash;will you never shake off your
+<i>timorousness</i>?&nbsp; Are you afraid of being
+sparrow-blasted?&nbsp; Who hath hurt you?&nbsp; Behold, I am on
+your side; only you are for doubting, and I am for being
+confident.&nbsp; Besides, is this a time to be sad in?&nbsp; A
+feast is made for mirth; why, then, do you now, to your shame,
+and our trouble, break out into such passionate melancholy
+language, when you should eat and drink, and be merry?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said Mr. Godly-Fear again, &lsquo;I may well be sad, for
+Emmanuel is gone from Mansoul.&nbsp; I say again, he is gone, and
+you, sir, are the man that has driven him away; yea, he is gone
+without so much as acquainting the nobles of Mansoul with his
+going; and if that is not a sign of his anger, I am not
+acquainted with the methods of godliness.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;And now, my lords and gentlemen, for my speech is still
+to you, your gradual declining from him did provoke him gradually
+to depart from you, the which he did for some time, if perhaps
+you would have been made sensible thereby, and have been renewed
+by humbling yourselves; but when he saw that none would regard,
+nor lay these fearful beginnings of his anger and judgment to
+heart, he went away from this place; and this I saw with mine
+eye.&nbsp; Wherefore now, while you boast, your strength is gone;
+you are like the man that had lost his locks that before did wave
+about his shoulders.&nbsp; You may, with this lord of your feast,
+shake yourselves, and conclude to do as at other times; but since
+without him you can do nothing, and he is departed from you, turn
+your feast into a sigh, and your mirth into
+lamentation.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then the subordinate preacher, old Mr. Conscience by name, he
+that of old was Recorder of Mansoul, being startled at what was
+said, began to second it thus:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Indeed, my brethren,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;I fear
+that Mr. Godly-Fear tells us true: I, for my part, have not seen
+my Prince a long season.&nbsp; I cannot remember the day, for my
+part; nor can I answer Mr. Godly-Fear&rsquo;s question.&nbsp; I
+doubt, I am afraid that all is nought with Mansoul.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>Godly</i>.&nbsp; Nay, I know that you shall not find him in
+Mansoul, for he is departed and gone; yea, and gone for the
+faults of the elders, and for that they rewarded his grace with
+unsufferable unkindness.</p>
+<p>Then did the subordinate preacher look as if he would fall
+down dead at the table; also all there present, except the man of
+the house, began to look pale and wan.&nbsp; But having a little
+recovered themselves, and jointly agreeing to believe Mr.
+Godly-Fear and his sayings, they began to consult what was best
+to be done, (now Mr. Carnal-Security was gone into his
+withdrawing-room, for he liked not such dumpish doings,) both to
+the man of the house for drawing them into evil, and also to
+recover Emmanuel&rsquo;s love.</p>
+<p>And, with that, that saying of their Prince came very hot into
+their minds, which he had bidden them do to such as were false
+prophets that should arise to delude the town of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+So they took Mr. Carnal-Security (concluding that he must be he)
+and burned his house upon him with fire; for he also was a
+Diabolonian by nature.</p>
+<p>So when this was passed and over, they bespeed themselves to
+look for Emmanuel their Prince; and they sought him, but they
+found him not.&nbsp; Then were they more confirmed in the truth
+of Mr. Godly-Fear&rsquo;s sayings, and began also severely to
+reflect upon themselves for their so vile and ungodly doings; for
+they concluded now that it was through them that their Prince had
+left them.</p>
+<p>Then they agreed and went to my Lord Secretary, (him whom
+before they refused to hear&mdash;him whom they had grieved with
+their doings,) to know of him, for he was a seer, and could tell
+where Emmanuel was, and how they might direct a petition to
+him.&nbsp; But the Lord Secretary would not admit them to a
+conference about this matter, nor would admit them to his royal
+place of abode, nor come out to them to show them his face or
+intelligence.</p>
+<p>And now was it a day gloomy and dark, a day of clouds and of
+thick darkness with Mansoul.&nbsp; Now they saw that they had
+been foolish, and began to perceive what the company and prattle
+of Mr. Carnal-Security had done, and what desperate damage his
+swaggering words had brought poor Mansoul into.&nbsp; But what
+further it was likely to cost them they were ignorant of.&nbsp;
+Now Mr. Godly-Fear began again to be in repute with the men of
+the town; yea, they were ready to look upon him as a prophet.</p>
+<p>Well, when the Sabbath day was come, they went to hear their
+subordinate preacher; but oh, how he did thunder and lighten this
+day!&nbsp; His text was that in the prophet Jonah: &lsquo;They
+that observe lying vanities forsake their own mercy.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+But there was then such power and authority in that sermon, and
+such a dejection seen in the countenances of the people that day,
+that the like hath seldom been heard or seen.&nbsp; The people,
+when sermon was done, were scarce able to go to their homes, or
+to betake themselves to their employs the week after; they were
+so sermon-smitten, and also so sermon-sick by being smitten, that
+they knew not what to do.</p>
+<p>He did not only show to Mansoul their sin, but did tremble
+before them, under the sense of his own, still crying out of
+himself, as he preached to them, &lsquo;Unhappy man that I am!
+that I should do so wicked a thing!&nbsp; That I, a preacher!
+whom the Prince did set up to teach to Mansoul his law, should
+myself live senseless and sottishly here, and be one of the first
+found in transgression!&nbsp; This transgression also fell within
+my precincts; I should have cried out against the wickedness; but
+I let Mansoul lie wallowing in it, until it had driven Emmanuel
+from its borders!&rsquo;&nbsp; With these things he also charged
+all the lords and gentry of Mansoul, to the almost distracting of
+them.</p>
+<p>About this time, also, there was a great sickness in the town
+of Mansoul, and most of the inhabitants were greatly
+afflicted.&nbsp; Yea, the captains also, and men of war, were
+brought thereby to a languishing condition, and that for a long
+time together; so that in case of an invasion, nothing could to
+purpose now have been done, either by the townsmen or field
+officers.&nbsp; Oh, how many pale faces, weak hands, feeble
+knees, and staggering men were now seen to walk the streets of
+Mansoul!&nbsp; Here were groans, there pants, and yonder lay
+those that were ready to faint.</p>
+<p>The garments, too, which Emmanuel had given them were but in a
+sorry case; some were rent, some were torn, and all in a nasty
+condition; some also did hang so loosely upon them, that the next
+bush they came at was ready to pluck them off.</p>
+<p>After some time spent in this sad and desolate condition, the
+subordinate preacher called for a day of fasting, and to humble
+themselves for being so wicked against the great Shaddai and his
+Son.&nbsp; And he desired that Captain Boanerges would
+preach.&nbsp; So he consented to do it; and the day being come,
+and his text was this, &lsquo;Cut it down, why cumbereth it the
+ground?&rsquo;&nbsp; And a very smart sermon he made upon the
+place.&nbsp; First, he showed what was the occasion of the words,
+namely, because the fig-tree was barren; then he showed what was
+contained in the sentence, namely, repentance, or utter
+desolation.&nbsp; He then showed, also, by whose authority this
+sentence was pronounced, and that was by Shaddai himself.&nbsp;
+And, lastly, he showed the reasons of the point, and then
+concluded his sermon.&nbsp; But he was very pertinent in the
+application, insomuch that he made poor Mansoul tremble.&nbsp;
+For this sermon, as well as the former, wrought much upon the
+hearts of the men of Mansoul; yea, it greatly helped to keep
+awake those that were roused by the preaching that went
+before.&nbsp; So that now throughout the whole town, there was
+little or nothing to be heard or seen but sorrow, and mourning,
+and woe.</p>
+<p>Now, after sermon, they got together and consulted what was
+best to be done.&nbsp; &lsquo;But,&rsquo; said the subordinate
+preacher, &lsquo;I will do nothing of mine own head, without
+advising with my neighbour Mr. Godly-Fear.&nbsp; For if he had
+aforehand understood more of the mind of our Prince than we, I do
+not know but he also may have it now, even now we are turning
+again to virtue.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>So they called and sent for Mr. Godly-Fear, and he forthwith
+appeared.&nbsp; Then they desired that he would further show his
+opinion about what they had best to do. Then said the old
+gentleman as followeth: &lsquo;It is my opinion that this town of
+Mansoul should, in this day of her distress, draw up and send an
+humble petition to their offended Prince Emmanuel, that he, in
+his favour and grace, will turn again unto you, and not keep
+anger for ever.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>When the townsmen had heard this speech, they did, with one
+consent, agree to his advice; so they did presently draw up their
+request, and the next was, But who shall carry it?&nbsp; At last
+they did all agree to send it by my Lord Mayor.&nbsp; So he
+accepted of the service, and addressed himself to his journey;
+and went and came to the court of Shaddai, whither Emmanuel the
+Prince of Mansoul was gone.&nbsp; But the gate was shut, and a
+strict watch kept thereat; so that the petitioner was forced to
+stand without for a great while together.&nbsp; Then he desired
+that some would go into the Prince and tell him who stood at the
+gate, and what his business was.&nbsp; So one went and told to
+Shaddai, and to Emmanuel his Son, that the Lord Mayor of the town
+of Mansoul stood without at the gate of the King&rsquo;s court,
+desiring to be admitted into the presence of the Prince, the
+King&rsquo;s Son.&nbsp; He also told what was the Lord
+Mayor&rsquo;s errand, both to the King and his Son
+Emmanuel.&nbsp; But the Prince would not come down, nor admit
+that the gate should be opened to him, but sent him an answer to
+this effect: &lsquo;They have turned their back unto me, and not
+their face; but now in the time of their trouble they say to me,
+Arise, and save us.&nbsp; But can they not now go to Mr.
+Carnal-Security, to whom they went when they turned from me, and
+make him their leader, their lord, and their protection now in
+their trouble; why now in their trouble do they visit me, since
+in their prosperity they went astray?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The answer made my Lord Mayor look black in the face; it
+troubled, it perplexed, it rent him sore.&nbsp; And now he began
+again to see what it was to be familiar with Diabolonians, such
+as Mr. Carnal-Security was.&nbsp; When he saw that at court, as
+yet, there was little help to be expected, either for himself or
+friends in Mansoul, he smote upon his breast, and returned
+weeping, and all the way bewailing the lamentable state of
+Mansoul.</p>
+<p>Well, when he was come within sight of the town, the elders
+and chief of the people of Mansoul went out at the gate to meet
+him, and to salute him, and to know how he sped at court.&nbsp;
+But he told them his tale in so doleful a manner, that they all
+cried out, and mourned, and wept.&nbsp; Wherefore they threw
+ashes and dust upon their heads, and put sackcloth upon their
+loins, and went crying out through the town of Mansoul; the
+which, when the rest of the townsfolk saw, they all mourned and
+wept.&nbsp; This, therefore, was a day of rebuke and trouble, and
+of anguish to the town of Mansoul, and also of great
+distress.</p>
+<p>After some time, when they had somewhat refrained themselves,
+they came together to consult again what by them was yet to be
+done; and they asked advice, as they did before, of that reverend
+Mr. Godly-Fear, who told them that there was no way better than
+to do as they had done, nor would he that they should be
+discouraged at all with that they had met with at court; yea,
+though several of their petitions should be answered with nought
+but silence or rebuke: &lsquo;For,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;it is
+the way of the wise Shaddai to make men wait and to exercise
+patience, and it should be the way of them in want, to be willing
+to stay his leisure.</p>
+<p>Then they took courage, and sent again and again, and again,
+and again; for there was not now one day, nor an hour that went
+over Mansoul&rsquo;s head, wherein a man might not have met upon
+the road one or other riding post, sounding the horn from Mansoul
+to the court of the King Shaddai; and all with letters
+petitionary in behalf of, and for the Prince&rsquo;s return to
+Mansoul.&nbsp; The road, I say, was now full of messengers, going
+and returning, and meeting one another; some from the court, and
+some from Mansoul; and this was the work of the miserable town of
+Mansoul, all that long, that sharp, that cold and tedious
+winter.</p>
+<p>Now if you have not forgot, you may yet remember that I told
+you before, that after Emmanuel had taken Mansoul, yea, and after
+that he had new modelled the town, there remained in several
+lurking places of the corporation many of the old Diabolonians,
+that either came with the tyrant when he invaded and took the
+town, or that had there, by reason of unlawful mixtures, their
+birth and breeding, and bringing up.&nbsp; And their holes, dens,
+and lurking places were in, under, or about the wall of the
+town.&nbsp; Some of their names are the Lord Fornication, the
+Lord Adultery, the Lord Murder, the Lord Anger, the Lord
+Lasciviousness, the Lord Deceit, the Lord Evil-eye, the Lord
+Blasphemy, and that horrible villain, the old and dangerous Lord
+Covetousness.&nbsp; These, as I told you, with many more, had yet
+their abode in the town of Mansoul, and that after that Emmanuel
+had driven their prince Diabolus out of the castle.</p>
+<p>Against these the good Prince did grant a commission to the
+Lord Willbewill and others, yea, to the whole town of Mansoul, to
+seek, take, secure, and destroy any or all that they could lay
+hands of, for that they were Diabolonians by nature, enemies to
+the Prince, and those that sought to ruin the blessed town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; But the town of Mansoul did not pursue this
+warrant, but neglected to look after, to apprehend, to secure,
+and to destroy these Diabolonians.&nbsp; Wherefore what do these
+villains but by degrees take courage to put forth their heads,
+and to show themselves to the inhabitants of the town.&nbsp; Yea,
+and as I was told, some of the men of Mansoul grew too familiar
+with some of them, to the sorrow of the corporation, as you yet
+will hear more of in time and place.</p>
+<p>Well, when the Diabolonian lords that were left perceived that
+Mansoul had, through sinning, offended Emmanuel their Prince, and
+that he had withdrawn himself and was gone, what do they but plot
+the ruin of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; So upon a time they met
+together at the hold of one Mr. Mischief, who was also a
+Diabolonian, and there consulted how they might deliver up
+Mansoul into the hands of Diabolus again.&nbsp; Now some advised
+one way, and some another, every man according to his own
+liking.&nbsp; At last my Lord Lasciviousness propounded, whether
+it might not be best, in the first place, for some of those that
+were Diabolonians in Mansoul, to adventure to offer themselves
+for servants to some of the natives of the town;
+&lsquo;for,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;if they so do, and Mansoul
+shall accept of them, they may for us, and for Diabolus our Lord,
+make the taking of the town of Mansoul more easy than otherwise
+it will be.&rsquo;&nbsp; But then stood up the Lord Murder, and
+said, &lsquo;This may not be done at this time; for Mansoul is
+now in a kind of a rage, because by our friend, Mr.
+Carnal-Security, she hath been once ensnared already, and made to
+offend against her Prince; and how shall she reconcile herself
+unto her lord again, but by the heads of these men?&nbsp;
+Besides, we know that they have in commission to take and slay us
+wherever they shall find us; let us, therefore, be wise as foxes:
+when we are dead, we can do them no hurt; but while we live, we
+may.&rsquo;&nbsp; Thus, when they had tossed the matter to and
+fro, they jointly agreed that a letter should forthwith be sent
+away to Diabolus in their name, by which the state of the town of
+Mansoul should be showed him, and how much it is under the frowns
+of their Prince.&nbsp; &lsquo;We may also,&rsquo; said some,
+&lsquo;let him know our intentions, and ask of him his advice in
+the case.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>So a letter was presently framed, the contents of which were
+these:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;To our great lord, the Prince Diabolus, dwelling below
+in the infernal cave:</p>
+<p>&lsquo;O great father, and mighty Prince Diabolus, we, the
+true Diabolonians yet remaining in the rebellious town of
+Mansoul, having received our beings from thee, and our
+nourishment at thy hands, cannot with content and quiet endure to
+behold, as we do this day, how thou art dispraised, disgraced,
+and reproached among the inhabitants of this town; nor is thy
+long absence at all delightful to us, because greatly to our
+detriment.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;The reason of this our writing unto our lord, is for
+that we are not altogether without hope that this town may become
+thy habitation again; for it is greatly declined from its Prince
+Emmanuel; and he is uprisen, and is departed from them: yea, and
+though they send, and send, and send, and send after him to
+return to them, yet can they not prevail, nor get good words from
+him.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;There has been also of late, and is yet remaining, a
+very great sickness and fainting among them; and that not only
+upon the poorer sort of the town, but upon the lords, captains,
+and chief gentry of the place, (we only who are of the
+Diabolonians by nature remain well, lively, and strong,) so that
+through their great transgression on the one hand, and their
+dangerous sickness on the other, we judge they lie open to thy
+hand and power.&nbsp; If, therefore, it shall stand with thy
+horrible cunning, and with the cunning of the rest of the princes
+with thee, to come and make an attempt to take Mansoul again,
+send us word, and we shall to our utmost power be ready to
+deliver it into thy hand.&nbsp; Or if what we have said shall not
+by thy fatherhood be thought best and most meet to be done, send
+us thy mind in a few words, and we are all ready to follow thy
+counsel to the hazarding of our lives, and what else we have.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Given under our hands the day and date above-written,
+after a close consultation at the house of Mr. Mischief, who yet
+is alive and hath his place in our desirable town of
+Mansoul.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>When Mr. Profane (for he was the carrier) was come with his
+letter to Hell-Gate Hill, he knocked at the brazen gates for
+entrance.&nbsp; Then did Cerberus, the porter, for he is the
+keeper of that gate, open to Mr. Profane, to whom he delivered
+his letter, which he had brought from the Diabolonians in
+Mansoul.&nbsp; So he carried it in, and presented it to Diabolus
+his lord, and said, &lsquo;Tidings, my lord, from Mansoul, from
+our trusty friends in Mansoul.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then came together from all places of the den Beelzebub,
+Lucifer, Apollyon, with the rest of the rabblement there, to hear
+what news from Mansoul.&nbsp; So the letter was broken up and
+read, and Cerberus he stood by.&nbsp; When the letter was openly
+read, and the contents thereof spread into all the corners of the
+den, command was given that, without let or stop,
+dead-man&rsquo;s bell should be rung for joy.&nbsp; So the bell
+was rung, and the princes rejoiced that Mansoul was likely to
+come to ruin.&nbsp; Now, the clapper of the bell went, &lsquo;The
+town of Mansoul is coming to dwell with us: make room for the
+town of Mansoul.&rsquo;&nbsp; This bell therefore they did ring,
+because they did hope that they should have Mansoul again.</p>
+<p>Now, when they had performed this their horrible ceremony,
+they got together again to consult what answer to send to their
+friends in Mansoul; and some advised one thing, and some another:
+but at length, because the business required haste, they left the
+whole business to the prince Diabolus, judging him the most
+proper lord of the place.&nbsp; So he drew up a letter as he
+thought fit, in answer to what Mr. Profane had brought, and sent
+it to the Diabolonians that did dwell in Mansoul, by the same
+hand that had brought theirs to him; and these were the contents
+thereof:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;To our offspring, the high and mighty Diabolonians that
+yet dwell in the town of Mansoul, Diabolus, the great prince of
+Mansoul, wisheth a prosperous issue and conclusion of those many
+brave enterprises, conspiracies, and designs, that you, of your
+love and respect to our honour, have in your hearts to attempt to
+do against Mansoul.&nbsp; Beloved children and disciples, my Lord
+Fornication, Adultery, and the rest, we have here, in our
+desolate den, received, to our highest joy and content, your
+welcome letter, by the hand of our trusty Mr. Profane; and to
+show how acceptable your tidings were, we rang out our bell for
+gladness; for we rejoiced as much as we could, when we perceived
+that yet we had friends in Mansoul, and such as sought our honour
+and revenge in the ruin of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; We also
+rejoiced to hear that they are in a degenerated condition, and
+that they have offended their Prince, and that he is gone.&nbsp;
+Their sickness also pleaseth us, as does also your health, might,
+and strength.&nbsp; Glad also would we be, right horribly
+beloved, could we get this town into our clutches again.&nbsp;
+Nor will we be sparing of spending our wit, our cunning, our
+craft, and hellish inventions to bring to a wished conclusion
+this your brave beginning in order thereto.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;And take this for your comfort, (our birth, and our
+offspring,) that shall we again surprise it and take it, we will
+attempt to put all your foes to the sword, and will make you the
+great lords and captains of the place.&nbsp; Nor need you fear,
+if ever we get it again, that we after that shall be cast out any
+more; for we will come with more strength, and so lay far more
+fast hold than at the first we did.&nbsp; Besides, it is the law
+of that Prince that now they own, that if we get them a second
+time, they shall be ours for ever.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Do you, therefore, our trusty Diabolonians, yet more
+pry into, and endeavour to spy out the weakness of the town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; We also would that you yourselves do attempt to
+weaken them more and more.&nbsp; Send us word also by what means
+you think we had best to attempt the regaining thereof: namely,
+whether by persuasion to a vain and loose life; or, whether by
+tempting them to doubt and despair; or, whether by blowing up of
+the town by the gunpowder of pride, and self-conceit.&nbsp; Do
+you also, O ye brave Diabolonians, and true sons of the pit, be
+always in a readiness to make a most hideous assault within, when
+we shall be ready to storm it without.&nbsp; Now speed you in
+your project, and we in our desires, to the utmost power of our
+gates, which is the wish of your great Diabolus, Mansoul&rsquo;s
+enemy, and him that trembles when he thinks of judgment to
+come.&nbsp; All the blessings of the pit be upon you, and so we
+close up our letter.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Given at the pit&rsquo;s mouth, by the joint consent of
+all the princes of darkness, to be sent, to the force and power
+that we have yet remaining in Mansoul, by the hand of Mr.
+Profane, by me, Diabolus.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>This letter, as was said, was sent to Mansoul, to the
+Diabolonians that yet remained there, and that yet inhabited the
+wall, from the dark dungeon of Diabolus, by the hand of Mr.
+Profane, by whom they also in Mansoul sent theirs to the
+pit.&nbsp; Now, when this Mr. Profane had made his return, and
+was come to Mansoul again, he went and came as he was wont to the
+house of Mr. Mischief, for there was the conclave, and the place
+where the contrivers were met.&nbsp; Now, when they saw that
+their messenger was returned safe and sound, they were greatly
+gladded thereat.&nbsp; Then he presented them with his letter
+which he had brought from Diabolus for them; the which, when they
+had read and considered, did much augment their gladness.&nbsp;
+They asked him after the welfare of their friends, as how their
+Lord Diabolus, Lucifer, and Beelzebub did, with the rest of those
+of the den.&nbsp; To which this Profane made answer, &lsquo;Well,
+well, my lords; they are well, even as well as can be in their
+place.&nbsp; They also,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;did ring for joy
+at the reading of your letter, as you well perceived by this when
+you read it.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Now, as was said, when they had read their letter, and
+perceived that it encouraged them in their work, they fell to
+their way of contriving again, namely, how they might complete
+their Diabolonian design upon Mansoul.&nbsp; And the first thing
+that they agreed upon was to keep all things from Mansoul as
+close as they could.&nbsp; &lsquo;Let it not be known, let not
+Mansoul be acquainted with what we design against
+it.&rsquo;&nbsp; The next thing was, how, or by what means, they
+should try to bring to pass the ruin and overthrow of Mansoul;
+and one said after this manner, and another said after
+that.&nbsp; Then stood up Mr. Deceit, and said, &lsquo;My right
+Diabolonian friends, our lords, and the high ones of the deep
+dungeon, do propound unto us these three ways.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;1. Whether we had best to seek its ruin by making
+Mansoul loose and vain.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;2. Or whether by driving them to doubt and despair.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;3. Or whether by endeavouring to blow them up by the
+gunpowder of pride and self-conceit.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Now, I think, if we shall tempt them to pride, that may
+do something; and if we tempt them to wantonness, that may
+help.&nbsp; But, in my mind, if we could drive them into
+desperation, that would knock the nail on the head; for then we
+should have them, in the first place, question the truth of the
+love of the heart of their Prince towards them, and that will
+disgust him much.&nbsp; This, if it works well, will make them
+leave off quickly their way of sending petitions to him; then
+farewell earnest solicitations for help and supply; for then this
+conclusion lies naturally before them, &ldquo;As good do nothing,
+as do to no purpose.&rdquo;&rsquo;&nbsp; So to Mr. Deceit they
+unanimously did consent.</p>
+<p>Then the next question was, But how shall we do to bring this
+our project to pass? and it was answered by the same
+gentleman&mdash;that this might be the best way to do it:
+&lsquo;Even let,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;so many of our friends
+as are willing to venture themselves for the promoting of their
+prince&rsquo;s cause, disguise themselves with apparel, change
+their names, and go into the market like far country-men, and
+proffer to let themselves for servants to the famous town of
+Mansoul, and let them pretend to do for their masters as
+beneficially as may be; for by so doing they may, if Mansoul
+shall hire them, in little time so corrupt and defile the
+corporation, that her now Prince shall be not only further
+offended with them, but in conclusion shall spue them out of his
+mouth.&nbsp; And when this is done, our prince Diabolus shall
+prey upon them with ease: yea, of themselves they shall fall into
+the mouth of the eater.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>This project was no sooner propounded, but was as highly
+accepted, and forward were all Diabolonians now to engage in so
+delicate an enterprise: but it was not thought fit that all
+should do thus; wherefore they pitched upon two or three, namely,
+the Lord Covetousness, the Lord Lasciviousness, and the Lord
+Anger.&nbsp; The Lord Covetousness called himself by the name of
+Prudent-Thrifty; the Lord Lasciviousness called himself by the
+name of Harmless-Mirth; and the Lord Anger called himself by the
+name of Good-Zeal.</p>
+<p>So upon a market-day they came into the market-place, three
+lusty fellows they were to look on, and they were clothed in
+sheep&rsquo;s russet, which was also now in a manner as white as
+were the white robes of the men of Mansoul.&nbsp; Now the men
+could speak the language of Mansoul well.&nbsp; So when they were
+come into the market-place, and had offered to let themselves to
+the townsmen, they were presently taken up; for they asked but
+little wages, and promised to do their masters great service.</p>
+<p>Mr. Mind hired Prudent-Thrifty, and Mr. Godly-Fear hired
+Good-Zeal.&nbsp; True, this fellow Harmless-Mirth did hang a
+little in hand, and could not so soon get him a master as the
+others did, because the town of Mansoul was now in Lent, but
+after a while, because Lent was almost out, the Lord Willbewill
+hired Harmless-Mirth to be both his waiting man and his lackey:
+and thus they got them masters.</p>
+<p>These villains now being got thus far into the houses of the
+men of Mansoul, quickly began to do great mischief therein; for,
+being filthy, arch, and sly, they quickly corrupted the families
+where they were; yea, they tainted their masters much, especially
+this Prudent-Thrifty, and him they call Harmless-Mirth.&nbsp;
+True, he that went under the visor of Good-Zeal, was not so well
+liked of his master; for he quickly found that he was but a
+counterfeit rascal; the which when the fellow perceived, with
+speed he made his escape from the house, or I doubt not but his
+master had hanged him.</p>
+<p>Well, when these vagabonds had thus far carried on their
+design, and had corrupted the town as much as they could, in the
+next place they considered with themselves at what time their
+prince Diabolus without, and themselves within the town, should
+make an attempt to seize upon Mansoul; and they all agreed upon
+this, that a market-day would be best for that work; for
+why?&nbsp; Then will the townsfolk be busy in their ways: and
+always take this for a rule, when people are most busy in the
+world, they least fear a surprise.&nbsp; &lsquo;We also
+then,&rsquo; said they, &lsquo;shall be able with less suspicion
+to gather ourselves together for the work of our friends and
+lords; yea, and in such a day, if we shall attempt our work, and
+miss it, we may, when they shall give us the rout, the better
+hide ourselves in the crowd, and escape.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>These things being thus far agreed upon by them, they wrote
+another letter to Diabolus, and sent it by the hand to Mr.
+Profane, the contents of which were these:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;The lords of Looseness send to the great and high
+Diabolus from our dens, caves, holes, and strongholds, in and
+about the wall of the town of Mansoul, greeting:</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Our great lord, and the nourisher of our lives,
+Diabolus&mdash;how glad we were when we heard of your
+fatherhood&rsquo;s readiness to comply with us, and help forward
+our design in our attempts to ruin Mansoul, none can tell but
+those who, as we do, set themselves against all appearance of
+good, when and wheresoever we find it.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Touching the encouragement that your greatness is
+pleased to give us to continue to devise, contrive, and study the
+utter desolation of Mansoul, that we are not solicitous about:
+for we know right well that it cannot but be pleasing and
+profitable to us to see our enemies, and them that seek our
+lives, die at our feet, or fly before us.&nbsp; We therefore are
+still contriving, and that to the best of our cunning, to make
+this work most facile and easy to your lordships, and to us.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;First, we considered of that most hellishly cunning,
+compacted, threefold project, that by you was propounded to us in
+your last; and have concluded, that though to blow them up with
+the gunpowder of pride would do well, and to do it by tempting
+them to be loose and vain will help on, yet to contrive to bring
+them into the gulf of desperation, we think will do best of
+all.&nbsp; Now we, who are at your beck, have thought or two ways
+to do this: first we, for our parts, will make them as vile as we
+can, and then you with us, at a time appointed, shall be ready to
+fall upon them with the utmost force.&nbsp; And of all the
+nations that are at your whistle, we think that an army of
+doubters may be the most likely to attack and overcome the town
+of Mansoul.&nbsp; Thus shall we overcome these enemies, else the
+pit shall open her mouth upon them, and desperation shall thrust
+them down into it.&nbsp; We have also, to effect this so much by
+us desired design, sent already three of our trusty Diabolonians
+among them; they are disguised in garb, they have changed their
+names, and are now accepted of them; namely, Covetousness,
+Lasciviousness, and Anger.&nbsp; The name of Covetousness is
+changed to Prudent-Thrifty, and him Mr. Mind has hired, and is
+almost become as bad as our friend.&nbsp; Lasciviousness has
+changed his name to Harmless-Mirth, and he is got to be the Lord
+Willbewill&rsquo;s lackey; but he has made his master very
+wanton.&nbsp; Anger changed his name into Good-Zeal, and was
+entertained by Mr. Godly-Fear; but the peevish old gentleman took
+pepper in the nose, and turned our companion out of his
+house.&nbsp; Nay, he has informed us since that he ran away from
+him, or else his old master had hanged him up for his labour.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Now these have much helped forward our work and design
+upon Mansoul; for notwithstanding the spite and quarrelsome
+temper of the old gentleman last mentioned, the other two ply
+their business well, and are likely to ripen the work apace.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Our next project is, that it be concluded that you come
+upon the town upon a market-day, and that when they are upon the
+heat of their business; for then, to be sure, they will be most
+secure, and least think that an assault will be made upon
+them.&nbsp; They will also at such a time be less able to defend
+themselves, and to offend you in the prosecution of our
+design.&nbsp; And we your trusty (and we are sure your beloved)
+ones shall, when you shall make your furious assault without, be
+ready to second the business within.&nbsp; So shall we, in all
+likelihood, be able to put Mansoul to utter confusion, and to
+swallow them up before they can come to themselves.&nbsp; If your
+serpentine heads, most subtile dragons, and our highly esteemed
+lords can find out a better way than this, let us quickly know
+your minds.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;To the monsters of the infernal cave, from the house of
+Mr. Mischief in Mansoul, by the hand of Mr. Profane.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Now all the while that the raging runagates and hellish
+Diabolonians were thus contriving the ruin of the town of
+Mansoul, they (namely, the poor town itself) was in a sad and
+woeful case; partly because they had so grievously offended
+Shaddai and his Son, and partly because that the enemies thereby
+got strength within them afresh; and also because, though they
+had by many petitions made suit to the Prince Emmanuel, and to
+his Father Shaddai by him, for their pardon and favour, yet
+hitherto obtained they not one smile; but contrariwise, through
+the craft and subtilty of the domestic Diabolonians, their cloud
+was made to grow blacker and blacker, and their Emmanuel to stand
+at further distance.</p>
+<p>The sickness also did still greatly rage in Mansoul, both
+among the captains and the inhabitants of the town; and their
+enemies only were now lively and strong, and likely to become the
+head, whilst Mansoul was made the tail.</p>
+<p>By this time the letter last mentioned, that was written by
+the Diabolonians that yet lurked in the town of Mansoul, was
+conveyed to Diabolus in the black den, by the hand of Mr.
+Profane.&nbsp; He carried the letter by Hell-Gate Hill as afore,
+and conveyed it by Cerberus to his lord.</p>
+<p>But when Cerberus and Mr. Profane did meet, they were
+presently as great as beggars, and thus they fell into discourse
+about Mansoul, and about the project against her.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Ah! old friend,&rsquo; quoth Cerberus, &lsquo;art thou
+come to Hell-Gate Hill again?&nbsp; By St. Mary, I am glad to see
+thee!&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>Prof.</i>&nbsp; Yes, my lord, I am come again about the
+concerns of the town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p><i>Cerb.</i>&nbsp; Prithee, tell me what condition is that
+town of Mansoul in at present?</p>
+<p><i>Prof.</i>&nbsp; In a brave condition, my lord, for us, and
+for my lords, the lords of this place, I trow for they are
+greatly decayed as to godliness, and that is as well as our heart
+can wish; their Lord is greatly out with them, and that doth also
+please us well.&nbsp; We have already also a foot in their dish,
+for our Diabolonian friends are laid in their bosoms, and what do
+we lack but to be masters of the place!&nbsp; Besides, our trusty
+friends in Mansoul are daily plotting to betray it to the lords
+of this town; also the sickness rages bitterly among them; and
+that which makes up all, we hope at last to prevail.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said the dog of Hell-Gate, &lsquo;No time like this to
+assault them.&nbsp; I wish that the enterprise be followed close,
+and that the success desired may be soon effected: yea, I wish it
+for the poor Diabolonians&rsquo; sakes, that live in the
+continual fear of their lives in that traitorous town of
+Mansoul.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>Prof.</i>&nbsp; The contrivance is almost finished, the
+lords in Mansoul that are Diabolonians are at it day and night,
+and the other are like silly doves; they want heart to be
+concerned with their state and to consider that ruin is at
+hand.&nbsp; Besides you may, yea, must think, when you put all
+things together, that there are many reasons that prevail with
+Diabolus to make what haste he can.</p>
+<p><i>Cerb.</i>&nbsp; Thou hast said as it is; I am glad things
+are at this pass.&nbsp; Go in, my brave Profane, to my lords,
+they will give thee for thy welcome as good a <i>coranto</i> as
+the whole of this kingdom will afford.&nbsp; I have sent thy
+letter in already.</p>
+<p>Then Mr. Profane went into the den, and his lord Diabolus met
+him, and saluted him with, &lsquo;Welcome, my trusty servant: I
+have been made glad with thy letter.&rsquo;&nbsp; The rest of the
+lords of the pit gave him also their salutations.&nbsp; Then
+Profane, after obeisance made to them all, said, &lsquo;Let
+Mansoul be given to my lord Diabolus, and let him be her king for
+ever.&rsquo;&nbsp; And with that, the hollow belly and yawning
+gorge of hell gave so loud and hideous a groan, (for that is the
+music of that place,) that it made the mountains about it totter,
+as if they would fall in pieces.</p>
+<p>Now, after they had read and considered the letter, they
+consulted what answer to return; and the first that did speak to
+it was Lucifer.</p>
+<p>Then said he, &lsquo;The first project of the Diabolonians in
+Mansoul is likely to be lucky, and to take; namely, that they
+will, by all the ways and means they can, make Mansoul yet more
+vile and filthy: no way to destroy a soul like this.&nbsp; Our
+old friend Balaam went this way and prospered many years ago; let
+this therefore stand with us for a maxim, and be to Diabolonians
+for a general rule in all ages; for nothing can make this to fail
+but grace, in which I would hope that this town has no
+share.&nbsp; But whether to fall upon them on a market-day,
+because of their cumber in business, that I would should be under
+debate.&nbsp; And there is more reason why this head should be
+debated, than why some other should; because upon this will turn
+the whole of what we shall attempt.&nbsp; If we time not our
+business well, our whole project may fail.&nbsp; Our friends, the
+Diabolonians, say that a market-day is best; for then will
+Mansoul be most busy, and have fewest thoughts of a
+surprise.&nbsp; But what if also they should double their guards
+on those days? (and methinks nature and reason should teach them
+to do it;) and what if they should keep such a watch on those
+days as the necessity of their present case doth require? yea,
+what if their men should be always in arms on those days? then
+you may, my lords, be disappointed in your attempts, and may
+bring our friends in the town to utter danger of unavoidable
+ruin.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said the great Beelzebub, &lsquo;There is something in
+what my lord hath said; but his conjecture may, or may not fall
+out.&nbsp; Nor hath my lord laid it down as that which must not
+be receded from; for I know that he said it only to provoke to a
+warm debate thereabout.&nbsp; Therefore we must understand, if we
+can, whether the town of Mansoul has such sense and knowledge of
+her decayed state, and of the design that we have on foot against
+her, as doth provoke her to set watch and ward at her gates, and
+to double them on market-days.&nbsp; But if, after inquiry made,
+it shall be found that they are asleep, then any day will do, but
+a market-day is best; and this is my judgment in this
+case.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then quoth Diabolus, &lsquo;How should we know this?&rsquo;
+and it was answered, &lsquo;Inquire about it at the mouth of Mr.
+Profane.&rsquo;&nbsp; So Profane was called in, and asked the
+question, and he made his answer as follows:&mdash;</p>
+<p><i>Prof.</i>&nbsp; My lords, so far as I can gather, this is
+at present the condition of the town of Mansoul: they are decayed
+in their faith and love; Emmanuel, their Prince, has given them
+the back; they send often by petition to fetch him again, but he
+maketh not haste to answer their request, nor is there much
+reformation among them.</p>
+<p><i>Diab.</i>&nbsp; I am glad that they are backward in a
+reformation, but yet I am afraid of their petitioning.&nbsp;
+However, their looseness of life is a sign that there is not much
+heart in what they do, and without the heart things are little
+worth.&nbsp; But go on, my masters; I will divert you, my lords,
+no longer.</p>
+<p><i>Beel.</i>&nbsp; If the case be so with Mansoul, as Mr.
+Profane has described it to be, it will be no great matter what
+day we assault it; not their prayers, nor their power will do
+them much service.</p>
+<p>When Beelzebub had ended his oration, then Apollyon did
+begin.&nbsp; &lsquo;My opinion,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;concerning
+this matter, is, that we go on fair and softly, not doing things
+in a hurry.&nbsp; Let our friends in Mansoul go on still to
+pollute and defile it, by seeking to draw it yet more into sin
+(for there is nothing like sin to devour Mansoul).&nbsp; If this
+be done, and it takes effect, Mansoul, of itself, will leave off
+to watch, to petition, or anything else that should tend to her
+security and safety; for she will forget her Emmanuel, she will
+not desire his company, and can she be gotten thus to live, her
+Prince will not come to her in haste.&nbsp; Our trusty friend,
+Mr. Carnal-Security, with one of his tricks did drive him out of
+the town; and why may not my Lord Covetousness, and my Lord
+Lasciviousness, by what they may do, keep him out of the
+town?&nbsp; And this I will tell you, (not because you know it
+not,) that two or three Diabolonians, if entertained and
+countenanced by the town of Mansoul, will do more to the keeping
+of Emmanuel from them, and towards making the town of Mansoul
+your own, than can an army of a legion that should be sent out
+from us to withstand him.&nbsp; Let, therefore, this first
+project that our friends in Mansoul have set on foot, be strongly
+and diligently carried on, with all cunning and craft imaginable;
+and let them send continually, under one guise or another, more
+and other of their men to play with the people of Mansoul; and
+then, perhaps, we shall not need to be at the charge of making a
+war upon them; or if that must of necessity be done, yet the more
+sinful they are, the more unable, to be sure, they will be to
+resist us, and then the more easily we shall overcome them.&nbsp;
+And besides, suppose (and that is the worst that can be supposed)
+that Emmanuel should come to them again, why may not the same
+means, or the like, drive him from them once more?&nbsp; Yea, why
+may he not, by their lapse into that sin again, be driven from
+them for ever, for the sake of which he was at the first driven
+from them for a season?&nbsp; And if this should happen, then
+away go with him his rams, his slings, his captains, his
+soldiers, and he leaveth Mansoul naked and bare.&nbsp; Yea, will
+not this town, when she sees herself utterly forsaken of her
+Prince, of her own accord open her gates again unto you, and make
+of you as in the days of old?&nbsp; But this must be done by
+time, a few days will not effect so great a work as
+this.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>So soon as Apollyon had made an end of speaking, Diabolus
+began to blow out his own malice, and to plead his own cause; and
+he said, &lsquo;My lords, and powers of the cave, my true and
+trusty friends, I have with much impatience, as becomes me, given
+ear to your long and tedious orations.&nbsp; But my furious
+gorge, and empty paunch, so lusteth after a repossession of my
+famous town of Mansoul, that whatever comes out, I can wait no
+longer to see the events of lingering projects.&nbsp; I must, and
+that without further delay, seek, by all means I can, to fill my
+insatiable gulf with the soul and body of the town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; Therefore lend me your heads, your hearts, and
+your help, now I am going to recover my town of
+Mansoul.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>When the lords and princes of the pit saw the flaming desire
+that was in Diabolus to devour the miserable town of Mansoul,
+they left off to raise any more objections, but consented to lend
+him what strength they could, though had Apollyon&rsquo;s advice
+been taken, they had far more fearfully distressed the town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; But, I say, they were willing to lend him what
+strength they could, not knowing what need they might have of
+him, when they should engage for themselves, as he.&nbsp;
+Wherefore they fell to advising about the next thing propounded,
+namely, what soldiers they were, and also how many, with whom
+Diabolus should go against the town of Mansoul to take it; and
+after some debate, it was concluded, according as in the letter
+the Diabolonians had suggested, that none were more fit for that
+expedition than an army of terrible doubters.&nbsp; They
+therefore concluded to send against Mansoul an army of sturdy
+doubters.&nbsp; The number thought fit to be employed in that
+service was between twenty and thirty thousand.&nbsp; So then the
+result of that great council of those high and mighty lords
+was&mdash;That Diabolus should even now, out of hand, beat up his
+drum for men in the land of Doubting, which land lieth upon the
+confines of the place called Hell-Gate Hill, for men that might
+be employed by him against the miserable town of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+It was also concluded, that these lords themselves should help
+him in the war, and that they would to that end head and manage
+his men.&nbsp; So they drew up a letter, and sent back to the
+Diabolonians that lurked in Mansoul, and that waited for the
+back-coming of Mr. Profane, to signify to them into what method
+and forwardness they at present had put their design.&nbsp; The
+contents whereof now follow:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;From the dark and horrible dungeon of hell, Diabolus
+with all the society of the princes of darkness, sends to our
+trusty ones, in and about the walls of the town of Mansoul, now
+impatiently waiting for our most devilish answer to their
+venomous and most poisonous design against the town of
+Mansoul.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Our native ones, in whom from day to day we boast, and
+in whose actions all the year long we do greatly delight
+ourselves, we received your welcome, because highly esteemed
+letter, at the hand of our trusty and greatly beloved, the old
+gentleman, Mr. Profane.&nbsp; And do give you to understand, that
+when we had broken it up, and had read the contents thereof, to
+your amazing memory be it spoken, our yawning hollow-bellied
+place, where we are, made so hideous and yelling a noise for joy,
+that the mountains that stand round about Hell-Gate Hill, had
+like to have been shaken to pieces at the sound thereof.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;We could also do no less than admire your faithfulness
+to us, with the greatness of that subtilty that now hath showed
+itself to be in your heads to serve us against the town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; For you have invented for us so excellent a method
+for our proceeding against that rebellious people, a more
+effectual cannot be thought of by all the wits of hell.&nbsp; The
+proposals, therefore, which now, at last, you have sent us, since
+we saw them, we have done little else but highly approved and
+admired them.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Nay, we shall, to encourage you in the profundity of
+your craft, let you know, that, at a full assembly and conclave
+of our princes and principalities of this place, your project was
+discoursed and tossed from one side of our cave to the other by
+their mightinesses; but a better, and as was by themselves
+judged, a more fit and proper way by all their wits, could not be
+invented, to surprise, take, and make our own, the rebellious
+town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Wherefore, in fine, all that was said that varied from
+what you had in your letter propounded, fell of itself to the
+ground, and yours only was stuck to by Diabolus, the prince; yea,
+his gaping gorge and yawning paunch was on fire to put your
+invention into execution.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;We therefore give you to understand that our stout,
+furious, and unmerciful Diabolus is raising, for your relief, and
+the ruin of the rebellious town of Mansoul, more than twenty
+thousand doubters to come against that people.&nbsp; They are all
+stout and sturdy men, and men that of old have been accustomed to
+war, and that can therefore well endure the drum.&nbsp; I say, he
+is doing this work of his with all the possible speed he can; for
+his heart and spirit is engaged in it.&nbsp; We desire,
+therefore, that, as you have hitherto stuck to us, and given us
+both advice and encouragement thus far, you still will prosecute
+our design; nor shall you lose, but be gainers thereby; yea, we
+intend to make you the lords of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;One thing may not by any means be omitted, that is,
+those with us do desire that every one of you that are in Mansoul
+would still use all your power, cunning, and skill, with delusive
+persuasions, yet to draw the town of Mansoul into more sin and
+wickedness, even that sin may be finished and bring forth
+death.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;For thus it is concluded with us, that the more vile,
+sinful, and debauched the town of Mansoul is, more backward will
+be their Emmanuel to come to their help, either by presence or
+other relief; yea, the more sinful, the more weak, and so the
+more unable will they be to make resistance when we shall make
+our assault upon them to swallow them up.&nbsp; Yea, that may
+cause that their mighty Shaddai himself may cast them out of his
+protection; yea, and send for his captains and soldiers home,
+with his slings and rams, and leave them naked and bare; and then
+the town of Mansoul will of itself open to us, and fall as the
+fig into the mouth of the eater.&nbsp; Yea, to be sure that we
+then with a great deal of ease shall come upon her and overcome
+her.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;As to the time of our coming upon Mansoul, we, as yet,
+have not fully resolved upon that, though at present some of us
+think as you, that a market-day, or a market-day at night, will
+certainly be the best.&nbsp; However, do you be ready, and when
+you shall hear our roaring drum without, do you be as busy to
+make the most horrible confusion within.&nbsp; So shall Mansoul
+certainly be distressed before and behind, and shall not know
+which way to betake herself for help.&nbsp; My Lord Lucifer, my
+Lord Beelzebub, my Lord Apollyon, my Lord Legion, with the rest,
+salute you, as does also my Lord Diabolus; and we wish both you,
+with all that you do, or shall possess, the very self-same fruit
+and success for their doing as we ourselves at present enjoy for
+ours.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;From our dreadful confines in the most fearful pit, we
+salute you, and so do those many legions here with us, wishing
+you may be as hellishly prosperous as we desire to be
+ourselves.&nbsp; By the letter-carrier, Mr. Profane.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then Mr. Profane addressed himself for his return to Mansoul,
+with his errand from the horrible pit to the Diabolonians that
+dwelt in that town.&nbsp; So he came up the stairs from the deep
+to the mouth of the cave where Cerberus was.&nbsp; Now when
+Cerberus saw him, he asked how did matters go below, about and
+against the town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p><i>Prof.</i>&nbsp; Things go as well as we can expect.&nbsp;
+The letter that I carried thither was highly approved, and well
+liked by all my lords, and I am returning to tell our
+Diabolonians so.&nbsp; I have an answer to it here in my bosom,
+that I am sure will make our masters that sent me glad; for the
+contents thereof are to encourage them to pursue their design to
+the utmost, and to be ready also to fall on within, when they
+shall see my Lord Diabolus beleaguering the town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p><i>Cerb.</i>&nbsp; But does he intend to go against them
+himself?</p>
+<p><i>Prof.</i>&nbsp; Does he!&nbsp; Ay! and he will take along
+with him more than twenty thousand, all sturdy Doubters, and men
+of war, picked men from the land of Doubting, to serve him in the
+expedition.</p>
+<p>Then was Cerberus glad, and said, &lsquo;And is there such
+brave preparations a-making to go against the miserable town of
+Mansoul?&nbsp; And would I might be put at the head of a thousand
+of them, that I might also show my valour against the famous town
+of Mansoul.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>Prof.</i>&nbsp; Your wish may come to pass; you look like
+one that has mettle enough, and my lord will have with him those
+that are valiant and stout.&nbsp; But my business requires
+haste.</p>
+<p><i>Cerb.</i>&nbsp; Ay, so it does.&nbsp; Speed thee to the
+town of Mansoul, with all the deepest mischiefs that this place
+can afford thee.&nbsp; And when thou shalt come to the house of
+Mr. Mischief, the place where the Diabolonians meet to plot, tell
+them that Cerberus doth wish them his service, and that if he
+may, he will with the army come up against the famous town of
+Mansoul.</p>
+<p><i>Prof.</i>&nbsp; That I will.&nbsp; And I know that my lords
+that are there will be glad to hear it, and to see you also.</p>
+<p>So after a few more such kind of compliments, Mr. Profane took
+his leave of his friend Cerberus; and Cerberus again, with a
+thousand of their pit-wishes, bid him haste, with all speed, to
+his masters.&nbsp; The which when he had heard, he made
+obeisance, and began to gather up his heels to run.</p>
+<p>Thus, therefore, he returned, and went and came to Mansoul;
+and going, as afore, to the house of Mr. Mischief, there he found
+the Diabolonians assembled, and waiting for his return.&nbsp; Now
+when he was come, and had presented himself, he also delivered to
+them his letter, and adjoined this compliment to them therewith:
+&lsquo;My lords, from the confines of the pit, the high and
+mighty principalities and powers of the den salute you here, the
+true Diabolonians of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Wishing you
+always the most proper of their benedictions, for the great
+service, high attempts, and brave achievements that you have put
+yourselves upon, for the restoring to our prince Diabolus the
+famous town of Mansoul.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>This was therefore the present state of the miserable town of
+Mansoul: she had offended her Prince, and he was gone; she had
+encouraged the powers of hell, by her foolishness, to come
+against her to seek her utter destruction.</p>
+<p>True, the town of Mansoul was somewhat made sensible of her
+sin, but the Diabolonians were gotten into her bowels; she cried,
+but Emmanuel was gone, and her cries did not fetch him as yet
+again.&nbsp; Besides, she knew not now whether, ever or never, he
+would return and come to his Mansoul again; nor did they know the
+power and industry of the enemy, nor how forward they were to put
+in execution that plot of hell that they had devised against
+her.</p>
+<p>They did, indeed, still send petition after petition to the
+Prince, but he answered all with silence.&nbsp; They did neglect
+reformation, and that was as Diabolus would have it; for he knew,
+if they regarded iniquity in their heart, their King would not
+hear their prayer; they therefore did still grow weaker and
+weaker, and were as a rolling thing before the whirlwind.&nbsp;
+They cried to their King for help, and laid Diabolonians in their
+bosoms: what therefore should a King do to them?&nbsp; Yea, there
+seemed now to be a mixture in Mansoul; the Diabolonians and the
+Mansoulians would walk the streets together.&nbsp; Yea, they
+began to seek their peace; for they thought that, since the
+sickness had been so mortal in Mansoul, it was in vain to go to
+handygripes with them.&nbsp; Besides, the weakness of Mansoul was
+the strength of their enemies; and the sins of Mansoul, the
+advantage of the Diabolonians.&nbsp; The foes of Mansoul did also
+now begin to promise themselves the town for a possession: there
+was no great difference now betwixt Mansoulians and Diabolonians:
+both seemed to be masters of Mansoul.&nbsp; Yea, the Diabolonians
+increased and grew, but the town of Mansoul diminished
+greatly.&nbsp; There were more than eleven thousand men, women,
+and children that died by the sickness in Mansoul.</p>
+<p>But now, as Shaddai would have it, there was one whose name
+was Mr. Prywell, a great lover of the people of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+And he, as his manner was, did go listening up and down in
+Mansoul to see, and to hear, if at any time he might, whether
+there was any design against it or no.&nbsp; For he was always a
+jealous man, and feared some mischief sometime would befal it,
+either from the Diabolonians within, or from some power
+without.&nbsp; Now upon a time it so happened, as Mr. Prywell
+went listening here and there, that he lighted upon a place
+called Vilehill, in Mansoul, where Diabolonians used to meet; so
+hearing a muttering, (you must know that it was in the night,) he
+softly drew near to hear; nor had he stood long under the
+house-end, (for there stood a house there,) but he heard one
+confidently affirm, that it was not, or would not be long before
+Diabolus should possess himself again of Mansoul; and that then
+the Diabolonians did intend to put all Mansoulians to the sword,
+and would kill and destroy the King&rsquo;s captains, and drive
+all his soldiers out of the town.&nbsp; He said, moreover, that
+he knew there were above twenty thousand fighting men prepared by
+Diabolus for the accomplishing of this design, and that it would
+not be months before they all should see it.</p>
+<p>When Mr. Prywell had heard this story, he did quickly believe
+it was true: wherefore he went forthwith to my Lord Mayor&rsquo;s
+house, and acquainted him therewith; who, sending for the
+subordinate preacher, brake the business to him; and he as soon
+gave the alarm to the town; for he was now the chief preacher in
+Mansoul, because, as yet, my Lord Secretary was ill at
+ease.&nbsp; And this was the way that the subordinate preacher
+did take to alarm the town therewith.&nbsp; The same hour he
+caused the lecture bell to be rung; so the people came together:
+he gave them then a short exhortation to watchfulness, and made
+Mr. Prywell&rsquo;s news the argument thereof.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;For,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;an horrible plot is contrived
+against Mansoul, even to massacre us all in a day, nor is this
+story to be slighted; for Mr. Prywell is the author
+thereof.&nbsp; Mr. Prywell was always a lover of Mansoul, a sober
+and judicious man, a man that is no tattler, nor raiser of false
+reports, but one that loves to look into the very bottom of
+matters, and talks nothing of news, but by very solid
+arguments.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I will call him, and you shall hear him your own
+selves;&rsquo; so he called him, and he came and told his tale so
+punctually, and affirmed its truth with such ample grounds, that
+Mansoul fell presently under a conviction of the truth of what he
+said.&nbsp; The preacher did also back him, saying, &lsquo;Sirs,
+it is not irrational for us to believe it, for we have provoked
+Shaddai to anger, and have sinned Emmanuel out of the town; we
+have had too much correspondence with Diabolonians, and have
+forsaken our former mercies: no marvel then, if the enemy both
+within and without should design and plot our ruin; and what time
+like this to do it?&nbsp; The sickness is now in the town, and we
+have been made weak thereby.&nbsp; Many a good meaning man is
+dead, and the Diabolonians of late grow stronger and
+stronger.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Besides,&rsquo; quoth the subordinate preacher,
+&lsquo;I have received from this good truth-teller this one
+inkling further, that he understood by those that he overheard,
+that several letters have lately passed between the furies and
+the Diabolonians in order to our destruction.&rsquo;&nbsp; When
+Mansoul heard all this, and not being able to gainsay it, they
+lift up their voice and wept.&nbsp; Mr. Prywell did also, in the
+presence of the townsmen, confirm all that their subordinate
+preacher had said.&nbsp; Wherefore they now set afresh to bewail
+their folly, and to a doubling of petitions to Shaddai and his
+Son.&nbsp; They also brake the business to the captains, high
+commanders, and men of war in the town of Mansoul, entreating
+them to use the means to be strong, and to take good courage; and
+that they would look after their harness, and make themselves
+ready to give Diabolus battle by night and by day, shall he come,
+as they are informed he will, to beleaguer the town of
+Mansoul.</p>
+<p>When the captains heard this, they being always true lovers of
+the town of Mansoul, what do they but like so many Samsons they
+shake themselves, and come together to consult and contrive how
+to defeat those bold and hellish contrivances that were upon the
+wheel by the means of Diabolus and his friends against the now
+sickly, weakly, and much impoverished town of Mansoul; and they
+agreed upon these following particulars:&mdash;</p>
+<p>1. That the gates of Mansoul should be kept shut, and made
+fast with bars and locks, and that all persons that went out, or
+came in, should be very strictly examined by the captains of the
+guards, &lsquo;to the end,&rsquo; said they, &lsquo;that those
+that are managers of the plot amongst us, may, either coming or
+going, be taken; and that we may also find out who are the great
+contrivers, amongst us, of our ruin.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>2. The next thing was, that a strict search should be made for
+all kind of Diabolonians throughout the whole town of Mansoul;
+and that every man&rsquo;s house from top to bottom should be
+looked into, and that, too, house by house, that if possible a
+further discovery might be made of all such among them as had a
+hand in these designs.</p>
+<p>3. It was further concluded upon, that wheresoever or with
+whomsoever any of the Diabolonians were found, that even those of
+the town of Mansoul that had given them house and harbour, should
+to their shame, and the warning of others, take penance in the
+open place.</p>
+<p>4. It was, moreover, resolved by the famous town of Mansoul,
+that a public fast, and a day of humiliation, should be kept
+throughout the whole corporation, to the justifying of their
+Prince, the abasing of themselves before him for their
+transgressions against him, and against Shaddai, his
+Father.&nbsp; It was further resolved, that all such in Mansoul
+as did not on that day endeavour to keep that fast, and to humble
+themselves for their faults, but that should mind their worldly
+employs, or be found wandering up and down the streets, should be
+taken for Diabolonians, and should suffer as Diabolonians for
+such their wicked doings.</p>
+<p>5. It was further concluded then, that with what speed, and
+with what warmth of mind they could, they would renew their
+humiliation for sin, and their petitions to Shaddai for help;
+they also resolved, to send tidings to the court of all that Mr.
+Prywell had told them.</p>
+<p>6. It was also determined, that thanks should be given by the
+town of Mansoul to Mr. Prywell, for his diligent seeking of the
+welfare of their town: and further, that forasmuch as he was so
+naturally inclined to seek their good, and also to undermine
+their foes, they gave him a commission of scout-master-general,
+for the good of the town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>When the corporation, with their captains, had thus concluded,
+they did as they had said; they shut up their gates, they made
+for Diabolonians strict search, they made those with whom any
+were found to take penance in the open place: they kept their
+fast, and renewed their petitions to their Prince, and Mr.
+Prywell managed his charge and the trust that Mansoul had put in
+his hands, with great conscience and good fidelity; for he gave
+himself wholly up to his employ, and that not only within the
+town, but he went out to pry, to see, and to hear.</p>
+<p>And not many days after he provided for his journey, and went
+towards Hell-Gate Hill, into the country where the Doubters were,
+where he heard of all that had been talked of in Mansoul, and he
+perceived also that Diabolus was almost ready for his march,
+etc.&nbsp; So he came back with speed, and, calling the captains
+and elders of Mansoul together, he told them where he had been,
+what he had heard, and what he had seen.&nbsp; Particularly, he
+told them that Diabolus was almost ready for his march, and that
+he had made old Mr. Incredulity, that once brake prison in
+Mansoul, the general of his army; that his army consisted all of
+Doubters, and that their number was above twenty thousand.&nbsp;
+He told, moreover, that Diabolus did intend to bring with him the
+chief princes of the infernal pit, and that he would make them
+chief captains over his Doubters.&nbsp; He told them, moreover,
+that it was certainly true that several of the black den would,
+with Diabolus, ride reformades to reduce the town of Mansoul to
+the obedience of Diabolus, their prince.</p>
+<p>He said, moreover, that he understood by the Doubters, among
+whom he had been, that the reason why old Incredulity was made
+general of the whole army, was because none truer than he to the
+tyrant; and because he had an implacable spite against the
+welfare of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Besides, said he, he
+remembers the affronts that Mansoul has given him, and he is
+resolved to be revenged of them.</p>
+<p>But the black princes shall be made high commanders, only
+Incredulity shall be over them all; because, which I had almost
+forgot, he can more easily, and more dexterously, beleaguer the
+town of Mansoul, than can any of the princes besides.</p>
+<p>Now, when the captains of Mansoul, with the elders of the
+town, had heard the tidings that Mr. Prywell did bring, they
+thought it expedient, without further delay, to put into
+execution the laws that against the Diabolonians their Prince had
+made for them, and given them in commandment to manage against
+them.&nbsp; Wherefore, forthwith a diligent and impartial search
+was made in all houses in Mansoul, for all and all manner of
+Diabolonians.&nbsp; Now, in the house of Mr. Mind, and in the
+house of the great Lord Willbewill, were two Diabolonians
+found.&nbsp; In Mr. Mind&rsquo;s house was one Lord Covetousness
+found; but he had changed his name to Prudent-Thrifty.&nbsp; In
+my Lord Willbewill&rsquo;s house, one Lasciviousness was found;
+but he had changed his name to Harmless-Mirth.&nbsp; These two
+the captains and elders of the town of Mansoul took, and
+committed them to custody under the hand of Mr. Trueman, the
+gaoler; and this man handled them so severely, and loaded them so
+well with irons, that in time they both fell into a very deep
+consumption, and died in the prison-house; their masters also,
+according to the agreement of the captains and elders, were
+brought to take penance in the open place to their shame, and for
+a warning to the rest of the town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>Now, this was the manner of penance in those days: the persons
+offending being made sensible of the evil of their doings, were
+enjoined open confession of their faults, and a strict amendment
+of their lives.</p>
+<p>After this, the captains and elders of Mansoul sought yet to
+find out more Diabolonians, wherever they lurked, whether in
+dens, caves, holes, vaults, or where else they could, in or about
+the wall or town of Mansoul.&nbsp; But though they could plainly
+see their footing, and so follow them by their track and smell to
+their holds, even to the mouths of their caves and dens, yet take
+them, hold them, and do justice upon them, they could not; their
+ways were so crooked, their holds so strong, and they so quick to
+take sanctuary there.</p>
+<p>But Mansoul did now with so stiff an hand rule over the
+Diabolonians that were left, that they were glad to shrink into
+corners: time was when they durst walk openly, and in the day;
+but now they were forced to embrace privacy and the night: time
+was when a Mansoulian was their companion; but now they counted
+them deadly enemies.&nbsp; This good change did Mr.
+Prywell&rsquo;s intelligence make in the famous town of
+Mansoul.</p>
+<p>By this time, Diabolus had finished his army which he intended
+to bring with him for the ruin of Mansoul; and had set over them
+captains, and other field officers, such as liked his furious
+stomach best: himself was lord paramount, Incredulity was general
+of his army, their highest captains shall be named afterwards;
+but now for their officers, colours, and scutcheons.</p>
+<p>1. Their first captain was Captain Rage: he was captain over
+the election doubters, his were the red colours; his
+standard-bearer was Mr. Destructive, and the great red dragon he
+had for his scutcheon.</p>
+<p>2. The second captain was Captain Fury: he was captain over
+the vocation doubters; his standard-bearer was Mr. Darkness, his
+colours were those that were pale, and he had for his scutcheon
+the fiery flying serpent.</p>
+<p>3. The third captain was Captain Damnation: he was captain
+over the grace doubters; his were the red colours, Mr. No-Life
+bare them, and he had for his scutcheon the black den.</p>
+<p>4. The fourth captain was Captain Insatiable; he was captain
+over the faith doubters: his were the red colours, Mr. Devourer
+bare them, and he had for a scutcheon the yawning jaws.</p>
+<p>5. The fifth captain was Captain Brimstone: he was captain
+over the perseverance doubters; his also were the red colours,
+Mr. Burning bare them, and his scutcheon was the blue and
+stinking flame.</p>
+<p>6. The sixth captain was Captain Torment: he was captain over
+the resurrection doubters; his colours were those that were pale;
+Mr. Gnaw was his standard-bearer, and he had the black worm for
+his scutcheon.</p>
+<p>7. The seventh captain was Captain No-Ease; he was captain
+over the salvation doubters; his were the red colours, Mr.
+Restless bare them, and his scutcheon was the ghastly picture of
+death.</p>
+<p>8. The eighth captain was the Captain Sepulchre: he was
+captain over the glory doubters; his also were the pale colours,
+Mr. Corruption was his standard-bearer, and he had for his
+scutcheon a skull, and dead men&rsquo;s bones.</p>
+<p>9. The ninth captain was Captain Past-Hope; he was captain of
+those that are called the felicity doubters; his standard-bearer
+was Mr. Despair; his also were the red colours, and his scutcheon
+was a hot iron and the hard heart.</p>
+<p>These were his captains, and these were their forces, these
+were their standards, these were their colours, and these were
+their scutcheons.&nbsp; Now, over these did the great Diabolus
+make superior captains, and they were in number seven: as,
+namely, the Lord Beelzebub, the Lord Lucifer, the Lord Legion,
+the Lord Apollyon, the Lord Python, the Lord Cerberus, and the
+Lord Belial; these seven he set over the captains, and
+Incredulity was lord-general, and, Diabolus was king.&nbsp; The
+reformades also, such as were like themselves, were made some of
+them captains of hundreds, and some of them captains of
+more.&nbsp; And thus was the army of Incredulity completed.</p>
+<p>So they set out at Hell-Gate Hill, for there they had their
+rendezvous, from whence they came with a straight course upon
+their march toward the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Now, as was hinted
+before, the town had, as Shaddai would have it, received from the
+mouth of Mr. Prywell the alarm of their coming before.&nbsp;
+Wherefore they set a strong watch at the gates, and had also
+doubled their guards: they also mounted their slings in good
+places, where they might conveniently cast out their great stones
+to the annoyance of their furious enemy.</p>
+<p>Nor could those Diabolonians that were in the town do that
+hurt as was designed they should; for Mansoul was now
+awake.&nbsp; But alas! poor people, they were sorely affrighted
+at the first appearance of their foes, and at their sitting down
+before the town, especially when they heard the roaring of their
+drum.&nbsp; This, to speak truth, was amazingly hideous to hear;
+it frighted all men seven miles round, if they were but awake and
+heard it.&nbsp; The streaming of their colours was also terrible
+and dejecting to behold.</p>
+<p>When Diabolus was come up against the town, first he made his
+approach to Ear-gate, and gave it a furious assault, supposing,
+as it seems, that his friends in Mansoul had been ready to do the
+work within; but care was taken of that before, by the vigilance
+of the captains.&nbsp; Wherefore, missing of the help that he
+expected from them, and finding his army warmly attended with the
+stones that the slingers did sling, (for that I will say for the
+captains, that considering the weakness that yet was upon them by
+reason of the long sickness that had annoyed the town of Mansoul,
+they did gallantly behave themselves,) he was forced to make some
+retreat from Mansoul, and to entrench himself and his men in the
+field without the reach of the slings of the town.</p>
+<p>Now having entrenched himself, he did cast up four mounts
+against the town: the first he called Mount Diabolus, putting his
+own name thereon, the more to affright the town of Mansoul; the
+other three he called thus&mdash;Mount Alecto, Mount Megara, and
+Mount Tisiphone; for these are the names of the dreadful furies
+of hell.&nbsp; Thus he began to play his game with Mansoul, and
+to serve it as doth the lion his prey, even to make it fall
+before his terror.&nbsp; But, as I said, the captains and
+soldiers resisted so stoutly, and did do such execution with
+their stones, that they made him, though against stomach, to
+retreat, wherefore Mansoul began to take courage.</p>
+<p>Now upon Mount Diabolus, which was raised on the north side of
+the town, there did the tyrant set up his standard, and a fearful
+thing it was to behold; for he had wrought in it by devilish art,
+after the manner of a scutcheon, a flaming flame fearful to
+behold, and the picture of Mansoul burning in it.</p>
+<p>When Diabolus had thus done, he commanded that his drummer
+should every night approach the walls of the town of Mansoul, and
+so to beat a parley; the command was to do it at nights, for in
+the daytime they annoyed him with their slings; for the tyrant
+said, that he had a mind to parley with the now trembling town of
+Mansoul, and he commanded that the drums should beat every night,
+that through weariness they might at last, if possible, (at the
+first they were unwilling yet,) be forced to do it.</p>
+<p>So this drummer did as commanded: he arose, and did beat his
+drum.&nbsp; But when his drum did go, if one looked toward the
+town of Mansoul, &lsquo;Behold darkness and sorrow, and the light
+was darkened in the heaven thereof.&rsquo;&nbsp; No noise was
+ever heard upon earth more terrible, except the voice of Shaddai
+when he speaketh.&nbsp; But how did Mansoul tremble! it now
+looked for nothing but forthwith to be swallowed up.</p>
+<p>When this drummer had beaten for a parley, he made this speech
+to Mansoul: &lsquo;My master has bid me tell you, that if you
+will willingly submit, you shall have the good of the earth; but
+if you shall be stubborn, he is resolved to take you by
+force.&rsquo;&nbsp; But by that the fugitive had done beating his
+drum, the people of Mansoul had betaken themselves to the
+captains that were in the castle, so that there was none to
+regard, nor to give this drummer an answer; so he proceeded no
+further that night, but returned again to his master to the
+camp.</p>
+<p>When Diabolus saw that by drumming he could not work out
+Mansoul to his will, the next night he sendeth his drummer
+without his drum, still to let the townsmen know that he had a
+mind to parley with them.&nbsp; But when all came to all, his
+parley was turned into a summons to the town to deliver up
+themselves: but they gave him neither heed nor hearing: for they
+remembered what at first it cost them to hear him a few
+words.</p>
+<p>The next night he sends again, and then who should be his
+messenger to Mansoul but the terrible Captain Sepulchre; so
+Captain Sepulchre came up to the walls of Mansoul, and made this
+oration to the town:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;O ye inhabitants of the rebellious town of
+Mansoul!&nbsp; I summon you in the name of the Prince Diabolus,
+that, without any more ado, you set open the gates of your town,
+and admit the great lord to come in.&nbsp; But if you shall still
+rebel, when we have taken to us the town by force, we will
+swallow you up as the grave; wherefore if you will hearken to my
+summons, say so, and if not then let me know.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;The reason of this my summons,&rsquo; quoth he,
+&lsquo;is, for that my lord is your undoubted prince and lord, as
+you yourselves have formerly owned.&nbsp; Nor shall that assault
+that was given to my lord, when Emmanuel dealt so dishonourably
+by him, prevail with him to lose his right, and to forbear to
+attempt to recover his own.&nbsp; Consider, then, O Mansoul, with
+thyself, wilt thou show thyself peaceable, or no?&nbsp; If thou
+shalt quietly yield up thyself, then our old friendship shall be
+renewed; but if thou shalt yet refuse and rebel, then expect
+nothing but fire and sword.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>When the languishing town of Mansoul had heard this summoner
+and his summons, they were yet more put to their dumps, but made
+to the captain no answer at all; so away he went as he came.</p>
+<p>But, after some consultation among themselves, as also with
+some of their captains, they applied themselves afresh to the
+Lord Secretary for counsel and advice from him; for this Lord
+Secretary was their chief preacher, (as also is mentioned some
+pages before,) only now he was ill at ease; and of him they
+begged favour in these two or three things&mdash;</p>
+<p>1. That he would look comfortably upon them, and not keep
+himself so much retired from them as formerly.&nbsp; Also, that
+he would be prevailed with to give them a hearing, while they
+should make known their miserable condition to him.&nbsp; But to
+this he told them as before, that &lsquo;as yet he was but ill at
+ease, and therefore could not do as he had formerly
+done.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>2. The second thing that they desired was, that he would be
+pleased to give them his advice about their now so important
+affairs, for that Diabolus was come and set down before the town
+with no less than twenty thousand doubters.&nbsp; They said,
+moreover, that both he and his captains were cruel men, and that
+they were afraid of them.&nbsp; But to this he said, &lsquo;You
+must look to the law of the Prince, and there see what is laid
+upon you to do.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>3. Then they desired that his highness would help them to
+frame a petition to Shaddai, and unto Emmanuel his Son, and that
+he would set his own hand thereto as a token that he was one with
+them in it: &lsquo;For,&rsquo; said they, &lsquo;my Lord, many a
+one have we sent, but can get no answer of peace; but now,
+surely, one with thy hand unto it may obtain good for
+Mansoul.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>But all the answer that he gave to this was, &lsquo;that they
+had offended their Emmanuel, and had also grieved himself, and
+that therefore they must as yet partake of their own
+devices.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>This answer of the Lord Secretary fell like a millstone upon
+them; yea, it crushed them so that they could not tell what to
+do; yet they durst not comply with the demands of Diabolus, nor
+with the demands of his captain.&nbsp; So then here were the
+straits that the town of Mansoul was betwixt, when the enemy came
+upon her: her foes were ready to swallow her up, and her friends
+did forbear to help her.</p>
+<p>Then stood up my Lord Mayor, whose name was my Lord
+Understanding, and he began to pick and pick, until he had picked
+comfort out of that seemingly bitter saying of the Lord
+Secretary; for thus he descanted upon it: &lsquo;First,&rsquo;
+said he, &lsquo;this unavoidably follows upon the saying of my
+Lord, &ldquo;that we must yet suffer for our sins.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Secondly, But,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;the words yet sound as if
+at last we should be saved from our enemies, and that after a few
+more sorrows, Emmanuel will come and be our help.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Now the Lord Mayor was the more critical in his dealing with the
+Secretary&rsquo;s words, because my lord was more than a prophet,
+and because none of his words were such, but that at all times
+they were most exactly significant; and the townsmen were allowed
+to pry into them, and to expound them to their best
+advantage.</p>
+<p>So they took their leaves of my lord, and returned, and went,
+and came to the captains, to whom they did tell what my Lord High
+Secretary had said; who, when they had heard it, were all of the
+same opinion as was my Lord Mayor himself.&nbsp; The captains,
+therefore, began to take some courage unto them, and to prepare
+to make some brave attempt upon the camp of the enemy, and to
+destroy all that were Diabolonians, with the roving doubters that
+the tyrant had brought with him to destroy the poor town of
+Mansoul.</p>
+<p>So all betook themselves forthwith to their places&mdash;the
+Captains to theirs, the Lord Mayor to his, the subordinate
+preacher to his, and my Lord Willbewill to his.&nbsp; The
+captains longed to be at some work for their prince; for they
+delighted in warlike achievements.&nbsp; The next day, therefore,
+they came together and consulted; and after consultation had,
+they resolved to give an answer to the captain of Diabolus with
+slings; and so they did at the rising of the sun on the morrow;
+for Diabolus had adventured to come nearer again, but the
+sling-stones were to him and his like hornets.&nbsp; For as there
+is nothing to the town of Mansoul so terrible as the roaring of
+Diabolus&rsquo;s drum, so there is nothing to Diabolus so
+terrible as the well playing of Emmanuel&rsquo;s slings.&nbsp;
+Wherefore Diabolus was forced to make another retreat, yet
+further off from the famous town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Then did the
+Lord Mayor of Mansoul cause the bells to be rung, &lsquo;and that
+thanks should be sent to the Lord High Secretary by the mouth of
+the subordinate preacher; for that by his words the captains and
+elders of Mansoul had been strengthened against
+Diabolus.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>When Diabolus saw that his captains and soldiers, high lords
+and renowned, were frightened, and beaten down by the stones that
+came from the golden slings of the Prince of the town of Mansoul,
+he bethought himself, and said, &lsquo;I will try to catch them
+by fawning, I will try to flatter them into my net.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Wherefore, after a while, he came down again to the wall, not
+now with his drum, nor with Captain Sepulchre; but having all
+besugared his lips, he seemed to be a very sweet-mouthed,
+peaceable prince, designing nothing for humour&rsquo;s sake, nor
+to be revenged on Mansoul for injuries by them done to him; but
+the welfare, and good, and advantage of the town and people
+therein was now, as he said, his only design.&nbsp; Wherefore,
+after he had called for audience, and desired that the townsfolk
+would give it to him, he proceeded in his oration, and
+said:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Oh, the desire of my heart, the famous town of Mansoul!
+how many nights have I watched, and how many weary steps have I
+taken, if perhaps I might do thee good!&nbsp; Far be it, far be
+it from me to desire to make a war upon you; if ye will but
+willingly and quietly deliver up yourselves unto me.&nbsp; You
+know that you were mine of old.&nbsp; Remember also, that so long
+as you enjoyed me for your lord, and that I enjoyed you for my
+subjects, you wanted for nothing of all the delights of the
+earth, that I, your lord and prince, could get for you, or that I
+could invent to make you bonny and blithe withal.&nbsp; Consider,
+you never had so many hard, dark, troublesome, and
+heart-afflicting hours, while you were mine, as you have had
+since you revolted from me; nor shall you ever have peace again,
+until you and I become one as before.&nbsp; But, be but prevailed
+with to embrace me again, and I will grant, yea, enlarge your old
+charter with abundance of privileges; so that your license and
+liberty shall be to take, hold, enjoy, and make your own all that
+is pleasant from the east to the west.&nbsp; Nor shall any of
+those incivilities, wherewith you have offended me, be ever
+charged upon you by me, so long as the sun and moon endure.&nbsp;
+Nor shall any of those dear friends of mine that now, for the
+fear of you, lie lurking in dens, and holes, and caves in
+Mansoul, be hurtful to you any more; yea, they shall be your
+servants, and shall minister unto you of their substance, and of
+whatever shall come to hand.&nbsp; I need speak no more; you know
+them, and have sometime since been much delighted in their
+company.&nbsp; Why, then, should we abide at such odds?&nbsp; Let
+us renew our old acquaintance and friendship again.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Bear with your friend; I take the liberty at this time
+to speak thus freely unto you.&nbsp; The love that I have to you
+presses me to do it, as also does the zeal of my heart for my
+friends with you: put me not therefore to further trouble, nor
+yourselves to further fears and frights.&nbsp; Have you I will,
+in a way of peace or war; nor do you flatter yourselves with the
+power and force of your captains, or that your Emmanuel will
+shortly come in to your help; for such strength will do you no
+pleasure.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;I am come against you with a stout and valiant army,
+and all the chief princes of the den are even at the head of
+it.&nbsp; Besides, my captains are swifter than eagles, stronger
+than lions, and more greedy of prey than are the evening
+wolves.&nbsp; What is Og of Bashan! what is Goliath of Gath! and
+what are an hundred more of them, to one of the least of my
+captains!&nbsp; How, then, shall Mansoul think to escape my hand
+and force?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Diabolus having thus handed his flattering, fawning,
+deceitful, and lying speech to the famous town of Mansoul, the
+Lord Mayor replied to him as follows: &lsquo;O Diabolus, prince
+of darkness, and master of all deceit; thy lying flatteries we
+have had and made sufficient probation of, and have tasted too
+deeply of that destructive cup already.&nbsp; Should we therefore
+again hearken unto thee, and so break the commandments of our
+great Shaddai, to join in affinity with thee, would not our
+Prince reject us, and cast us off for ever?&nbsp; And, being cast
+off by him, can the place that he has prepared for thee be a
+place of rest for us?&nbsp; Besides, O thou that art empty and
+void of all truth, we are rather ready to die by thy hand, than
+to fall in with thy flattering and lying deceits.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>When the tyrant saw that there was little to be got by
+parleying with my Lord Mayor, he fell into an hellish rage, and
+resolved that again, with his army of doubters, he would another
+time assault the town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>So he called for his drummer, who beat up for his men (and
+while he did beat, Mansoul did shake) to be in a readiness to
+give battle to the corporation: then Diabolus drew near with his
+army, and thus disposed of his men.&nbsp; Captain Cruel and
+Captain Torment, these he drew up and placed against Feel-gate,
+and commanded them to sit down there for the war.&nbsp; And he
+also appointed that, if need were, Captain No-Ease should come in
+to their relief.&nbsp; At Nose-gate he placed the Captain
+Brimstone and Captain Sepulchre, and bid them look well to their
+ward, on that side of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; But at Eye-gate
+he placed that grim-faced one, the Captain Past-Hope, and there
+also now he did set up his terrible standard.</p>
+<p>Now Captain Insatiable, he was to look to the carriages of
+Diabolus, and was also appointed to take into custody that, or
+those persons and things, that should at any time as prey be
+taken from the enemy.</p>
+<p>Now Mouth-gate the inhabitants of Mansoul kept for a
+sally-port; wherefore that they kept strong; for that it was it
+by and out at which the townsfolk did send their petitions to
+Emmanuel their Prince.&nbsp; That also was the gate from the top
+of which the captains did play their slings at the enemies; for
+that gate stood somewhat ascending, so that the placing of them
+there, and the letting of them fly from that place, did much
+execution against the tyrant&rsquo;s army.&nbsp; Wherefore, for
+these causes, with others, Diabolus sought, if possible, to land
+up Mouth-gate with dirt.</p>
+<p>Now, as Diabolus was busy and industrious in preparing to make
+his assault upon the town of Mansoul, without, so the captains
+and soldiers in the corporation were as busy in preparing within;
+they mounted their slings, they set up their banners, they
+sounded their trumpets, and put themselves in such order as was
+judged most for the annoyance of the enemy, and for the advantage
+of Mansoul, and gave to their soldiers orders to be ready at the
+sound of the trumpet for war.&nbsp; The Lord Willbewill also, he
+took the charge of watching against the rebels within, and to do
+what he could to take them while without, or to stifle them
+within their caves, dens, and holes in the town-wall of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; And, to speak the truth of him, ever since he took
+penance for his fault, he has showed as much honesty and bravery
+of spirit as any he in Mansoul; for he took one Jolly, and his
+brother Griggish, the two sons of his servant Harmless-Mirth,
+(for to that day, though the father was committed to ward, the
+sons had a dwelling in the house of my lord,)&mdash;I say, he
+took them, and with his own hands put them to the cross.&nbsp;
+And this was the reason why he hanged them up: after their father
+was put into the hands of Mr. True-Man the gaoler, they, his
+sons, began to play his pranks, and to be ticking and toying with
+the daughters of their lord; nay, it was jealoused that they were
+too familiar with them, the which was brought to his
+lordship&rsquo;s ear.&nbsp; Now his lordship being unwilling
+unadvisedly to put any man to death, did not suddenly fall upon
+them, but set watch and spies to see if the thing was true; of
+the which he was soon informed, for his two servants, whose names
+were Find-Out and Tell-All, catched them together in uncivil
+manner more than once or twice, and went and told their
+lord.&nbsp; So when my Lord Willbewill had sufficient ground to
+believe the thing was true, he takes the two young Diabolonians,
+(for such they were, for their father was a Diabolonian born,)
+and has them to Eye-gate, where he raised a very high cross, just
+in the face of Diabolus, and of his army, and there he hanged the
+young villains, in defiance to Captain Past-Hope, and of the
+horrible standard of the tyrant.</p>
+<p>Now this Christian act of the brave Lord Willbewill did
+greatly abash Captain Past-Hope, discouraged the army of
+Diabolus, put fear into the Diabolonian runagates in Mansoul, and
+put strength and courage into the captains that belonged to
+Emmanuel, the Prince; for they without did gather, and that by
+this very act of my Lord, that Mansoul was resolved to fight, and
+that the Diabolonians within the town could not do such things as
+Diabolus had hopes they would.&nbsp; Nor was this the only proof
+of the brave Lord Willbewill&rsquo;s honesty to the town, nor of
+his loyalty to his Prince, as will afterwards appear.</p>
+<p>Now, when the children of Prudent-Thrifty, who dwelt with Mr.
+Mind, (for Thrift left children with Mr. Mind, when he was also
+committed to prison, and their names were Gripe and Rake-All;
+these he begat of Mr. Mind&rsquo;s bastard daughter, whose name
+was Mrs. Hold-fast-Bad;)&mdash;I say, when his children perceived
+how the Lord Willbewill had served them that dwelt with him, what
+do they but, lest they should drink of the same cup, endeavour to
+make their escape.&nbsp; But Mr. Mind, being wary of it, took
+them and put them in hold in his house till morning; (for this
+was done over night;) and remembering that by the law of Mansoul
+all Diabolonians were to die, (and to be sure they were at least
+by father&rsquo;s side such, and some say by mother&rsquo;s side
+too,) what does he but takes them and puts them in chains, and
+carries them to the selfsame place where my lord hanged his two
+before, and there he hanged them.</p>
+<p>The townsmen also took great encouragement at this act of Mr.
+Mind, and did what they could to have taken some more of these
+Diabolonian troublers of Mansoul; but at that time the rest lay
+so squat and close, that they could not be apprehended; so they
+set against them a diligent watch, and went every man to his
+place.</p>
+<p>I told you a little before, that Diabolus and his army were
+somewhat abashed and discouraged at the sight of what my Lord
+Willbewill did, when he hanged up those two young Diabolonians;
+but his discouragement quickly turned itself into furious madness
+and rage against the town of Mansoul, and fight it he
+would.&nbsp; Also the townsmen and captains within, they had
+their hopes and their expectations heightened, believing at last
+the day would be theirs; so they feared them the less.&nbsp;
+Their subordinate preacher, too, made a sermon about it; and he
+took that theme for his text, &lsquo;Gad, a troop shall overcome
+him: but he shall overcome at the last.&rsquo;&nbsp; Whence he
+showed, that though Mansoul should be sorely put to it at the
+first, yet the victory should most certainly be Mansoul&rsquo;s
+at the last.</p>
+<p>So Diabolus commanded that his drummer should beat a charge
+against the town; and the captains also that were in the town
+sounded a charge against them, but they had no drum: they were
+trumpets of silver with which they sounded against them.&nbsp;
+Then they which were of the camp of Diabolus came down to the
+town to take it, and the captains in the castle, with the
+slingers at Mouth-gate, played upon them amain.&nbsp; And now
+there was nothing heard in the camp of Diabolus but horrible rage
+and blasphemy; but in the town good words, prayer, and singing of
+psalms.&nbsp; The enemy replied with horrible objections, and the
+terribleness of their drum; but the town made answer with the
+slapping of their slings, and the melodious noise of their
+trumpets.&nbsp; And thus the fight lasted for several days
+together, only now and then they had some small intermission, in
+the which the townsmen refreshed themselves, and the captains
+made ready for another assault.</p>
+<p>The captains of Emmanuel were clad in silver armour, and the
+soldiers in that which was of proof; the soldiers of Diabolus
+were clad in iron which was made to give place to
+Emmanuel&rsquo;s engine-shot.&nbsp; In the town, some were hurt,
+and some were greatly wounded.&nbsp; Now, the worst of it was, a
+chirurgeon was scarce in Mansoul, for that Emmanuel at present
+was absent.&nbsp; Howbeit, with the leaves of a tree the wounded
+were kept from dying; yet their wounds did greatly putrefy, and
+some did grievously stink.&nbsp; Of the townsmen, these were
+wounded, namely, my Lord Reason; he was wounded in the
+head.&nbsp; Another that was wounded was the brave Lord Mayor; he
+was wounded in the eye.&nbsp; Another that was wounded was Mr.
+Mind; he received his wound about the stomach.&nbsp; The honest
+subordinate preacher also, he received a shot not far off the
+heart but none of these were mortal.</p>
+<p>Many also of the inferior sort were not only wounded but slain
+outright.</p>
+<p>Now, in the camp of Diabolus were wounded and slain a
+considerable number; for instance, Captain Rage, he was wounded,
+and so was Captain Cruel.&nbsp; Captain Damnation was made to
+retreat, and to intrench himself further off of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+The standard also of Diabolus was beaten down, and his
+standard-bearer, Captain Much-Hurt, had his brains beat out with
+a sling-stone, to the no little grief and shame of his prince
+Diabolus.</p>
+<p>Many also of the doubters were slain outright, though enough
+of them were left alive to make Mansoul shake and totter.&nbsp;
+Now the victory that day being turned to Mansoul, did put great
+valour into the townsmen and captains, and did cover
+Diabolus&rsquo;s camp with a cloud, but withal it made them far
+more furious.&nbsp; So the next day Mansoul rested, and commanded
+that the bells should be rung; the trumpets also joyfully
+sounded, and the captains shouted round the town.</p>
+<p>My Lord Willbewill also was not idle, but did notable service
+within against the domestics, or the Diabolonians that were in
+the town, not only by keeping them in awe, for he lighted on one
+at last whose name was Mr. Anything, a fellow of whom mention was
+made before; for it was he, if you remember, that brought the
+three fellows to Diabolus, whom the Diabolonians took out of
+Captain Boanerges&rsquo;s companies, and that persuaded them to
+list themselves under the tyrant, to fight against the army of
+Shaddai.&nbsp; My Lord Willbewill did also take a notable
+Diabolonian, whose name was Loose-Foot: this Loose-Foot was a
+scout to the vagabonds in Mansoul, and that did use to carry
+tidings out of Mansoul to the camp, and out of the camp to those
+of the enemies in Mansoul.&nbsp; Both these my lord sent away
+safe to Mr. True-Man, the gaoler, with a commandment to keep them
+in irons; for he intended then to have them out to be crucified,
+when it would be for the best to the corporation, and most for
+the discouragement of the camp of the enemies.</p>
+<p>My Lord Mayor also, though he could not stir about so much as
+formerly, because of the wound that he lately received, yet gave
+he out orders to all that were the natives of Mansoul, to look to
+their watch, and stand upon their guard, and, as occasion should
+offer, to prove themselves men.</p>
+<p>Mr. Conscience, the preacher, he also did his utmost to keep
+all his good documents alive upon the hearts of the people of
+Mansoul.</p>
+<p>Well, awhile after, the captains and stout ones of the town of
+Mansoul agreed and resolved upon a time to make a sally out upon
+the camp of Diabolus, and this must be done in the night; and
+there was the folly of Mansoul, (for the night is always the best
+for the enemy, but the worst for Mansoul to fight in,) but yet
+they would do it, their courage was so high; their last victory
+also still stuck in their memories.</p>
+<p>So the night appointed being come, the Prince&rsquo;s brave
+captains cast lots who should lead the van in this new and
+desperate expedition against Diabolus, and against his
+Diabolonian army; and the lot fell to Captain Credence, to
+Captain Experience, and to Captain Good-Hope, to lead the forlorn
+hope.&nbsp; (This Captain Experience the Prince created such when
+himself did reside in the town of Mansoul.)&nbsp; So, as I said,
+they made their sally out upon the army that lay in the siege
+against them; and their hap was to fall in with the main body of
+their enemies.&nbsp; Now Diabolus and his men being expertly
+accustomed to night-work, took the alarm presently, and were as
+ready to give them battle, as if they had sent them word of their
+coming.&nbsp; Wherefore to it they went amain, and blows were
+hard on every side; the hell drum also was beat most furiously,
+while the trumpets of the Prince most sweetly sounded.&nbsp; And
+thus the battle was joined; and Captain Insatiable looked to the
+enemy&rsquo;s carriages, and waited when he should receive some
+prey.</p>
+<p>The Prince&rsquo;s captains fought it stoutly, beyond what
+indeed could be expected they should; they wounded many; they
+made the whole army of Diabolus to make a retreat.&nbsp; But I
+cannot tell how, but the brave Captain Credence, Captain
+Good-Hope, and Captain Experience, as they were upon the pursuit,
+cutting down, and following hard after the enemy in the rear,
+Captain Credence stumbled and fell, by which fall he caught so
+great a hurt, that he could not rise till Captain Experience did
+help him up, at which their men were put in disorder.&nbsp; The
+captain also was so full of pain, that he could not forbear but
+aloud to cry out: at this, the other two captains fainted,
+supposing that Captain Credence had received his mortal wound;
+their men also were more disordered, and had no list to
+fight.&nbsp; Now Diabolus being very observing, though at this
+time as yet he was put to the worst, perceiving that a halt was
+made among the men that were the pursuers, what does he but,
+taking it for granted that the captains were either wounded or
+dead, he therefore makes at first a stand, then faces about, and
+so comes up upon the Prince&rsquo;s army with as much of his fury
+as hell could help him to; and his hap was to fall in just among
+the three captains, Captain Credence, Captain Good-Hope, and
+Captain Experience, and did cut, wound, and pierce them so
+dreadfully, that what through discouragement, what through
+disorder, and what through the wounds that they had received, and
+also the loss of much blood, they scarce were able, though they
+had for their power the three best hands in Mansoul, to get safe
+into the hold again.</p>
+<p>Now, when the body of the Prince&rsquo;s army saw how these
+three captains were put to the worst, they thought it their
+wisdom to make as safe and good a retreat as they could, and so
+returned by the sally-port again; and so there was an end of this
+present action.&nbsp; But Diabolus was so flushed with this
+night&rsquo;s work, that he promised himself, in few days, an
+easy and complete conquest over the town of Mansoul; wherefore,
+on the day following, he comes up to the sides thereof with great
+boldness, and demands entrance, and that forthwith they deliver
+themselves up to his government.&nbsp; The Diabolonians, too,
+that were within, they began to be somewhat brisk, as we shall
+show afterward.</p>
+<p>But the valiant Lord Mayor replied, that what he got he must
+get by force; for as long as Emmanuel, their Prince, was alive,
+(though he at present was not so with them as they wished,) they
+should never consent to yield Mansoul up to another.</p>
+<p>And with that the Lord Willbewill stood up, and said,
+&lsquo;Diabolus, thou master of the den, and enemy to all that is
+good, we poor inhabitants of the town of Mansoul are too well
+acquainted with thy rule and government, and with the end of
+those things that for certain will follow submitting to thee, to
+do it.&nbsp; Wherefore though while we were without knowledge we
+suffered thee to take us, (as the bird that saw not the snare
+fell into the hands of the fowler,) yet since we have been turned
+from darkness to light, we have also been turned from the power
+of Satan to God.&nbsp; And though through thy subtlety, and also
+the subtlety of the Diabolonians within, we have sustained much
+loss, and also plunged ourselves into much perplexity, yet give
+up ourselves, lay down our arms, and yield to so horrid a tyrant
+as thou, we shall not; die upon the place we choose rather to
+do.&nbsp; Besides, we have hopes that in time deliverance will
+come from court unto us, and therefore we yet will maintain a war
+against thee.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>This brave speech of the Lord Willbewill, with that also of
+the Lord Mayor, did somewhat abate the boldness of Diabolus,
+though it kindled the fury of his rage.&nbsp; It also succoured
+the townsmen and captains; yea, it was as a plaster to the brave
+Captain Credence&rsquo;s wound; for you must know that a brave
+speech now (when the captains of the town with their men of war
+came home routed, and when the enemy took courage and boldness at
+the success that he had obtained to draw up to the walls, and
+demand entrance, as he did) was in season, and also
+advantageous.</p>
+<p>The Lord Willbewill also did play the man within; for while
+the captains and soldiers were in the field, he was in arms in
+the town, and wherever by him there was a Diabolonian found, they
+were forced to feel the weight of his heavy hand, and also the
+edge of his penetrating sword: many therefore of the Diabolonians
+he wounded, as the Lord Cavil, the Lord Brisk, the Lord
+Pragmatic, and the Lord Murmur; several also of the meaner sort
+he did sorely maim; though there cannot at this time an account
+be given you of any that he slew outright.&nbsp; The cause, or
+rather the advantage that my Lord Willbewill had at this time to
+do thus, was for that the captains were gone out to fight the
+enemy in the field.&nbsp; &lsquo;For now,&rsquo; thought the
+Diabolonians within, &lsquo;is our time to stir and make an
+uproar in the town.&rsquo;&nbsp; What do they therefore but
+quickly get themselves into a body, and fall forthwith to
+hurricaning in Mansoul, as if now nothing but whirlwind and
+tempest should be there.&nbsp; Wherefore, as I said, he takes
+this opportunity to fall in among them with his men, cutting and
+slashing with courage that was undaunted; at which the
+Diabolonians with all haste dispersed themselves to their holds,
+and my lord to his place as before.</p>
+<p>This brave act of my lord did somewhat revenge the wrong done
+by Diabolus to the captains, and also did let them know that
+Mansoul was not to be parted with for the loss of a victory or
+two; wherefore the wing of the tyrant was clipped again, as to
+boasting,&mdash;I mean in comparison of what he would have done,
+if the Diabolonians had put the town to the same plight to which
+he had put the captains.</p>
+<p>Well, Diabolus yet resolves to have the other bout with
+Mansoul.&nbsp; &lsquo;For,&rsquo; thought he, &lsquo;since I beat
+them once, I may beat them twice.&rsquo;&nbsp; Wherefore he
+commanded his men to be ready at such an hour of the night, to
+make a fresh assault upon the town; and he gave it out in special
+that they should bend all their force against Feel-gate, and
+attempt to break into the town through that.&nbsp; The word that
+then he did give to his officers and soldiers was
+Hell-fire.&nbsp; &lsquo;And,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;if we break
+in upon them, as I wish we do, either with some, or with all our
+force, let them that break in look to it, that they forget not
+the word.&nbsp; And let nothing be heard in the town of Mansoul
+but, &ldquo;Hell-fire!&nbsp; Hell-fire!
+Hell-fire!&rdquo;&rsquo;&nbsp; The drummer was also to beat
+without ceasing, and the standard-bearers were to display their
+colours; the soldiers, too, were to put on what courage they
+could, and to see that they played manfully their parts against
+the town.</p>
+<p>So when night was come, and all things by the tyrant made
+ready for the work, he suddenly makes his assault upon Feel-gate,
+and after he had awhile struggled there, he throws the gate wide
+open: for the truth is, those gates were but weak, and so most
+easily made to yield.&nbsp; When Diabolus had thus far made his
+attempt, he placed his captains (namely, Torment and No-Ease)
+there; so he attempted to press forward, but the Prince&rsquo;s
+captains came down upon him, and made his entrance more difficult
+than he desired.&nbsp; And, to speak truth, they made what
+resistance they could; but the three of their best and most
+valiant captains being wounded, and by their wounds made much
+incapable of doing the town that service they would, (and all the
+rest having more than their hands full of the doubters, and their
+captains that did follow Diabolus,) they were overpowered with
+force, nor could they keep them out of the town.&nbsp; Wherefore
+the Prince&rsquo;s men and their captains betook themselves to
+the castle, as to the stronghold of the town: and this they did
+partly for their own security, partly for the security of the
+town, and partly, or rather chiefly, to preserve to Emmanuel the
+prerogative-royal of Mansoul; for so was the castle of
+Mansoul.</p>
+<p>The captains therefore being fled into the castle, the enemy,
+without much resistance, possess themselves of the rest of the
+town, and spreading themselves as they went into every corner,
+they cried out as they marched, according to the command of the
+tyrant, &lsquo;Hell-fire! Hell-fire! Hell-fire!&rsquo; so that
+nothing for a while throughout the town of Mansoul could be heard
+but the direful noise of &lsquo;Hell-fire!&rsquo; together with
+the roaring of Diabolus&rsquo;s drum.&nbsp; And now did the
+clouds hang black over Mansoul, nor to reason did anything but
+ruin seem to attend it.&nbsp; Diabolus also quartered his
+soldiers in the houses of the inhabitants of the town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; Yea, the subordinate preacher&rsquo;s house was as
+full of these outlandish doubters as ever it could hold, and so
+was my Lord Mayor&rsquo;s, and my Lord Willbewill&rsquo;s
+also.&nbsp; Yea, where was there a corner, a cottage, a barn, or
+a hogstye, that now was not full of these vermin?&nbsp; Yea, they
+turned the men of the town out of their houses, and would lie in
+their beds, and sit at their tables themselves.&nbsp; Ah, poor
+Mansoul! now thou feelest the fruits of sin, yea, what venom was
+in the flattering words of Mr. Carnal-Security!&nbsp; They made
+great havoc of whatever they laid their hands on; yea, they fired
+the town in several places; many young children also were by them
+dashed in pieces; and those that were yet unborn they destroyed
+in their mothers&rsquo; wombs: for you must needs think that it
+could not now be otherwise; for what conscience, what pity, what
+bowels of compassion can any expect at the hands of outlandish
+doubters?&nbsp; Many in Mansoul that were women, both young and
+old, they forced, ravished, and beastlike abused, so that they
+swooned, miscarried, and many of them died, and so lay at the top
+of every street, and in all by-places of the town.</p>
+<p>And now did Mansoul seem to be nothing but a den of dragons,
+an emblem of hell, and a place of total darkness.&nbsp; Now did
+Mansoul lie almost like the barren wilderness; nothing but
+nettles, briars, thorns, weeds, and stinking things seemed now to
+cover the face of Mansoul.&nbsp; I told you before, how that
+these Diabolonian doubters turned the men of Mansoul out of their
+beds, and now I will add, they wounded them, they mauled them,
+yea, and almost brained many of them.&nbsp; Many did I say, yea
+most, if not all of them.&nbsp; Mr. Conscience they so wounded,
+yea, and his wounds so festered, that he could have no ease day
+nor night, but lay as if continually upon a rack; but that
+Shaddai rules all, certainly they had slain him outright.&nbsp;
+Mr. Lord Mayor they so abused that they almost put out his eyes;
+and had not my Lord Willbewill got into the castle, they intended
+to have chopped him all to pieces; for they did look upon him, as
+his heart now stood, to be one of the very worst that was in
+Mansoul against Diabolus and his crew.&nbsp; And indeed he hath
+shown himself a man, and more of his exploits you will hear of
+afterwards.</p>
+<p>Now, a man might have walked for days together in Mansoul, and
+scarcely have seen one in the town that looked like a religious
+man.&nbsp; Oh, the fearful state of Mansoul now! now every corner
+swarmed with outlandish doubters; red-coats and black-coats
+walked the town by clusters, and filled up all the houses with
+hideous noises, vain songs, lying stories, and blasphemous
+language against Shaddai and his Son.&nbsp; Now also those
+Diabolonians that lurked in the walls and dens and holes that
+were in the town of Mansoul, came forth and showed themselves;
+yea, walked with open face in company with the doubters that were
+in Mansoul.&nbsp; Yea, they had more boldness now to walk the
+streets, to haunt the houses, and to show themselves abroad, than
+had any of the honest inhabitants of the now woful town of
+Mansoul.</p>
+<p>But Diabolus and his outlandish men were not at peace in
+Mansoul; for they were not there entertained as were the captains
+and forces of Emmanuel: the townsmen did browbeat them what they
+could; nor did they partake or make stroy of any of the
+necessaries of Mansoul, but that which they seized on against the
+townsmen&rsquo;s will: what they could, they hid from them, and
+what they could not, they had with an ill-will.&nbsp; They, poor
+hearts! had rather have had their room than their company; but
+they were at present their captives, and their captives for the
+present they were forced to be.&nbsp; But, I say, they
+discountenanced them as much as they were able, and showed them
+all the dislike that they could.</p>
+<p>The captains also from the castle did hold them in continual
+play with their slings, to the chafing and fretting of the minds
+of the enemies.&nbsp; True, Diabolus made a great many attempts
+to have broken open the gates of the castle, but Mr. Godly-Fear
+was made the keeper of that; and he was a man of that courage,
+conduct, and valour, that it was in vain, as long as life lasted
+within him, to think to do that work, though mostly desired;
+wherefore all the attempts that Diabolus made against him were
+fruitless.&nbsp; I have wished sometimes that that man had had
+the whole rule of the town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>Well, this was the condition of the town of Mansoul for about
+two years and a half: the body of the town was the seat of war,
+the people of the town were driven into holes, and the glory of
+Mansoul was laid in the dust.&nbsp; What rest, then, could be to
+the inhabitants, what peace could Mansoul have, and what sun
+could shine upon it?&nbsp; Had the enemy lain so long without in
+the plain against the town, it had been enough to have famished
+them: but now, when they shall be within, when the town shall be
+their tent, their trench and fort against the castle that was in
+the town; when the town shall be against the town, and shall
+serve to be a defence to the enemies of her strength and life: I
+say, when they shall make use of the forts and town-holds to
+secure themselves in, even till they shall take, spoil, and
+demolish the castle,&mdash;this was terrible! and yet this was
+now the state of the town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>After the town of Mansoul had been in this sad and lamentable
+condition, for so long a time as I have told you, and no
+petitions that they presented their Prince with, all this while,
+could prevail, the inhabitants of the town, namely, the elders
+and chief of Mansoul, gathered together, and, after some time
+spent in condoling their miserable state and this miserable
+judgment coming upon them, they agreed together to draw up yet
+another petition, and to send it away to Emmanuel for
+relief.&nbsp; But Mr. Godly-Fear stood up and answered, that he
+knew that his Lord the Prince never did nor ever would receive a
+petition for these matters, from the hand of any whoever, unless
+the Lord Secretary&rsquo;s hand was to it; &lsquo;and
+this,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;is the reason that you prevailed
+not all this while.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then they said they would draw
+up one, and get the Lord Secretary&rsquo;s hand unto it.&nbsp;
+But Mr. Godly-Fear answered again, that he knew also that the
+Lord Secretary would not set his hand to any petition that
+himself had not an hand in composing and drawing up.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;And besides,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;the Prince doth know
+my Lord Secretary&rsquo;s hand from all the hands in the world;
+wherefore he cannot be deceived by any pretence whatever.&nbsp;
+Wherefore my advice is that you go to my Lord, and implore him to
+lend you his aid.&rsquo;&nbsp; (Now he did yet abide in the
+castle, where all the captains and men-at-arms were.)</p>
+<p>So they heartily thanked Mr. Godly-Fear, took his counsel, and
+did as he had bidden them.&nbsp; So they went and came to my
+Lord, and made known the cause of their coming to him; namely,
+that since Mansoul was in so deplorable a condition, his Highness
+would be pleased to undertake to draw up a petition for them to
+Emmanuel, the Son of the mighty Shaddai, and to their King and
+his Father by him.</p>
+<p>Then said the Secretary to them, &lsquo;What petition is it
+that you would have me draw up for you?&rsquo;&nbsp; But they
+said, &lsquo;Our Lord knows best the state and condition of the
+town of Mansoul; and how we are backslidden and degenerated from
+the Prince: thou also knowest who is come up to war against us,
+and how Mansoul is now the seat of war.&nbsp; My Lord knows,
+moreover, what barbarous usages our men, women, and children have
+suffered at their hands; and how our homebred Diabolonians do
+walk now with more boldness than dare the townsmen in the streets
+of Mansoul.&nbsp; Let our Lord therefore, according to the wisdom
+of God that is in him, draw up a petition for his poor servants
+to our Prince Emmanuel.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Well,&rsquo; said the
+Lord Secretary, &lsquo;I will draw up a petition for you, and
+will also set my hand thereto.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then said they,
+&lsquo;But when shall we call for it at the hands of our
+Lord?&rsquo;&nbsp; But he answered, &lsquo;Yourselves must be
+present at the doing of it; yea, you must put your desires to
+it.&nbsp; True, the hand and pen shall be mine, but the ink and
+paper must be yours; else how can you say it is your
+petition?&nbsp; Nor have I need to petition for myself, because I
+have not offended.&rsquo; He also added as followeth: &lsquo;No
+petition goes from me in my name to the Prince, and so to his
+Father by him, but when the people that are chiefly concerned
+therein do join in heart and soul in the matter, for that must be
+inserted therein.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>So they did heartily agree with the sentence of the Lord, and
+a petition was forthwith drawn up for them.&nbsp; But now, who
+should carry it? that was next.&nbsp; But the Secretary advised
+that Captain Credence should carry it; for he was a well-spoken
+man.&nbsp; They therefore called for him, and propounded to him
+the business.&nbsp; &lsquo;Well,&rsquo; said the captain,
+&lsquo;I gladly accept of the motion; and though I am lame, I
+will do this business for you with as much speed, and as well as
+I can.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The contents of the petition were to this purpose</p>
+<p>&lsquo;O our Lord, and Sovereign Prince Emmanuel, the potent,
+the long-suffering Prince! grace is poured into thy lips, and to
+thee belong mercy and forgiveness, though we have rebelled
+against thee.&nbsp; We, who are no more worthy to be called thy
+Mansoul, nor yet fit to partake of common benefits, do beseech
+thee, and thy Father by thee, to do away our
+transgressions.&nbsp; We confess that thou mightest cast us away
+for them; but do it not for thy name&rsquo;s sake: let the Lord
+rather take an opportunity, at our miserable condition, to let
+out his bowels and compassions to us.&nbsp; We are compassed on
+every side, Lord; our own backslidings reprove us; our
+Diabolonians within our town fright us; and the army of the angel
+of the bottomless pit distresses us.&nbsp; Thy grace can be our
+salvation, and whither to go but to thee we know not.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Furthermore, O gracious Prince, we have weakened our
+captains, and they are discouraged, sick, and, of late, some of
+them grievously worsted and beaten out of the field by the power
+and force of the tyrant.&nbsp; Yea, even those of our captains,
+in whose valour we did formerly use to put most of our
+confidence, they are as wounded men.&nbsp; Besides, Lord, our
+enemies are lively, and they are strong; they vaunt and boast
+themselves, and do threaten to part us among themselves for a
+booty.&nbsp; They are fallen also upon us, Lord, with many
+thousand doubters, such as with whom we cannot tell what to do;
+they are all grim-looked and unmerciful ones, and they bid
+defiance to us and thee.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Our wisdom is gone, our power is gone, because thou art
+departed from us; nor have we what we may call ours but sin,
+shame, and confusion of face for sin.&nbsp; Take pity upon us, O
+Lord, take pity upon us, thy miserable town of Mansoul, and save
+us out of the hands of our enemies.&nbsp; Amen.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>This petition, as was touched afore, was handed by the Lord
+Secretary, and carried to the court by the brave and most stout
+Captain Credence.&nbsp; Now he carried it out at Mouth-gate, (for
+that, as I said, was the sally-port of the town,) and he went and
+came to Emmanuel with it.&nbsp; Now how it came out, I do not
+know; but for certain it did, and that so far as to reach the
+ears of Diabolus.&nbsp; Thus I conclude, because that the tyrant
+had it presently by the end, and charged the town of Mansoul with
+it, saying, &lsquo;Thou rebellious and stubborn-hearted Mansoul,
+I will make thee to leave off petitioning.&nbsp; Art thou yet for
+petitioning?&nbsp; I will make thee to leave.&rsquo;&nbsp; Yea,
+he also knew who the messenger was that carried the petition to
+the Prince, and it made him both to fear and rage.</p>
+<p>Wherefore he commanded that his drum should be beat again, a
+thing that Mansoul could not abide to hear: but when Diabolus
+will have his drum beat, Mansoul must abide the noise.&nbsp;
+Well, the drum was beat, and the Diabolonians were gathered
+together.</p>
+<p>Then said Diabolus, &lsquo;O ye stout Diabolonians, be it
+known unto you, that there is treachery hatched against us in the
+rebellious town of Mansoul; for albeit the town is in our
+possession, as you see, yet these miserable Mansoulians have
+attempted to dare, and have been so hardy as yet to send to the
+court to Emmanuel for help.&nbsp; This I give you to understand,
+that ye may yet know how to carry it to the wretched town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; Wherefore, O my trusty Diabolonians, I command
+that yet more and more ye distress this town of Mansoul, and vex
+it with your wiles, ravish their women, deflower their virgins,
+slay their children, brain their ancients, fire their town, and
+what other mischief you can; and let this be the reward of the
+Mansoulians from me, for their desperate rebellions against
+me.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>This, you see, was the charge; but something stepped in
+betwixt that and execution, for as yet there was but little more
+done than to rage.</p>
+<p>Moreover, when Diabolus had done thus, he went the next way up
+to the castle gates, and demanded that, upon pain of death, the
+gates should be opened to him, and that entrance should be given
+him and his men that followed after.&nbsp; To whom Mr. Godly-Fear
+replied, (for he it was that had the charge of that gate,) that
+the gate should not be opened unto him, nor to the men that
+followed after him.&nbsp; He said, moreover, that Mansoul, when
+she had suffered awhile, should be made perfect, strengthened,
+settled.</p>
+<p>Then said Diabolus, &lsquo;Deliver me, then, the men that have
+petitioned against me, especially Captain Credence, that carried
+it to your Prince; deliver that varlet into my hands, and I will
+depart from the town.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then up starts a Diabolonian, whose name was Mr. Fooling, and
+said, &lsquo;My lord offereth you fair: it is better for you that
+one man perish, than that your whole Mansoul should be
+undone.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>But Mr. Godly-Fear made him this replication, &lsquo;How long
+will Mansoul be kept out of the dungeon, when she hath given up
+her faith to Diabolus!&nbsp; As good lose the town, as lose
+Captain Credence; for if one be gone the other must
+follow.&rsquo;&nbsp; But to that Mr. Fooling said nothing.</p>
+<p>Then did my Lord Mayor reply, and said, &lsquo;O thou
+devouring tyrant, be it known unto thee, we shall hearken to none
+of thy words; we are resolved to resist thee as long as a
+captain, a man, a sling, and a stone to throw at thee shall be
+found in the town of Mansoul.&rsquo;&nbsp; But Diabolus answered,
+&lsquo;Do you hope, do you wait, do you look for help and
+deliverance?&nbsp; You have sent to Emmanuel, but your wickedness
+sticks too close in your skirts, to let innocent prayers come out
+of your lips.&nbsp; Think you that you shall be prevailers and
+prosper in this design?&nbsp; You will fail in your wish, you
+will fail in your attempts; for it is not only I, but your
+Emmanuel is against you: yea, it is he that hath sent me against
+you to subdue you.&nbsp; For what, then, do you hope? or by what
+means will you escape?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said the Lord Mayor, &lsquo;We have sinned indeed; but
+that shall be no help to thee, for our Emmanuel hath said it, and
+that in great faithfulness, &ldquo;and him that cometh to me I
+will in no wise cast out.&rdquo;&nbsp; He hath also told us, O
+our enemy, that &ldquo;all manner of sin and blasphemy shall be
+forgiven&rdquo; to the sons of men.&nbsp; Therefore we dare not
+despair, but will look for, wait for, and hope for deliverance
+still.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Now, by this time, Captain Credence was returned and come from
+the court from Emmanuel to the castle of Mansoul, and he returned
+to them with a packet.&nbsp; So my Lord Mayor, hearing that
+Captain Credence was come, withdrew himself from the noise of the
+roaring of the tyrant, and left him to yell at the wall of the
+town, or against the gates of the castle.&nbsp; So he came up to
+the captain&rsquo;s lodgings, and saluting him, he asked him of
+his welfare, and what was the best news at court.&nbsp; But when
+he asked Captain Credence that, the water stood in his
+eyes.&nbsp; Then said the captain, &lsquo;Cheer up, my lord, for
+all will be well in time.&rsquo;&nbsp; And with that he first
+produced his packet, and laid it by; but that the Lord Mayor, and
+the rest of the captains, took for sign of good tidings.&nbsp;
+Now a season of grace being come, he sent for all the captains
+and elders of the town, that were here and there in their
+lodgings in the castle and upon their guard, to let them know
+that Captain Credence was returned from the court, and that he
+had something in general, and something in special, to
+communicate to them.&nbsp; So they all came up to him, and
+saluted him, and asked him concerning his journey, and what was
+the best news at the court.&nbsp; And he answered them as he had
+done the Lord Mayor before, that all would be well at last.&nbsp;
+Now, when the captain had thus saluted them, he opened his
+packet, and thence did draw out his several notes for those that
+he had sent for.</p>
+<p>And the first note was for my Lord Mayor, wherein was
+signified:&mdash;That the Prince Emmanuel had taken it well that
+my Lord Mayor had been so true and trusty in his office, and the
+great concerns that lay upon him for the town and people of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; Also, he bid him to know, that he took it well
+that he had been so bold for his Prince Emmanuel, and had engaged
+so faithfully in his cause against Diabolus.&nbsp; He also
+signified, at the close of his letter, that he should shortly
+receive his reward.</p>
+<p>The second note that came out, was for the noble Lord
+Willbewill, wherein there was signified:&mdash;That his Prince
+Emmanuel did well understand how valiant and courageous he had
+been for the honour of his Lord, now in his absence, and when his
+name was under contempt by Diabolus.&nbsp; There was signified
+also, that his Prince had taken it well that he had been so
+faithful to the town of Mansoul, in his keeping of so strict a
+hand and eye over and so strict a rein upon the neck of the
+Diabolonians, that did still lie lurking in their several holes
+in the famous town of Mansoul.&nbsp; He signified, moreover, how
+that he understood that my Lord had, with his own hand, done
+great execution upon some of the chief of the rebels there, to
+the great discouragement of the adverse party and to the good
+example of the whole town of Mansoul; and that shortly his
+lordship should have his reward.</p>
+<p>The third note came out for the subordinate preacher, wherein
+was signified:&mdash;That his Prince took it well from him, that
+he had so honestly and so faithfully performed his office, and
+executed the trust committed to him by his Lord, while he
+exhorted, rebuked, and forewarned Mansoul according to the laws
+of the town.&nbsp; He signified, moreover, that he took it well
+at his hand that he called to fasting, to sackcloth, and ashes,
+when Mansoul was under her revolt.&nbsp; Also, that he called for
+the aid of the Captain Boanerges to help in so weighty a work;
+and that shortly he also should receive his reward.</p>
+<p>The fourth note came out for Mr. Godly-Fear, wherein his Lord
+thus signified:&mdash;That his Lordship observed, that he was the
+first of all the men in Mansoul that detected Mr. Carnal-Security
+as the only one that, through his subtlety and cunning, had
+obtained for Diabolus a defection and decay of goodness in the
+blessed town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Moreover, his Lord gave him to
+understand, that he still remembered his tears and mourning for
+the state of Mansoul.&nbsp; It was also observed, by the same
+note, that his Lord took notice of his detecting of this Mr.
+Carnal-Security, at his own table among his guests, in his own
+house, and that in the midst of his jolliness, even while he was
+seeking to perfect his villanies against the town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; Emmanuel also took notice that this reverend
+person, Mr. Godly-Fear, stood stoutly to it, at the gates of the
+castle, against all the threats and attempts of the tyrant; and
+that he had put the townsmen in a way to make their petition to
+their Prince, so as that he might accept thereof, and as they
+might obtain an answer of peace; and that therefore shortly he
+should receive his reward.</p>
+<p>After all this, there was yet produced a note which was
+written to the whole town of Mansoul, whereby they
+perceived&mdash;That their Lord took notice of their so often
+repeating of petitions to him; and that they should see more of
+the fruits of such their doings in time to come.&nbsp; Their
+Prince did also therein tell them, that he took it well, that
+their heart and mind, now at last, abode fixed upon him and his
+ways, though Diabolus had made such inroads upon them; and that
+neither flatteries on the one hand, nor hardships on the other,
+could make them yield to serve his cruel designs.&nbsp; There was
+also inserted at the bottom of this note&mdash;That his Lordship
+had left the town of Mansoul in the hands of the Lord Secretary,
+and under the conduct of Captain Credence, saying, &lsquo;Beware
+that you yet yield yourselves unto their governance; and in due
+time you shall receive your reward.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>So, after the brave Captain Credence had delivered his notes
+to those to whom they belonged, he retired himself to my Lord
+Secretary&rsquo;s lodgings, and there spends time in conversing
+with him; for they too were very great one with another, and did
+indeed know more how things would go with Mansoul than did all
+the townsmen besides.&nbsp; The Lord Secretary also loved the
+Captain Credence dearly; yea, many a good bit was sent him from
+my Lord&rsquo;s table; also, he might have a show of countenance,
+when the rest of Mansoul lay under the clouds: so, after some
+time for converse was spent, the captain betook himself to his
+chambers to rest.&nbsp; But it was not long after when my Lord
+did send for the captain again; so the captain came to him, and
+they greeted one another with usual salutations.&nbsp; Then said
+the captain to the Lord Secretary, &lsquo;What hath my Lord to
+say to his servant?&rsquo;&nbsp; So the Lord Secretary took him
+and had him aside, and after a sign or two of more favour, he
+said, &lsquo;I have made thee the Lord&rsquo;s lieutenant over
+all the forces in Mansoul; so that, from this day forward, all
+men in Mansoul shall be at thy word; and thou shalt be he that
+shall lead in, and that shall lead out Mansoul.&nbsp; Thou shalt
+therefore manage, according to thy place, the war for thy Prince,
+and for the town of Mansoul, against the force and power of
+Diabolus; and at thy command shall the rest of the captains
+be.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Now the townsmen began to perceive what interest the captain
+had, both with the court, and also with the Lord Secretary in
+Mansoul; for no man before could speed when sent, nor bring such
+good news from Emmanuel as he.&nbsp; Wherefore what do they,
+after some lamentation that they made no more use of him in their
+distresses, but send by their subordinate preacher to the Lord
+Secretary, to desire him that all that ever they were and had
+might be put under the government, care, custody, and conduct of
+Captain Credence.</p>
+<p>So their preacher went and did his errand, and received this
+answer from the mouth of his Lord: that Captain Credence should
+be the great doer in all the King&rsquo;s army, against the
+King&rsquo;s enemies, and also for the welfare of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+So he bowed to the ground, and thanked his Lordship, and returned
+and told his news to the townsfolk.&nbsp; But all this was done
+with all imaginable secrecy, because the foes had yet great
+strength in the town.&nbsp; But to return to our story again.</p>
+<p>When Diabolus saw himself thus boldly confronted by the Lord
+Mayor, and perceived the stoutness of Mr. Godly-Fear, he fell
+into a rage, and forthwith called a council of war, that he might
+be revenged on Mansoul.&nbsp; So all the princes of the pit came
+together, and old Incredulity at the head of them, with all the
+captains of his army.&nbsp; So they consult what to do.&nbsp; Now
+the effect and conclusion of the council that day was how they
+might take the castle, because they could not conclude themselves
+masters of the town so long as that was in the possession of
+their enemies.</p>
+<p>So one advised this way, and another advised that; but when
+they could not agree in their verdict, Apollyon, that president
+of the council, stood up, and thus he began: &lsquo;My
+brotherhood,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;I have two things to
+propound unto you; and my first is this.&nbsp; Let us withdraw
+ourselves from the town into the plain again, for our presence
+here will do us no good, because the castle is yet in our
+enemies&rsquo; hands; nor is it possible that we should take
+that, so long as so many brave captains are in it, and that this
+bold fellow, Godly-Fear, is made the keeper of the gates of
+it.&nbsp; Now, when we have withdrawn ourselves into the plain,
+they, of their own accord, will be glad of some little ease; and
+it may be, of their own accord, they again may begin to be
+remiss, and even their so being will give them a bigger blow than
+we can possibly give them ourselves.&nbsp; But if that should
+fail, our going forth of the town may draw the captains out after
+us; and you know what it cost them when we fought them in the
+field before.&nbsp; Besides, can we but draw them out into the
+field, we may lay an ambush behind the town, which shall, when
+they are come forth abroad, rush in and take possession of the
+castle.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>But Beelzebub stood up, and replied, saying: &lsquo;It is
+impossible to draw them all off from the castle; some, you may be
+sure, will lie there to keep that; wherefore it will be but in
+vain thus to attempt, unless we were sure that they will all come
+out.&rsquo;&nbsp; He therefore concluded that what was done must
+be done by some other means.&nbsp; And the most likely means that
+the greatest of their heads could invent, was that which Apollyon
+had advised to before, namely, to get the townsmen again to
+sin.&nbsp; &lsquo;For,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;it is not our being
+in the town, nor in the field, nor our fighting, nor our killing
+of their men, that can make us the masters of Mansoul; for so
+long as one in the town is able to lift up his finger against us,
+Emmanuel will take their parts; and if he shall take their parts,
+we know what time of day it will be with us.&nbsp; Wherefore, for
+my part,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;there is, in my judgment, no way
+to bring them into bondage to us, like inventing a way to make
+them sin.&nbsp; Had we,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;left all our
+doubters at home, we had done as well as we have done now, unless
+we could have made them the masters and governors of the castle;
+for doubters at a distance are but like objections refelled with
+arguments.&nbsp; Indeed, can we but get them into the hold, and
+make them possessors of that, the day will be our own.&nbsp; Let
+us, therefore, withdraw ourselves into the plain, (not expecting
+that the captains in Mansoul should follow us,) but yet, I say,
+let us do this, and before we so do, let us advise again with our
+trusty Diabolonians that are yet in their holds of Mansoul, and
+set them to work to betray the town to us; for they indeed must
+do it, or it will be left undone for ever.&rsquo;&nbsp; By these
+sayings of Beelzebub, (for I think it was he that gave this
+counsel,) the whole conclave was forced to be of his opinion,
+namely, that the way to get the castle was to get the town to
+sin.&nbsp; Then they fell to inventing by what means they might
+do this thing.</p>
+<p>Then Lucifer stood up, and said: &lsquo;The counsel of
+Beelzebub is pertinent.&nbsp; Now, the way to bring this to pass,
+in mine opinion, is this: let us withdraw our force from the town
+of Mansoul; let us do this, and let us terrify them no more,
+either with summons, or threats, or with the noise of our drum,
+or any other awakening means.&nbsp; Only let us lie in the field
+at a distance, and be as if we regarded them not; for frights, I
+see, do but awaken them, and make them more stand to their
+arms.&nbsp; I have also another stratagem in my head: you know
+Mansoul is a market-town, and a town that delights in commerce;
+what, therefore, if some of our Diabolonians shall feign
+themselves far-country men, and shall go out and bring to the
+market of Mansoul some of our wares to sell; and what matter at
+what rates they sell their wares, though it be but for half the
+worth?&nbsp; Now, let those that thus shall trade in their market
+be those that are witty and true to us, and I will lay my crown
+to pawn it will do.&nbsp; There are two that are come to my
+thoughts already, that I think will be arch at this work, and
+they are Mr. Penny-wise-pound-foolish, and Mr.
+Get-i&rsquo;the-hundred-and-lose-i&rsquo;the-shire; nor is this
+man with the long name at all inferior to the other.&nbsp; What,
+also, if you join with them Mr. Sweet-world and Mr. Present-good;
+they are men that are civil and cunning, but our true friends and
+helpers.&nbsp; Let these, with as many more, engage in this
+business for us, and let Mansoul be taken up in much business,
+and let them grow full and rich, and this is the way to get
+ground of them.&nbsp; Remember ye not that thus we prevailed upon
+Laodicea, and how many at present do we hold in this snare?&nbsp;
+Now, when they begin to grow full, they will forget their misery;
+and if we shall not affright them, they may happen to fall
+asleep, and so be got to neglect their town watch, their castle
+watch, as well as their watch at the gates.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Yea, may we not, by this means, so cumber Mansoul with
+abundance, that they shall be forced to make of their castle a
+warehouse, instead of a garrison fortified against us, and a
+receptacle for men of war.&nbsp; Thus, if we get our goods and
+commodities thither, I reckon that the castle is more than half
+ours.&nbsp; Besides, could we so order it that it shall be filled
+with such kind of wares, then if we made a sudden assault upon
+them, it would be hard for the captains to take shelter
+there.&nbsp; Do you not know that of the parable, &ldquo;The
+deceitfulness of riches choke the word&rdquo;? and again,
+&ldquo;When the heart is over-charged with surfeiting and
+drunkenness, and the cares of this life,&rdquo; all mischief
+comes upon them at unawares?</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Furthermore, my lords,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;you very
+well know that it is not easy for a people to be filled with our
+things, and not to have some of our Diabolonians as retainers to
+their houses and services.&nbsp; Where is a Mansoulian that is
+full of this world, that has not for his servants and
+waiting-men, Mr. Profuse, or Mr. Prodigality, or some other of
+our Diabolonian gang, as Mr. Voluptuous, Mr. Pragmatical, Mr.
+Ostentation, or the like?&nbsp; Now these can take the castle of
+Mansoul, or blow it up, or make it unfit for a garrison for
+Emmanuel, and any of these will do.&nbsp; Yea, these, for aught I
+know, may do it for us sooner than an army of twenty thousand
+men.&nbsp; Wherefore, to end as I began, my advice is, that we
+quietly withdraw ourselves, not offering any further force, or
+forcible attempts, upon the castle, at least at this time; and
+let us set on foot our new project, and let us see if that will
+not make them destroy themselves.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>This advice was highly applauded by them all, and was
+accounted the very masterpiece of hell, namely, to choke Mansoul
+with a fulness of this world, and to surfeit her heart with the
+good things thereof.&nbsp; But see how things meet
+together!&nbsp; Just as this Diabolonian council was broken up,
+Captain Credence received a letter from Emmanuel, the contents of
+which were these: That upon the third day he would meet him in
+the field in the plains about Mansoul.&nbsp; &lsquo;Meet me in
+the field!&rsquo; quoth the Captain; &lsquo;what meaneth my lord
+by this?&nbsp; I know not what he meaneth by meeting me in the
+field.&rsquo;&nbsp; So he took the note in his hand, and did
+carry it to my Lord Secretary, to ask his thoughts thereupon; for
+my Lord was a seer in all matters concerning the King, and also
+for the good and comfort of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; So he
+showed my Lord the note, and desired his opinion thereof.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;For my part,&rsquo; quoth Captain Credence, &lsquo;I know
+not the meaning thereof.&rsquo;&nbsp; So my lord did take and
+read it and, after a little pause, he said, &lsquo;The
+Diabolonians have had against Mansoul a great consultation
+to-day; they have, I say, this day been contriving the utter ruin
+of the town; and the result of their council is, to set Mansoul
+into such a way which, if taken, will surely make her destroy
+herself.&nbsp; And, to this end, they are making ready for their
+own departure out of the town, intending to betake themselves to
+the field again,&rsquo; and there to lie till they shall see
+whether this their project will take or no.&nbsp; But be thou
+ready with the men of thy Lord, (for on the third day they will
+be in the plain,) there to fall upon the Diabolonians; for the
+Prince will by that time be in the field; yea, by that it is
+break of day, sun-rising, or before, and that with a mighty force
+against them.&nbsp; So he shall be before them, and thou shalt be
+behind them, and betwixt you both their army shall be
+destroyed.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>When Captain Credence heard this, away goes he to the rest of
+the captains, and tells them what a note he had a while since
+received from the hand of Emmanuel.&nbsp; &lsquo;And,&rsquo; said
+he, &lsquo;that which was dark therein hath my lord the Lord
+Secretary expounded unto me.&rsquo;&nbsp; He told them, moreover,
+what by himself and by them must be done to answer the mind of
+their Lord.&nbsp; Then were the captains glad; and Captain
+Credence commanded that all the King&rsquo;s trumpeters should
+ascend to the battlements of the castle, and there, in the
+audience of Diabolus and of the whole town of Mansoul, make the
+best music that heart could invent.&nbsp; The trumpeters then did
+as they were commanded.&nbsp; They got themselves up to the top
+of the castle, and thus they began to sound.&nbsp; Then did
+Diabolus start, and said, &lsquo;What can be the meaning of this?
+they neither sound Boot-and-saddle, nor Horse-and-away, nor a
+charge.&nbsp; What do these madmen mean that yet they should be
+so merry and glad?&rsquo;&nbsp; Then answered one of themselves
+and said, &lsquo;This is for joy that their Prince Emmanuel is
+coming to relieve the town of Mansoul; and to this end he is at
+the head of an army, and that this relief is near.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The men of Mansoul also were greatly concerned at this
+melodious charm of the trumpets; they said, yea, they answered
+one another, saying, &lsquo;This can be no harm to us; surely
+this can be no harm to us.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then said the
+Diabolonians, &lsquo;What had we best to do?&rsquo; and it was
+answered, &lsquo;It was best to quit the town;&rsquo; and
+&lsquo;that,&rsquo; said one, &lsquo;ye may do in pursuance of
+your last counsel, and by so doing also be better able to give
+the enemy battle, should an army from without come upon us.&nbsp;
+So, on the second day, they withdrew themselves from Mansoul, and
+abode in the plains without; but they encamped themselves before
+Eye-gate, in what terrene and terrible manner they could.&nbsp;
+The reason why they would not abide in the town (besides the
+reasons that were debated in their late conclave) was, for that
+they were not possessed of the stronghold, and
+&lsquo;because,&rsquo; said they, &lsquo;we shall have more
+convenience to fight, and also to fly, if need be, when we are
+encamped in the open plains.&rsquo;&nbsp; Besides, the town would
+have been a pit for them rather than a place of defence, had the
+Prince come up and inclosed them fast therein.&nbsp; Therefore
+they betook themselves to the field, that they might also be out
+of the reach of the slings, by which they were much annoyed all
+the while that they were in the town.</p>
+<p>Well, the time that the captains were to fall upon the
+Diabolonians being come, they eagerly prepared themselves for
+action; for Captain Credence had told the captains over night,
+that they should meet their Prince in the field to-morrow.&nbsp;
+This, therefore, made them yet far more desirous to be engaging
+the enemy; for &lsquo;You shall see the Prince in the field
+to-morrow&rsquo; was like oil to a flaming fire, for of a long
+time they had been at a distance: they therefore were for this
+the more earnest and desirous of the work.&nbsp; So, as I said,
+the hour being come, Captain Credence, with the rest of the men
+of war, drew out their forces before it was day by the sally-port
+of the town.&nbsp; And, being all ready, Captain Credence went up
+to the head of the army, and gave to the rest of the captains the
+word, and so they to their under-officers and soldiers: the word
+was &lsquo;The sword of the Prince Emmanuel, and the shield of
+Captain Credence;&rsquo; which is, in the Mansoulian tongue,
+&lsquo;The word of God and faith.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then the captains
+fell on, and began roundly to front, and flank, and rear
+Diabolus&rsquo;s camp.</p>
+<p>Now, they left Captain Experience in the town, because he was
+yet ill of his wounds, which the Diabolonians had given him in
+the last fight.&nbsp; But when he perceived that the captains
+were at it, what does he but, calling for his crutches with
+haste, gets up, and away he goes to the battle, saying,
+&lsquo;Shall I lie here, when my brethren are in the fight, and
+when Emmanuel, the Prince, will show himself in the field to his
+servants?&rsquo;&nbsp; But when the enemy saw the man come with
+his crutches, they were daunted yet the more; &lsquo;for,&rsquo;
+thought they, &lsquo;what spirit has possessed these Mansoulians,
+that they fight us upon their crutches?&rsquo;&nbsp; Well, the
+captains, as I said, fell on, and did bravely handle their
+weapons, still crying out and shouting, as they laid on blows,
+&lsquo;The sword of the Prince Emmanuel, and the shield of
+Captain Credence!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Now, when Diabolus saw that the captains were come out, and
+that so valiantly they surrounded his men, he concluded that, for
+the present, nothing from them was to be looked for but blows,
+and the dints of their &lsquo;two-edged sword.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Wherefore he also falls on upon the Prince&rsquo;s army with
+all his deadly force: so the battle was joined.&nbsp; Now who was
+it that at first Diabolus met with in the fight, but Captain
+Credence on the one hand, and the Lord Willbewill on the other:
+now Willbewill&rsquo;s blows were like the blows of a giant, for
+that man had a strong arm, and he fell in upon the election
+doubters, for they were the life-guard of Diabolus, and he kept
+them in play a good while, cutting and battering shrewdly.&nbsp;
+Now when Captain Credence saw my lord engaged, he did stoutly
+fall on, on the other hand, upon the same company also; so they
+put them to great disorder.&nbsp; Now Captain Good-Hope had
+engaged the vocation doubters, and they were sturdy men; but the
+captain was a valiant man: Captain Experience did also send him
+some aid; so he made the vocation doubters to retreat.&nbsp; The
+rest of the armies were hotly engaged, and that on every side,
+and the Diabolonians did fight stoutly.&nbsp; Then did my Lord
+Secretary command that the slings from the castle should be
+played; and his men could throw stones at an hair&rsquo;s
+breadth.&nbsp; But, after a while, those that were made to fly
+before the captains of the Prince, did begin to rally again, and
+they came up stoutly upon the rear of the Prince&rsquo;s army:
+wherefore the Prince&rsquo;s army began to faint; but,
+remembering that they should see the face of their Prince
+by-and-by, they took courage, and a very fierce battle was
+fought.&nbsp; Then shouted the captains, saying, &lsquo;The sword
+of the Prince Emmanuel, and the shield of Captain
+Credence!&rsquo; and with that Diabolus gave back, thinking that
+more aid had been come.&nbsp; But no Emmanuel as yet
+appeared.&nbsp; Moreover, the battle did hang in doubt; and they
+made a little retreat on both sides.&nbsp; Now, in the time of
+respite, Captain Credence bravely encouraged his men to stand to
+it; and Diabolus did the like, as well as he could.&nbsp; But
+Captain Credence made a brave speech to his soldiers, the
+contents whereof here follow:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Gentlemen soldiers, and my brethren in this design, it
+rejoiceth me much to see in the field for our Prince, this day,
+so stout and so valiant an army, and such faithful lovers of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; You have hitherto, as hath become you, shown
+yourselves men of truth and courage against the Diabolonian
+forces; so that, for all their boast, they have not yet much
+cause to boast of their gettings.&nbsp; Now take to yourselves
+your wonted courage, and show yourselves men even this once only;
+for in a few minutes after the next engagement, this time, you
+shall see your Prince show himself in the field; for we must make
+this second assault upon this tyrant Diabolus, and then Emmanuel
+comes.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>No sooner had the captain made this speech to his soldiers,
+but one Mr. Speedy came post to the captain from the Prince, to
+tell him that Emmanuel was at hand.&nbsp; This news when the
+captain had received, he communicated to the other
+field-officers, and they again to their soldiers and men of
+war.&nbsp; Wherefore, like men raised from the dead, so the
+captains and their men arose, made up to the enemy, and cried as
+before, &lsquo;The sword of the Prince Emmanuel, and the shield
+of Captain Credence!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The Diabolonians also bestirred themselves, and made
+resistance as well as they could; but in this last engagement the
+Diabolonians lost their courage, and many of the doubters fell
+down dead to the ground.&nbsp; Now, when they had been in heat of
+battle about an hour or more, Captain Credence lift up his eyes
+and saw, and, behold, Emmanuel came; and he came with colours
+flying, trumpets sounding, and the feet of his men scarce touched
+the ground, they hasted with that celerity towards the captains
+that were engaged.&nbsp; Then did Credence wind with his men to
+the townward, and gave to Diabolus the field: so Emmanuel came
+upon him on the one side, and the enemies&rsquo; place was
+betwixt them both.&nbsp; Then again they fell to it afresh; and
+now it was but a little while more but Emmanuel and Captain
+Credence met, still trampling down the slain as they came.</p>
+<p>But when the captains saw that the Prince was come, and that
+he fell upon the Diabolonians on the other side, and that Captain
+Credence and his Highness had got them up betwixt them, they
+shouted, (they so shouted that the ground rent again,) saying,
+&lsquo;The sword of Emmanuel, and the shield of Captain
+Credence!&rsquo;&nbsp; Now, when Diabolus saw that he and his
+forces were so hard beset by the Prince and his princely army,
+what does he, and the lords of the pit that were with him, but
+make their escape, and forsake their army, and leave them to fall
+by the hand of Emmanuel, and of his noble Captain Credence: so
+they fell all down slain before them, before the Prince, and
+before his royal army; there was not left so much as one doubter
+alive; they lay spread upon the ground dead men, as one would
+spread dung upon the land.</p>
+<p>When the battle was over, all things came into order in the
+camp.&nbsp; Then the captains and elders of Mansoul came together
+to salute Emmanuel, while without the corporation: so they
+saluted him, and welcomed him, and that with a thousand welcomes,
+for that he was come to the borders of Mansoul again.&nbsp; So he
+smiled upon them, and said, &lsquo;Peace be to you.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Then they addressed themselves to go to the town; they went then
+to go up to Mansoul, they, the Prince, with all the new forces
+that now he had brought with him to the war.&nbsp; Also all the
+gates of the town were set open for his reception, so glad were
+they of his blessed return.&nbsp; And this was the manner and
+order of this going of his into Mansoul:</p>
+<p>First.&nbsp; As I said, all the gates of the town were set
+open, yea, the gates of the castle also; the elders, too, of the
+town of Mansoul placed themselves at the gates of the town, to
+salute him at his entrance thither: and so they did; for, as he
+drew near, and approached towards the gates, they said,
+&lsquo;Lift up your heads, O ye gates; and be ye lift up, ye
+everlasting doors; and the King of glory shall come
+in.&rsquo;&nbsp; And they answered again, &lsquo;Who is the King
+of glory?&rsquo; and they made return to themselves, &lsquo;The
+Lord, strong and mighty; the Lord mighty in battle.&nbsp; Lift up
+your heads, O ye gates; even lift them up, ye everlasting
+doors,&rsquo; etc.</p>
+<p>Secondly.&nbsp; It was ordered also, by those of Mansoul, that
+all the way from the town gates to those of the castle, his
+blessed Majesty should be entertained with the song, by them that
+had the best skill in music in all the town of Mansoul: then did
+the elders, and the rest of the men of Mansoul, answer one
+another as Emmanuel entered the town, till he came at the castle
+gates, with songs and sound of trumpets, saying, &lsquo;They have
+seen thy goings, O God; even the goings of my God, my King, in
+the sanctuary.&nbsp; So the singers went before, the players on
+instruments followed after, and among them were the damsels
+playing on timbrels.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Thirdly.&nbsp; Then the captains, (for I would speak a word of
+them,) they in their order waited on the Prince, as he entered
+into the gates of Mansoul.&nbsp; Captain Credence went before,
+and Captain Good-Hope with him; Captain Charity came behind with
+other of his companions, and Captain Patience followed after all;
+and the rest of the captains, some on the right hand, and some on
+the left, accompanied Emmanuel into Mansoul.&nbsp; And all the
+while the colours were displayed, the trumpets sounded, and
+continual shoutings were among the soldiers.&nbsp; The Prince
+himself rode into the town in his armour, which was all of beaten
+gold, and in his chariot&mdash;the pillars of it were of silver,
+the bottom thereof of gold, the covering of it was of purple, the
+midst thereof being paved with love for the daughters of the town
+of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>Fourthly.&nbsp; When the Prince was come to the entrance of
+Mansoul, he found all the streets strewed with lilies and
+flowers, curiously decked with boughs and branches from the green
+trees that stood round about the town.&nbsp; Every door also was
+filled with persons, who had adorned every one their fore-part
+against their house with something of variety and singular
+excellency, to entertain him withal as he passed in the streets:
+they also themselves, as Emmanuel passed by, did welcome him with
+shouts and acclamations of joy, saying, &lsquo;Blessed be the
+Prince that cometh in the name of his Father Shaddai.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Fifthly.&nbsp; At the castle gates the elders of Mansoul,
+namely, the Lord Mayor, the Lord Willbewill, the subordinate
+preacher, Mr. Knowledge, and Mr. Mind, with other of the gentry
+of the place, saluted Emmanuel again.&nbsp; They bowed before
+him, they kissed the dust of his feet, they thanked, they
+blessed, and praised his Highness for not taking advantage
+against them for their sins, but rather had pity upon them in
+their misery, and returned to them with mercies, and to build up
+their Mansoul for ever.&nbsp; Thus was he had up straightway to
+the castle; for that was the royal palace, and the place where
+his honour was to dwell; the which was ready prepared for his
+Highness by the presence of the Lord Secretary, and the work of
+Captain Credence.&nbsp; So he entered in.</p>
+<p>Sixthly.&nbsp; Then the people and commonalty of the town of
+Mansoul came to him into the castle to mourn, and to weep, and to
+lament for their wickedness, by which they had forced him out of
+the town.&nbsp; So when they were come, bowed themselves to the
+ground seven times; they also wept, they wept aloud, and asked
+forgiveness of the Prince, and prayed that he would again, as of
+old, confirm his love to Mansoul.</p>
+<p>To the which the great Prince replied, &lsquo;Weep not, but go
+your way, eat the fat, and drink the sweet, and send portions to
+them for whom nought is prepared; for the joy of your Lord is
+your strength.&nbsp; I am returned to Mansoul with mercies, and
+my name shall be set up, exalted, and magnified by
+it.&rsquo;&nbsp; He also took these inhabitants, and kissed them,
+and laid them in his bosom.</p>
+<p>Moreover, he gave to the elders of Mansoul, and to each town
+officer, a chain of gold and a signet.&nbsp; He also sent to
+their wives earrings and jewels, and bracelets, and other
+things.&nbsp; He also bestowed upon the true-born children of
+Mansoul many precious things.</p>
+<p>When Emmanuel, the Prince, had done all these things for the
+famous town of Mansoul, then he said unto them, first,
+&lsquo;Wash your garments, then put on your ornaments, and then
+come to me into the castle of Mansoul.&rsquo;&nbsp; So they went
+to the fountain that was set open for Judah and Jerusalem to wash
+in; and there they washed, and there they made their
+&lsquo;garments white,&rsquo; and came again to the Prince into
+the castle, and thus they stood before him.</p>
+<p>And now there was music and dancing throughout the whole town
+of Mansoul, and that because their Prince had again granted to
+them his presence and the light of his countenance; the bells
+also did ring, and the sun shone comfortably upon them for a
+great while together.</p>
+<p>The town of Mansoul did also now more thoroughly seek the
+destruction and ruin of all remaining Diabolonians that abode in
+the walls, and the dens that they had in the town of Mansoul; for
+there was of them that had, to this day, escaped with life and
+limb from the hand of their suppressors in the famous town of
+Mansoul.</p>
+<p>But my Lord Willbewill was a greater terror to them now than
+ever he had been before; forasmuch as his heart was yet more
+fully bent to seek, contrive, and pursue them to the death; he
+pursued them night and day, and did put them now to sore
+distress, as will afterwards appear.</p>
+<p>After things were thus far put into order in the famous town
+of Mansoul, care was taken, and order given by the blessed Prince
+Emmanuel, that the townsmen should, without further delay,
+appoint some to go forth into the plain to bury the dead that
+were there,&mdash;the dead that fell by the sword of Emmanuel,
+and by the shield of the Captain Credence,&mdash;lest the fumes
+and ill savours that would arise from them might infect the air,
+and so annoy the famous town of Mansoul.&nbsp; This also was a
+reason of this order, namely, that, as much as in Mansoul lay,
+they might cut off the name, and being, and remembrance of those
+enemies from the thought of the famous town of Mansoul and its
+inhabitants.</p>
+<p>So order was given out by the Lord Mayor, that wise and trusty
+friend of the town of Mansoul, that persons should be employed
+about this necessary business; and Mr. Godly-Fear, and one Mr.
+Upright, were to be overseers about this matter: so persons were
+put under them to work in the fields, and to bury the slain that
+lay dead in the plains.&nbsp; And these were their places of
+employment: some were to make the graves, some to bury the dead,
+and some were to go to and fro in the plains, and also round
+about the borders of Mansoul, to see if a skull, or a bone, or a
+piece of a bone of a doubter, was yet to be found above ground
+anywhere near the corporation; and if any were found, it was
+ordered, that the searchers that searched should set up a mark
+thereby, and a sign, that those that were appointed to bury them
+might find it, and bury it out of sight, that the name and
+remembrance of a Diabolonian doubter might be blotted out from
+under heaven; and that the children, and they that were to be
+born in Mansoul, might not know, if possible, what a skull, what
+a bone, or a piece of a bone of a doubter was.&nbsp; So the
+buriers, and those that were appointed for that purpose, did as
+they were commanded: they buried the doubters, and all the skulls
+and bones, and pieces of bones of doubters, wherever they found
+them; and so they cleansed the plains.&nbsp; Now also Mr.
+God&rsquo;s-Peace took up his commission, and acted again as in
+former days.</p>
+<p>Thus they buried in the plains about Mansoul the election
+doubters, the vocation doubters, the grace doubters, the
+perseverance doubters, the resurrection doubters, the salvation
+doubters, and the glory doubters; whose captains were Captain
+Rage, Captain Cruel, Captain Damnation, Captain Insatiable,
+Captain Brimstone, Captain Torment, Captain No-Ease, Captain
+Sepulchre, and Captain Past-Hope; and old Incredulity was, under
+Diabolus, their general.&nbsp; There were also the seven heads of
+their army; and they were the Lord Beelzebub, the Lord Lucifer,
+the Lord Legion, the Lord Apollyon, the Lord Python, the Lord
+Cerberus, and the Lord Belial.&nbsp; But the princes and the
+captains, with old Incredulity, their general, did all of them
+make their escape: so their men fell down slain by the power of
+the Prince&rsquo;s forces, and by the hands of the men of the
+town of Mansoul.&nbsp; They also were buried as is afore related,
+to the exceeding great joy of the now famous town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; They that buried them buried also with them their
+arms, which were cruel instruments of death: (their weapons were
+arrows, darts, mauls, firebrands, and the like).&nbsp; They
+buried also their armour, their colours, banners, with the
+standard of Diabolus, and what else soever they could find that
+did but smell of a Diabolonian doubter.</p>
+<p>Now when the tyrant had arrived at Hell-Gate Hill, with his
+old friend Incredulity, they immediately descended the den, and
+having there with their fellows for a while condoled their
+misfortune and great loss that they sustained against the town of
+Mansoul, they fell at length into a passion, and revenged they
+would be for the loss that they sustained before the town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; Wherefore they presently call a council to
+contrive yet further what was to be done against the famous town
+of Mansoul; for their yawning paunches could not wait to see the
+result of their Lord Lucifer&rsquo;s and their Lord
+Apollyon&rsquo;s counsel that they had given before; for their
+raging gorge thought every day, even as long as a short for ever,
+until they were filled with the body and soul, with the flesh and
+bones, and with all the delicates of Mansoul.&nbsp; They
+therefore resolve to make another attempt upon the town of
+Mansoul, and that by an army mixed and made up partly of
+doubters, and partly of blood-men.&nbsp; A more particular
+account now take of both.</p>
+<p>The doubters are such as have their name from their nature, as
+well as from the land and kingdom where they are born: their
+nature is to put a question upon every one of the truths of
+Emmanuel; and their country is called the land of Doubting, and
+that land lieth off, and farthest remote to the north, between
+the land of Darkness and that called the &lsquo;valley of the
+shadow of death.&rsquo;&nbsp; For though the land of Darkness,
+and that called &lsquo;the valley of the shadow of death,&rsquo;
+be sometimes called as if they were one and the self-same place,
+yet indeed they are two, lying but a little way asunder, and the
+land of Doubting points in, and lieth between them.&nbsp; This is
+the land of Doubting; and these that came with Diabolus to ruin
+the town of Mansoul are the natives of that country.</p>
+<p>The blood-men are a people that have their name derived from
+the malignity of their nature, and from the fury that is in them
+to execute it upon the town of Mansoul: their land lieth under
+the dog-star, and by that they are governed as to their
+intellectuals.&nbsp; The name of their country is the province of
+Loath-good: the remote parts of it are far distant from the land
+of Doubting, yet they do both butt and bound upon the hill called
+Hell-Gate Hill.&nbsp; These people are always in league with the
+doubters, for they jointly do make question of the faith and
+fidelity of the men of the town of Mansoul, and so are both alike
+qualified for the service of their prince.</p>
+<p>Now of these two countries did Diabolus, by the beating of his
+drum, raise another army against the town of Mansoul, of
+five-and-twenty thousand strong.&nbsp; There were ten thousand
+doubters, and fifteen thousand blood-men, and they were put under
+several captains for the war; and old Incredulity was again made
+general of the army.</p>
+<p>As for the doubters, their captains were five of the seven
+that were heads of the last Diabolonian army, and these are their
+names: Captain Beelzebub, Captain Lucifer, Captain Apollyon,
+Captain Legion, and Captain Cerberus; and the captains that they
+had before were some of them made lieutenants, and some ensigns
+of the army.</p>
+<p>But Diabolus did not count that, in this expedition of his,
+these doubters would prove his principal men, for their manhood
+had been tried before; also the Mansoulians had put them to the
+worst: only he did bring them to multiply a number, and to help,
+if need was, at a pinch.&nbsp; But his trust he put in his
+blood-men, for that they were all rugged villains, and he knew
+that they had done feats heretofore.</p>
+<p>As for the blood-men, they also were under command and the
+names of their captains were, Captain Cain, Captain Nimrod,
+Captain Ishmael, Captain Esau, Captain Saul, Captain Absalom,
+Captain Judas, and Captain Pope.</p>
+<p>1. Captain Cain was over two bands, namely, the zealous and
+the angry blood-men: his standard-bearer bare the red colours,
+and his scutcheon was the murdering club.</p>
+<p>2. Captain Nimrod was captain over two bands, namely, the
+tyrannical and encroaching blood-men: his standard-bearer bare
+the red colours, and his scutcheon was the great bloodhound.</p>
+<p>3. Captain Ishmael was captain over two bands, namely, the
+mocking and scorning blood-men: his standard-bearer bare the red
+colours, and his scutcheon was one mocking at Abraham&rsquo;s
+Isaac.</p>
+<p>4. Captain Esau was captain over two bands, namely, the
+blood-men that grudged that another should have the blessing;
+also over the blood-men that are for executing their private
+revenge upon others: his standard-bearer bare the red colours,
+and his scutcheon was one privately lurking to murder Jacob.</p>
+<p>5. Captain Saul was captain over two bands, namely, the
+groundlessly jealous and the devilishly furious blood-men: his
+standard-bearer bare the red colours, and his scutcheon was three
+bloody darts cast at harmless David.</p>
+<p>6. Captain Absalom was captain over two bands, namely, over
+the blood-men that will kill a father or a friend for the glory
+of this world; also over those blood-men that will hold one fair
+in hand with words, till they shall have pierced him with their
+swords: his standard-bearer did bear the red colours, and his
+scutcheon was the son pursuing the father&rsquo;s blood.</p>
+<p>7. Captain Judas was over two bands, namely, the blood-men
+that will sell a man&rsquo;s life for money, and those also that
+will betray their friend with a kiss: his standard-bearer bare
+the red colours, and his scutcheon was thirty pieces of silver
+and the halter.</p>
+<p>8. Captain Pope was captain over one band, for all these
+spirits are joined in one under him: his standard-bearer bare the
+red colours, and his scutcheon was the stake, the flame, and the
+good man in it.</p>
+<p>Now, the reason why Diabolus did so soon rally another force,
+after he had been beaten out of the field, was, for that he put
+mighty confidence in this army of blood-men; for he put a great
+deal of more trust in them than he did before in his army of
+doubters; though they had also often done great service for him
+in the strengthening of him in his kingdom.&nbsp; But these
+blood-men, he had proved them often, and their sword did seldom
+return empty.&nbsp; Besides, he knew that these, like mastiffs,
+would fasten upon any; upon father, mother, brother, sister,
+prince, or governor, yea upon the Prince of princes.&nbsp; And
+that which encouraged him the more was, for that they once did
+force Emmanuel out of the kingdom of Universe; &lsquo;And
+why,&rsquo; thought he, &lsquo;may they not also drive him from
+the town of Mansoul?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>So this army of five-and-twenty thousand strong was, by their
+general, the great Lord Incredulity, led up against the town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; Now Mr. Prywell, the scoutmaster-general, did
+himself go out to spy, and he did bring Mansoul tidings of their
+coming.&nbsp; Wherefore they shut up their gates, and put
+themselves in a posture of defence against these new Diabolonians
+that came up against the town.</p>
+<p>So Diabolus brought up his army, and beleaguered the town of
+Mansoul; the doubters were placed about Feel-gate, and the
+blood-men set down before Eye-gate and Ear-gate.</p>
+<p>Now when this army had thus encamped themselves, Incredulity
+did, in the name of Diabolus, his own name, and in the name of
+the blood-men and the rest that were with him, send a summons as
+hot as a red-hot iron to Mansoul, to yield to their demands;
+threatening, that if they still stood it out against them, they
+would presently burn down Mansoul with fire.&nbsp; For you must
+know that, as for the blood-men, they were not so much that
+Mansoul should be surrendered, as that Mansoul should be
+destroyed, and cut off out of the land of the living.&nbsp; True,
+they send to them to surrender; but should they so do, that would
+not stench or quench the thirsts of these men.&nbsp; They must
+have blood, the blood of Mansoul, else they die; and it is from
+hence that they have their name.&nbsp; Wherefore these blood-men
+he reserved while now that they might, when all his engines
+proved ineffectual, as his last and sure card be played against
+the town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>Now, when the townsmen had received this red-hot summons, it
+begat in them at present some changing and interchanging
+thoughts; but they jointly agreed, in less than half an hour, to
+carry the summons to the Prince, the which they did when they had
+writ at the bottom of it, &lsquo;Lord, save Mansoul from bloody
+men!&rsquo;</p>
+<p>So he took it, and looked upon it, and considered it, and took
+notice also of that short petition that the men of Mansoul had
+written at the bottom of it, and called to him the noble Captain
+Credence, and bid him go and take Captain Patience with him, and
+go and take care of that side of Mansoul that was beleaguered by
+the blood-men.&nbsp; So they went and did as they were commanded:
+the Captain Credence went and took Captain Patience, and they
+both secured that side of Mansoul that was besieged by the
+blood-men.</p>
+<p>Then he commanded that Captain Good-hope and Captain Charity,
+and my Lord Willbewill, should take charge of the other side of
+the town.&nbsp; &lsquo;And I,&rsquo; said the Prince, &lsquo;will
+set my standard upon the battlements of your castle, and do you
+three watch against the doubters.&rsquo;&nbsp; This done, he
+again commanded that the brave captain, the Captain Experience,
+should draw up his men in the market-place, and that there he
+should exercise them day by day before the people of the town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; Now this siege was long, and many a fierce attempt
+did the enemy, especially those called the blood-men, make upon
+the town of Mansoul; and many a shrewd brush did some of the
+townsmen meet with from them, especially Captain Self-Denial,
+who, I should have told you before, was commanded to take the
+care of Ear-gate and Eye-gate now against the blood-men.&nbsp;
+This Captain Self-Denial was a young man, but stout, and a
+townsman in Mansoul, as Captain Experience also was.&nbsp; And
+Emmanuel, at his second return to Mansoul, made him a captain
+over a thousand of the Mansoulians, for the good of the
+corporation.&nbsp; This captain, therefore, being an hardy man,
+and a man of great courage, and willing to venture himself for
+the good of the town of Mansoul, would now and then sally out
+upon the blood-men, and give them many notable alarms, and
+entered several brisk skirmishes with them, and also did some
+execution upon them; but you must think that this could not
+easily be done, but he must meet with brushes himself, for he
+carried several of their marks in his face; yea, and some in some
+other parts of his body.</p>
+<p>So, after some time spent for the trial of the faith, and
+hope, and love of the town of Mansoul, the Prince Emmanuel upon a
+day calls his captains and men of war together, and divides them
+into two companies; this done, he commands them at a time
+appointed, and that in the morning very early, to sally out upon
+the enemy, saying: &lsquo;Let half of you fall upon the doubters,
+and half of you fall upon the blood-men.&nbsp; Those of you that
+go out against the doubters, kill and slay, and cause to perish
+so many of them as by any means you can lay hands on; but for you
+that go out against the blood-men, slay them not, but take them
+alive.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>So, at the time appointed, betimes in the morning, the
+captains went out as they were commanded, against the
+enemies.&nbsp; Captain Good-Hope, Captain Charity, and those that
+were joined with them, as Captain Innocent and Captain
+Experience, went out against the doubters; and Captain Credence,
+and Captain Patience, with Captain Self-Denial, and the rest that
+were to join with them, went out against the blood-men.</p>
+<p>Now, those that went out against the doubters drew up into a
+body before the plain, and marched on to bid them battle.&nbsp;
+But the doubters, remembering their last success, made a retreat,
+not daring to stand the shock, but fled from the Prince&rsquo;s
+men; wherefore they pursued them, and in their pursuit slew many,
+but they could not catch them all.&nbsp; Now those that escaped
+went some of them home; and the rest by fives, nines, and
+seventeens, like wanderers, went straggling up and down the
+country, where they upon the barbarous people showed and
+exercised many of their Diabolonian actions: nor did these people
+rise up in arms against them, but suffered themselves to be
+enslaved by them.&nbsp; They would also after this show
+themselves in companies before the town of Mansoul, but never to
+abide in it; for if Captain Credence, Captain Good-Hope, or
+Captain Experience did but show themselves, they fled.</p>
+<p>Those that went out against the blood-men did as they were
+commanded: they forbore to slay any, but sought to compass them
+about.&nbsp; But the blood-men, when they saw that no Emmanuel
+was in the field, concluded also that no Emmanuel was in Mansoul;
+wherefore they, looking upon what the captains did to be, as they
+called it, a fruit of the extravagancy of their wild and foolish
+fancies, rather despised them than feared them.&nbsp; But the
+captains, minding their business, at last did compass them round;
+they also that had routed the doubters came in amain to their
+aid: so, in fine, after some little struggling, (for the
+blood-men also would have run for it, only now it was too late;
+for though they are mischievous and cruel, where they can
+overcome, yet all blood-men are chicken-hearted men, when they
+once come to see themselves matched and equalled,)&mdash;so the
+captains took them, and brought them to the Prince.</p>
+<p>Now when they were taken, had before the Prince, and examined,
+he found them to be of three several counties, though they all
+came out of one land.</p>
+<p>1. One sort of them came out of Blind-man-shire, and they were
+such as did ignorantly what they did.</p>
+<p>2. Another sort of them came out of Blind-zeal-shire, and they
+did superstitiously what they did.</p>
+<p>3. The third sort of them came out of the town of Malice, in
+the county of Envy, and they did what they did out of spite and
+implacableness.</p>
+<p>For the first of these, namely, they that came out of
+Blind-man-shire, when they saw where they were, and against whom
+they had fought, they trembled and cried, as they stood before
+him; and as many of these as asked him mercy, he touched their
+lips with his golden sceptre.</p>
+<p>They that came out of Blind-zeal-shire, they did not as their
+fellows did; for they pleaded that they had a right to do what
+they did, because Mansoul was a town whose laws and customs were
+diverse from all that dwelt thereabouts.&nbsp; Very few of these
+could be brought to see their evil; but those that did, and asked
+mercy, they also obtained favour.</p>
+<p>Now, they that came out of the town of Malice, that is in the
+county of Envy, they neither wept, nor disputed, nor repented,
+but stood gnawing their tongues before him for anguish and
+madness, because they could not have their will upon
+Mansoul.&nbsp; Now these last, with all those of the other two
+sorts that did not unfeignedly ask pardon for their
+faults,&mdash;those he made to enter into sufficient bond to
+answer for what they had done against Mansoul, and against her
+King, at the great and general assizes to be holden for our Lord
+the King, where he himself should appoint for the country and
+kingdom of Universe.&nbsp; So they became bound each man for
+himself, to come in, when called upon, to answer before our Lord
+the King for what they had done as before.</p>
+<p>And thus much concerning this second army that was sent by
+Diabolus to overthrow Mansoul.</p>
+<p>But there were three of those that came from the land of
+Doubting, who, after they had wandered and ranged the country a
+while, and perceived that they had escaped, were so hardy as to
+thrust themselves, knowing that yet there were in the town
+Diabolonians,&mdash;I say, they were so hardy as to thrust
+themselves into Mansoul among them.&nbsp; (Three, did I
+say?&nbsp; I think there were four.)&nbsp; Now, to whose house
+should these Diabolonian doubters go, but to the house of an old
+Diabolonian in Mansoul, whose name was Evil-Questioning, a very
+great enemy he was to Mansoul, and a great doer among the
+Diabolonians there.&nbsp; Well, to this Evil-Questioning&rsquo;s
+house, as was said, did these Diabolonians come (you may be sure
+that they had directions how to find the way thither), so he made
+them welcome, pitied their misfortune, and succoured them with
+the best that he had in his house.&nbsp; Now, after a little
+acquaintance (and it was not long before they had that), this old
+Evil-Questioning asked the doubters if they were all of a town
+(he knew that they were all of one kingdom), and they answered:
+&lsquo;No, nor not of one shire neither; for I,&rsquo; said one,
+&lsquo;am an election doubter:&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;I,&rsquo; said
+another, &lsquo;am a vocation doubter:&rsquo; then said the
+third, &lsquo;I am a salvation doubter:&rsquo; and the fourth
+said he was a grace doubter.&nbsp; &lsquo;Well,&rsquo; quoth the
+old gentleman, &lsquo;be of what shire you will, I am persuaded
+that you are down, boys: you have the very length of my foot, are
+one with my heart, and shall be welcome to me.&rsquo;&nbsp; So
+they thanked him, and were glad that they had found themselves an
+harbour in Mansoul.</p>
+<p>Then said Evil-Questioning to them: &lsquo;How many of your
+company might there be that came with you to the siege of
+Mansoul?&rsquo; and they answered: &lsquo;There were but ten
+thousand doubters in all, for the rest of the army consisted of
+fifteen thousand blood-men.&nbsp; These blood-men,&rsquo; quoth
+they, &lsquo;border upon our country; but, poor men! as we hear,
+they were every one taken by Emmanuel&rsquo;s
+forces.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Ten thousand!&rsquo; quoth the old
+gentleman; &lsquo;I will promise you, that is a round
+company.&nbsp; But how came it to pass, since you were so mighty
+a number, that you fainted, and durst not fight your
+foes?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Our general,&rsquo; said they,
+&lsquo;was the first man that did run for it.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Pray,&rsquo; quoth their landlord, &lsquo;who was that,
+your cowardly general?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;He was once the Lord
+Mayor of Mansoul,&rsquo; said they: &lsquo;but pray call him not
+a cowardly general; for whether any from the east to the west has
+done more service for our prince Diabolus, than has my Lord
+Incredulity, will be a hard question for you to answer.&nbsp; But
+had they catched him, they would for certain have hanged him; and
+we promise you, hanging is but a bad business.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then
+said the old gentleman, &lsquo;I would that all the ten thousand
+doubters were now well armed in Mansoul, and myself at the head
+of them; I would see what I could do.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Ay,&rsquo; said they, &lsquo;that would be well if we
+could see that; but wishes, alas! what are they?&rsquo; and these
+words were spoken aloud.&nbsp; &lsquo;Well,&rsquo; said old
+Evil-Questioning, &lsquo;take heed that you talk not too loud;
+you must be quat and close, and must take care of yourselves
+while you are here, or, I will assure you, you will be
+snapped.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Why?&rsquo; quoth the
+doubters.&nbsp; &lsquo;Why!&rsquo; quoth the old gentleman;
+&lsquo;why! because both the Prince and Lord Secretary, and their
+captains and soldiers, are all at present in town; yea, the town
+is as full of them as ever it can hold.&nbsp; And besides, there
+is one whose name is Willbewill, a most cruel enemy of ours, and
+him the Prince has made keeper of the gates, and has commanded
+him that, with all the diligence he can, he should look for,
+search out, and destroy all, and all manner of
+Diabolonians.&nbsp; And if he lighteth upon you, down you go,
+though your heads were made of gold.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>And now, to see how it happened, one of the Lord
+Willbewill&rsquo;s faithful soldiers, whose name was Mr.
+Diligence, stood all this while listening under old
+Evil-Questioning&rsquo;s eaves, and heard all the talk that had
+been betwixt him and the doubters that he entertained under his
+roof.</p>
+<p>The soldier was a man that my lord had much confidence in, and
+that he loved dearly; and that both because he was a man of
+courage, and also a man that was unwearied in seeking after
+Diabolonians to apprehend them.</p>
+<p>Now this man, as I told you, heard all the talk that was
+between old Evil-Questioning and these Diabolonians; wherefore
+what does he but goes to his lord, and tells him what he had
+heard.&nbsp; &lsquo;And sayest thou so, my trusty?&rsquo; quoth
+my lord.&nbsp; &lsquo;Ay,&rsquo; quoth Diligence, &lsquo;that I
+do; and if your lordship will be pleased to go with me, you shall
+find it as I have said.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;And are they
+there?&rsquo; quoth my lord.&nbsp; &lsquo;I know Evil-Questioning
+well, for he and I were great in the time of our apostasy: but I
+know not now where he dwells.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;But I
+do,&rsquo; said his man, &lsquo;and if your lordship will go, I
+will lead you the way to his den.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Go!&rsquo;
+quoth my lord, &lsquo;that I will.&nbsp; Come, my Diligence, let
+us go find them out.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>So my lord and his man went together the direct way to his
+house.&nbsp; Now his man went before to show him his way, and
+they went till they came even under old Mr.
+Evil-Questioning&rsquo;s wall.&nbsp; Then said Diligence,
+&lsquo;Hark! my lord, do you know the old gentleman&rsquo;s
+tongue when you hear it?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Yes,&rsquo; said my
+lord, &lsquo;I know it well, but I have not seen him many a
+day.&nbsp; This I know, he is cunning; I wish he doth not give us
+the slip.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Let me alone for that,&rsquo; said
+his servant Diligence.&nbsp; &lsquo;But how shall we find the
+door?&rsquo; quoth my lord.&nbsp; &lsquo;Let me alone for that,
+too,&rsquo; said his man.&nbsp; So he had my Lord Willbewill
+about, and showed him the way to the door.&nbsp; Then my lord,
+without more ado, broke open the door, rushed into the house, and
+caught them all five together, even as Diligence his man had told
+him.&nbsp; So my lord apprehended them, and led them away, and
+committed them to the hand of Mr. Trueman, the gaoler, and
+commanded, and he did put them in ward.&nbsp; This done, my Lord
+Mayor was acquainted in the morning with what my Lord Willbewill
+had done over night, and his lordship rejoiced much at the news,
+not only because there were doubters apprehended, but because
+that old Evil-Questioning was taken; for he had been a very great
+trouble to Mansoul, and much affliction to my Lord Mayor
+himself.&nbsp; He had also been sought for often, but no hand
+could ever be laid upon him till now.</p>
+<p>Well, the next thing was to make preparation to try these five
+that by my lord had been apprehended, and that were in the hands
+of Mr. Trueman, the gaoler.&nbsp; So the day was set, and the
+court called and come together, and the prisoners brought to the
+bar.&nbsp; My Lord Willbewill had power to have slain them when
+at first he took them, and that without any more ado; but he
+thought it at this time more for the honour of the Prince, the
+comfort of Mansoul, and the discouragement of the enemy, to bring
+them forth to public judgment.</p>
+<p>But, I say, Mr. Trueman brought them in chains to the bar; to
+the town-hall, for that was the place of judgment.&nbsp; So, to
+be short, the jury was panelled, the witnesses sworn, and the
+prisoners tried for their lives: the jury was the same that tried
+Mr. No-Truth, Pitiless, Haughty, and the rest of their
+companions.</p>
+<p>And, first, old Questioning himself was set to the bar for he
+was the receiver, the entertainer, and comforter of these
+doubters, that by nation were outlandish men: then he was bid to
+hearken to his charge, and was told that he had liberty to
+object, if he had ought to say for himself.&nbsp; So his
+indictment was read: the manner and form here follows.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Mr. Questioning, Thou art here indicted by the name of
+Evil-Questioning, an intruder upon the town of Mansoul, for that
+thou art a Diabolonian by nature, and also a hater of the Prince
+Emmanuel, and one that hast studied the ruin of the town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; Thou art also here indicted for countenancing the
+King&rsquo;s enemies, after wholesome laws made to the contrary:
+for, 1. Thou hast questioned the truth of her doctrine and state:
+2. In wishing that ten thousand doubters were in her: 3. In
+receiving, in entertaining, and encouraging of her enemies, that
+came from their army unto thee.&nbsp; What sayest thou to this
+indictment? art thou guilty or not guilty?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;My lord,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;I know not the meaning
+of this indictment, forasmuch as I am not the man concerned in
+it; the man that standeth by this charge accused before this
+bench is called by the name of Evil-Questioning, which name I
+deny to be mine, mine being Honest-Inquiry.&nbsp; The one indeed
+sounds like the other; but, I trow, your lordships know that
+between these two there is a wide difference; for I hope that a
+man, even in the worst of times, and that, too, amongst the worst
+of men, may make an honest inquiry after things, without running
+the danger of death.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then spake my Lord Willbewill, for he was one of the
+witnesses: &lsquo;My lord, and you the honourable bench and
+magistrates of the town of Mansoul, you all have heard with your
+ears that the prisoner at the bar has denied his name, and so
+thinks to shift from the charge of the indictment.&nbsp; But I
+know him to be the man concerned, and that his proper name is
+Evil-Questioning.&nbsp; I have known him, my lord, above these
+thirty years, for he and I (a shame it is for me to speak it)
+were great acquaintance, when Diabolus, that tyrant, had the
+government of Mansoul; and I testify that he is a Diabolonian by
+nature, an enemy to our Prince, and a hater of the blessed town
+of Mansoul.&nbsp; He has, in times of rebellion, been at and lain
+in my house, my lord, not so little as twenty nights together,
+and we did use to talk then, for the substance of talk, as he and
+his doubters have talked of late: true, I have not seen him many
+a day.&nbsp; I suppose that the coming of Emmanuel to Mansoul has
+made him change his lodgings, as this indictment has driven him
+to change his name; but this is the man, my lord.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said the court unto him, &lsquo;Hast thou any more to
+say?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Yes,&rsquo; quoth the old gentleman, &lsquo;that I
+have; for all that as yet has been said against me, is but by the
+mouth of one witness; and it is not lawful for the famous town of
+Mansoul, at the mouth of one witness, to put any man to
+death.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then stood forth Mr. Diligence, and said, &lsquo;My lord, as I
+was upon my watch such a night at the head of Bad Street, in this
+town, I chanced to hear a muttering within this gentleman&rsquo;s
+house.&nbsp; Then, thought I, what is to do here?&nbsp; So I went
+up close, but very softly, to the side of the house to listen,
+thinking, as indeed it fell out, that there I might light upon
+some Diabolonian conventicle.&nbsp; So, as I said, I drew nearer
+and nearer; and when I was got up close to the wall, it was but a
+while before I perceived that there were outlandish men in the
+house; but I did well understand their speech, for I have been a
+traveller myself.&nbsp; Now, hearing such language in such a
+tottering cottage as this old gentleman dwelt in, I clapped mine
+ear to a hole in the window, and there heard them talk as
+followeth.&nbsp; This old Mr. Questioning asked these doubters
+what they were, whence they came, and what was their business in
+these parts; and they told him to all these questions, yet he did
+entertain them.&nbsp; He also asked what numbers there were of
+them; and they told him ten thousand men.&nbsp; He then asked
+them, why they made no more manly assault upon Mansoul; and they
+told him: so he called their general coward, for marching off
+when he should have fought for his prince.&nbsp; Further, this
+old Evil-Questioning wished, and I heard him wish, would all the
+ten thousand doubters were now in Mansoul, and himself at the
+head of them.&nbsp; He bid them also to take heed and lie quat;
+for if they were taken they must die, although they had heads of
+gold.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then said the court: &lsquo;Mr.
+Evil-Questioning, here is now another witness against you, and
+his testimony is full: 1. He swears that you did receive these
+men into your house, and that you did nourish them there, though
+you knew that they were Diabolonians, and the King&rsquo;s
+enemies.&nbsp; 2. He swears that you did wish ten thousand of
+them in Mansoul.&nbsp; 3. He swears that you did give them advice
+to be quat and close, lest they were taken by the King&rsquo;s
+servants.&nbsp; All which manifesteth that thou art a
+Diabolonian; but hadst thou been a friend to the King, thou
+wouldst have apprehended them.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said Evil-Questioning: &lsquo;To the first of these I
+answer, The men that came into mine house were strangers, and I
+took them in; and is it now become a crime in Mansoul for a man
+to entertain strangers?&nbsp; That I did also nourish them is
+true; and why should my charity be blamed?&nbsp; As for the
+reason why I wished ten thousand of them in Mansoul, I never told
+it to the witnesses, nor to themselves.&nbsp; I might wish them
+to be taken, and so my wish might mean well to Mansoul, for aught
+that any yet knows.&nbsp; I did also bid them take heed that they
+fell not into the captains&rsquo; hands; but that might be
+because I am unwilling that any man should be slain, and not
+because I would have the King&rsquo;s enemies as such
+escape.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>My Lord Mayor then replied: &lsquo;That though it was a virtue
+to entertain strangers, yet it was treason to entertain the
+King&rsquo;s enemies.&nbsp; And for what else thou hast said,
+thou dost by words but labour to evade and defer the execution of
+judgment.&nbsp; But could there be no more proved against thee
+but that thou art a Diabolonian, thou must for that die the death
+by the law; but to be a receiver, a nourisher, a countenancer,
+and a harbourer of others of them, yea, of outlandish
+Diabolonians, yea, of them that came from far on purpose to cut
+off and destroy our Mansoul&mdash;this must not be
+borne.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said Evil-Questioning: &lsquo;I see how the game will go:
+I must die for my name, and for my charity.&rsquo;&nbsp; And so
+he held his peace.</p>
+<p>Then they called the outlandish doubters to the bar, and the
+first of them that was arraigned was the election doubter.&nbsp;
+So his indictment was read; and because he was an outlandish man,
+the substance of it was told him by an interpreter; namely,
+&lsquo;That he was there charged with being an enemy of Emmanuel
+the Prince, a hater of the town of Mansoul, and an opposer of her
+most wholesome doctrine.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then the judge asked him if he would plead? but he said only
+this&mdash;That he confessed that he was an election doubter, and
+that that was the religion that he had ever been brought up
+in.&nbsp; And said, moreover, &lsquo;If I must die for my
+religion, I trow, I shall die a martyr, and so I care the
+less.&rsquo;</p>
+<p><i>Judge</i>.&nbsp; Then it was replied: &lsquo;To question
+election, is to overthrow a great doctrine of the gospel, namely,
+the omnisciency, and power, and will of God; to take away the
+liberty of God with his creature, to stumble the faith of the
+town of Mansoul, and to make salvation to depend upon works, and
+not upon grace.&nbsp; It also belied the word, and disquieted the
+minds of the men of Mansoul; therefore by the best of laws he
+must die.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then was the vocation doubter called, and set to the bar; and
+his indictment for substance was the same with the other, only he
+was particularly charged with denying the calling of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>The judge asked him also what he had to say for himself?</p>
+<p>So he replied: &lsquo;That he never believed that there was
+any such thing as a distinct and powerful call of God to Mansoul;
+otherwise than by the general voice of the word, nor by that
+neither, otherwise than as it exhorted them to forbear evil, and
+to do that which is good, and in so doing a promise of happiness
+is annexed.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said the judge: &lsquo;Thou art a Diabolonian, and hast
+denied a great part of one of the most experimental truths of the
+Prince of the town of Mansoul; for he has called, and she has
+heard a most distinct and powerful call of her Emmanuel, by which
+she has been quickened, awakened, and possessed with heavenly
+grace to desire to have communion with her Prince, to serve him,
+and to do his will, and to look for her happiness merely of his
+good pleasure.&nbsp; And for thine abhorrence of this good
+doctrine, thou must die the death.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then the grace doubter was called, and his indictment was read
+and he replied thereto: &lsquo;That though he was of the land of
+doubting, his father was the offspring of a Pharisee, and lived
+in good fashion among his neighbours, and that he taught him to
+believe, and believe it I do, and will, that Mansoul shall never
+be saved freely by grace.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>Then said the judge: &lsquo;Why, the law of the Prince is
+plain: 1. Negatively, &ldquo;not of works:&rdquo; 2. Positively,
+&ldquo;by grace you are saved.&rdquo;&nbsp; And thy religion
+settleth in and upon the works of the flesh; for the works of the
+law are the works of the flesh.&nbsp; Besides, in saying as thou
+hast done, thou hast robbed God of His glory, and given it to a
+sinful man; thou hast robbed Christ of the necessity of His
+undertaking, and the sufficiency thereof, and hast given both
+these to the works of the flesh.&nbsp; Thou hast despised the
+work of the Holy Ghost, and hast magnified the will of the flesh,
+and of the legal mind.&nbsp; Thou art a Diabolonian, the son of a
+Diabolonian; and for thy Diabolonian principles thou must
+die.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>The court then, having proceeded thus far with them, sent out
+the jury, who forthwith brought them in guilty of death.&nbsp;
+Then stood up the Recorder, and addressed himself to the
+prisoners: &lsquo;You, the prisoners at the bar, you have been
+here indicted, and proved guilty of high crimes against Emmanuel
+our Prince, and against the welfare of the famous town of
+Mansoul, crimes for which you must be put to death, and die ye
+accordingly.&rsquo;&nbsp; So they were sentenced to the death of
+the cross.&nbsp; The place assigned them for execution, was that
+where Diabolus drew up his last army against Mansoul; save only
+that old Evil-Questioning was hanged at the top of Bad Street,
+just over against his own door.</p>
+<p>When the town of Mansoul had thus far rid themselves of their
+enemies, and of the troublers of their peace, in the next place a
+strict commandment was given out, that yet my Lord Willbewill
+should, with Diligence his man, search for, and do his best to
+apprehend what town Diabolonians were yet left alive in
+Mansoul.&nbsp; The names of several of them were, Mr. Fooling,
+Mr. Let-Good-Slip, Mr. Slavish-Fear, Mr. No-Love, Mr. Mistrust,
+Mr. Flesh, and Mr. Sloth.&nbsp; It was also commanded, that he
+should apprehend Mr. Evil-Questioning&rsquo;s children, that he
+left behind him, and that they should demolish his house.&nbsp;
+The children that he left behind him were these: Mr. Doubt, and
+he was his eldest son; the next to him was Legal-Life, Unbelief,
+Wrong-Thoughts-of-Christ, Clip-Promise, Carnal-Sense,
+Live-by-Feeling, Self-Love.&nbsp; All these he had by one wife,
+and her name was No-Hope; she was the kinswoman of old
+Incredulity, for he was her uncle; and when her father, old Dark,
+was dead, he took her and brought her up, and when she was
+marriageable, he gave her to this old Evil-Questioning to
+wife.</p>
+<p>Now the Lord Willbewill did put into execution his commission,
+with great Diligence, his man.&nbsp; He took Fooling in the
+streets, and hanged him up in Want-wit-Alley, over against his
+own house.&nbsp; This Fooling was he that would have had the town
+of Mansoul deliver up Captain Credence into the hands of
+Diabolus, provided that then he would have withdrawn his force
+out of the town.&nbsp; He also took Mr. Let-Good-Slip one day as
+he was busy in the market, and executed him according to
+law.&nbsp; Now there was an honest poor man in Mansoul, and his
+name was Mr. Meditation, one of no great account in the days of
+apostasy, but now of repute with the best of the town.&nbsp; This
+man, therefore, they were willing to prefer.&nbsp; Now Mr.
+Let-Good-Slip had a great deal of wealth heretofore in Mansoul,
+and, at Emmanuel&rsquo;s coming, it was sequestered to the use of
+the Prince: this, therefore, was now given to Mr. Meditation, to
+improve for the common good, and after him to his son, Mr.
+Think-Well; this Think-Well he had by Mrs. Piety his wife, and
+she was the daughter of Mr. Recorder.</p>
+<p>After this, my lord apprehended Clip-Promise: now because he
+was a notorious villain, for by his doings much of the
+King&rsquo;s coin was abused, therefore he was made a public
+example.&nbsp; He was arraigned and judged to be first set in the
+pillory, then to be whipped by all the children and servants in
+Mansoul, and then to be hanged till he was dead.&nbsp; Some may
+wonder at the severity of this man&rsquo;s punishment; but those
+that are honest traders in Mansoul, are sensible of the great
+abuse that one clipper of promises in little time may do to the
+town of Mansoul.&nbsp; And truly my judgment is, that all those
+of his name and life should be served even as he.</p>
+<p>He also apprehended Carnal-Sense, and put him in hold; but how
+it came about, I cannot tell, but he brake prison, and made his
+escape: yea, and the bold villain will not yet quit the town, but
+lurks in the Diabolonian dens a days, and haunts like a ghost
+honest men&rsquo;s houses a nights.&nbsp; Wherefore, there was a
+proclamation set up in the market-place in Mansoul, signifying
+that whosoever could discover Carnal-Sense, and apprehend him and
+slay him, should be admitted daily to the Prince&rsquo;s table,
+and should be made keeper of the treasure of Mansoul.&nbsp; Many,
+therefore, did bend themselves to do this thing, but take him and
+slay him they could not, though often he was discovered.</p>
+<p>But my lord took Mr. Wrong-Thoughts-of-Christ, and put him in
+prison, and he died there; though it was long first, for he died
+of a lingering consumption.</p>
+<p>Self-Love was also taken and committed to custody; but there
+were many that were allied to him in Mansoul, so his judgment was
+deferred.&nbsp; But at last Mr. Self-Denial stood up, and said:
+&lsquo;If such villains as these may be winked at in Mansoul, I
+will lay down my commission.&rsquo;&nbsp; He also took him from
+the crowd, and had him among his soldiers, and there he was
+brained.&nbsp; But some in Mansoul muttered at it, though none
+durst speak plainly, because Emmanuel was in town.&nbsp; But this
+brave act of Captain Self-Denial came to the Prince&rsquo;s ears;
+so he sent for him, and made him a lord in Mansoul.&nbsp; My Lord
+Willbewill also obtained great commendations of Emmanuel, for
+what he had done for the town of Mansoul.</p>
+<p>Then my Lord Self-Denial took courage, and set to the pursuing
+of the Diabolonians, with my Lord Willbewill; and they took
+Live-by-Feeling, and they took Legal-Life, and put them in hold
+till they died.&nbsp; But Mr. Unbelief was a nimble Jack: him
+they could never lay hold of, though they attempted to do it
+often.&nbsp; He therefore, and some few more of the subtlest of
+the Diabolonian tribe, did yet remain in Mansoul, to the time
+that Mansoul left off to dwell any longer in the kingdom of
+Universe.&nbsp; But they kept them to their dens and holes: if
+one of them did appear, or happen to be seen in any of the
+streets of the town of Mansoul, the whole town would be up in
+arms after them; yea, the very children in Mansoul would cry out
+after them as after a thief, and would wish that they might stone
+them to death with stones.&nbsp; And now did Mansoul arrive to
+some good degree of peace and quiet; her Prince also did abide
+within her borders; her captains, also, and her soldiers did
+their duties; and Mansoul minded her trade that she had with the
+country that was afar off; also she was busy in her
+manufacture.</p>
+<p>When the town of Mansoul had thus far rid themselves of so
+many of their enemies, and the troublers of their peace, the
+Prince sent to them, and appointed a day wherein he would, at the
+market-place, meet the whole people, and there give them in
+charge concerning some further matters, that, if observed, would
+tend to their further safety and comfort, and to the condemnation
+and destruction of their home-bred Diabolonians.&nbsp; So the day
+appointed was come, and the townsmen met together; Emmanuel also
+came down in his chariot, and all his captains in their state
+attending him, on the right hand and on the left.&nbsp; Then was
+an oyes made for silence, and, after some mutual carriages of
+love, the Prince began, and thus proceeded:&mdash;</p>
+<p>&lsquo;You, my Mansoul, and the beloved of mine heart, many
+and great are the privileges that I have bestowed upon you; I
+have singled you out from others, and have chosen you to myself,
+not for your worthiness, but for mine own sake.&nbsp; I have also
+redeemed you, not only from the dread of my Father&rsquo;s law,
+but from the hand of Diabolus.&nbsp; This I have done because I
+loved you, and because I have set my heart upon you to do you
+good.&nbsp; I have also, that all things, that might hinder thy
+way to the pleasures of paradise might be taken out of the way,
+laid down for thee for thy soul a plenary satisfaction, and have
+bought thee to myself; a price not of corruptible things, as of
+silver and gold, but a price of blood, mine own blood, which I
+have freely spilled upon the ground to make thee mine.&nbsp; So I
+have reconciled thee, O my Mansoul, to my Father, and entrusted
+thee in the mansion houses that are with my Father in the royal
+city, where things are, O my Mansoul, that eye hath not seen, nor
+hath entered into the heart of man to conceive.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Besides, O my Mansoul, thou seest what I have done, and
+how I have taken thee out of the hands of thine enemies: unto
+whom thou hadst deeply revolted from my Father, and by whom thou
+wast content to be possessed, and also to be destroyed.&nbsp; I
+came to thee first by my law, then by my gospel, to awaken thee,
+and show thee my glory.&nbsp; And thou knowest what thou wast,
+what thou saidst, what thou didst, and how many times thou
+rebelledst against my Father and me; yet I left thee not as thou
+seest this day, but came to thee, have borne thy manners, have
+waited upon thee, and, after all, accepted of thee, even of my
+mere grace and favour; and would not suffer thee to be lost, as
+thou most willingly wouldst have been.&nbsp; I also compassed
+thee about, and afflicted thee on every side, that I might make
+thee weary of thy ways, and bring down thy heart with molestation
+to a willingness to close with thy good and happiness.&nbsp; And
+when I had gotten a complete conquest over thee, I turned it to
+thy advantage.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Thou seest, also, what a company of my Father&rsquo;s
+host I have lodged within thy borders: captains and rulers,
+soldiers and men of war, engines and excellent devices to subdue
+and bring down thy foes; thou knowest my meaning, O
+Mansoul.&nbsp; And they are my servants, and thine, too,
+Mansoul.&nbsp; Yea, my design of possessing of thee with them,
+and the natural tendency of each of them is to defend, purge,
+strengthen, and sweeten thee for myself, O Mansoul, and to make
+thee meet for my Father&rsquo;s presence, blessing, and glory;
+for thou, my Mansoul, art created to be prepared unto these.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Thou seest, moreover, my Mansoul, how I have passed by
+thy backslidings, and have healed thee.&nbsp; Indeed I was angry
+with thee, but I have turned mine anger away from thee, because I
+loved thee still, and mine anger and mine indignation is ceased
+in the destruction of thine enemies, O Mansoul.&nbsp; Nor did thy
+goodness fetch me again unto thee, after that I for thy
+transgressions have hid my face, and withdrawn my presence from
+thee.&nbsp; The way of backsliding was thine, but the way and
+means of thy recovery was mine.&nbsp; I invented the means of thy
+return; it was I that made an hedge and a wall, when thou wast
+beginning to turn to things in which I delighted not.&nbsp; It
+was I that made thy sweet bitter, thy day night, thy smooth way
+thorny, and that also confounded all that sought thy
+destruction.&nbsp; It was I that set Mr. Godly-Fear to work in
+Mansoul.&nbsp; It was I that stirred up thy conscience and
+understanding, thy will and thy affections, after thy great and
+woful decay.&nbsp; It was I that put life into thee, O Mansoul,
+to seek me, that thou mightest find me, and in thy finding find
+thine own health, happiness, and salvation.&nbsp; It was I that
+fetched the second time the Diabolonians out of Mansoul; and it
+was I that overcame them, and that destroyed them before thy
+face.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;And now, my Mansoul, I am returned to thee in peace,
+and thy transgressions against me are as if they had not
+been.&nbsp; Nor shall it be with thee as in former days, but I
+will do better for thee than at thy beginning.</p>
+<p>For yet a little while, O my Mansoul, even after a few more
+times are gone over thy head, I will (but be not thou troubled at
+what I say) take down this famous town of Mansoul, stick and
+stone, to the ground.&nbsp; And I will carry the stones thereof,
+and the timber thereof, and the walls thereof, and the dust
+thereof, and the inhabitants thereof, into mine own country, even
+into a kingdom of my Father; and will there set it up in such
+strength and glory, as it never did see in the kingdom where now
+it is placed.&nbsp; I will even there set it up for my
+Father&rsquo;s habitation; for for that purpose it was at first
+erected in the kingdom of Universe; and there will I make it a
+spectacle of wonder, a monument of mercy, and the admirer of its
+own mercy.&nbsp; There shall the natives of Mansoul see all that,
+of which they have seen nothing here: there shall they be equal
+to those unto whom they have been inferior here.&nbsp; And there
+shalt thou, O my Mansoul, have such communion with me, with my
+Father, and with your Lord Secretary, as it is not possible here
+to be enjoyed, nor ever could be, shouldest thou live in Universe
+the space of a thousand years.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;And there, O my Mansoul, thou shalt be afraid of
+murderers no more; of Diabolonians, and their threats, no
+more.&nbsp; There, there shall be no more plots, nor
+contrivances, nor designs against thee, O my Mansoul.&nbsp; There
+thou shalt no more hear the evil-tidings, or the noise of the
+Diabolonian drum.&nbsp; There thou shalt not see the Diabolonian
+standard-bearers, nor yet behold Diabolus&rsquo;s standard.&nbsp;
+No Diabolonian mount shall be cast up against thee there; nor
+shall there the Diabolonian standard be set up to make thee
+afraid.&nbsp; There thou shalt not need captains, engines,
+soldiers, and men of war.&nbsp; There thou shalt meet with no
+sorrow, nor grief, nor shall it be possible that any Diabolonian
+should again, for ever, be able to creep into thy skirts, burrow
+in thy walls, or be seen again within thy borders all the days of
+eternity.&nbsp; Life shall there last longer than here you are
+able to desire it should; and yet it shall always be sweet and
+new, nor shall any impediment attend it for ever.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;There, O Mansoul, thou shalt meet with many of those
+that have been like thee, and that have been partakers of thy
+sorrows; even such as I have chosen, and redeemed, and set apart,
+as thou, for my Father&rsquo;s court and city-royal.&nbsp; All
+they will be glad in thee, and thou, when thou seest them, shalt
+be glad in thine heart.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;There are things, O Mansoul, even things of my
+Father&rsquo;s providing, and mine, that never were seen since
+the beginning of the world; and they are laid up with my Father,
+and sealed up among his treasures for thee, till thou shalt come
+thither to enjoy them.&nbsp; I told you before, that I would
+remove my Mansoul, and set it up elsewhere; and where I will set
+it, there are those that love thee, and those that rejoice in
+thee now; but how much more, when they shall see thee exalted to
+honour!&nbsp; My Father will then send them for you to fetch you;
+and their bosoms are chariots to put you in.&nbsp; And you, O my
+Mansoul, shall ride upon the wings of the wind.&nbsp; They will
+come to convey, conduct, and bring you to that, when your eyes
+see more, that will be your desired haven.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;And thus, O my Mansoul, I have showed unto thee what
+shall be done to thee hereafter, if thou canst hear, if thou
+canst understand; and now I will tell thee what at present must
+be thy duty and practice, until I come and fetch thee to myself,
+according as is related in the Scriptures of truth.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;First, I charge thee that thou dost hereafter keep more
+white and clean the liveries which I gave thee before my last
+withdrawing from thee.&nbsp; Do it, I say, for this will be thy
+wisdom.&nbsp; They are in themselves fine linen, but thou must
+keep them white and clean.&nbsp; This will be your wisdom, your
+honour, and will be greatly for my glory.&nbsp; When your
+garments are white, the world will count you mine.&nbsp; Also,
+when your garments are white, then I am delighted in your ways;
+for then your goings to and fro will be like a flash of
+lightning, that those that are present must take notice of; also
+their eyes will be made to dazzle thereat.&nbsp; Deck thyself,
+therefore, according to my bidding, and make thyself by my law
+straight steps for thy feet; so shall thy King greatly desire thy
+beauty, for he is thy Lord, and worship thou him.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Now, that thou mayest keep them as I bid thee, I have,
+as I before did tell thee, provided for thee an open fountain to
+wash thy garments in.&nbsp; Look, therefore, that thou wash often
+in my fountain, and go not in defiled garments; for as it is to
+my dishonour and my disgrace, so it will be to thy discomfort,
+when you shall walk in filthy garments.&nbsp; Let not, therefore,
+my garments, your garments, the garments that I gave thee, be
+defiled or spotted by the flesh.&nbsp; Keep thy garments always
+white, and let thy head lack no ointment.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;My Mansoul, I have ofttimes delivered thee from the
+designs, plots, attempts, and conspiracies of Diabolus; and for
+all this I ask thee nothing, but that thou render not to me evil
+for my good; but that thou bear in mind my love, and the
+continuation of my kindness to my beloved Mansoul, so as to
+provoke thee to walk in thy measure according to the benefit
+bestowed on thee.&nbsp; Of old, the sacrifices were bound with
+cords to the horns of the altar.&nbsp; Consider what is said to
+thee, O my blessed Mansoul.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;O my Mansoul, I have lived, I have died, I live, and
+will die no more for thee.&nbsp; I live, that thou mayest not
+die.&nbsp; Because I live, thou shalt live also.&nbsp; I
+reconciled thee to my Father by the blood of my cross; and being
+reconciled, thou shalt live through me.&nbsp; I will pray for
+thee; I will fight for thee; I will yet do thee good.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Nothing can hurt thee but sin; nothing can grieve me
+but sin; nothing can make thee base before thy foes but sin: take
+heed of sin, my Mansoul.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;And dost thou know why I at first, and do still, suffer
+Diabolonians to dwell in thy walls, O Mansoul?&nbsp; It is to
+keep thee wakening, to try thy love, to make thee watchful, and
+to cause thee yet to prize my noble captains, their soldiers, and
+my mercy.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;It is also, that yet thou mayest be made to remember
+what a deplorable condition thou once wast in.&nbsp; I mean when,
+not some, but all did dwell, not in thy walls, but in thy castle,
+and in thy stronghold, O Mansoul.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;O my Mansoul, should I slay all them within, many there
+be without, that would bring thee into bondage; for were all
+these within cut off, those without would find thee sleeping; and
+then, as in a moment, they would swallow up my Mansoul.&nbsp; I
+therefore left them in thee, not to do thee hurt (the which they
+yet will, if thou hearken to them, and serve them,) but to do
+thee good, the which they must, if thou watch and fight against
+them.&nbsp; Know, therefore, that whatever they shall tempt thee
+to, my design is, that they should drive thee, not further off,
+but nearer to my father, to learn thee war, to make petitioning
+desirable to thee, and to make thee little in thine own
+eyes.&nbsp; Hearken diligently to this, my Mansoul.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Show me, then, thy love, my Mansoul, and let not those
+that are within thy walls, take thy affections off from him that
+hath redeemed thy soul.&nbsp; Yea, let the sight of a Diabolonian
+heighten thy love to me.&nbsp; I came once, and twice, and
+thrice, to save thee from the poison of those arrows that would
+have wrought thy death: stand for me, thy Friend, my Mansoul,
+against the Diabolonians, and I will stand for thee before my
+Father, and all his court.&nbsp; Love me against temptation, and
+I will love thee notwithstanding thine infirmities.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;O my Mansoul, remember what my captains, my soldiers,
+and mine engines have done for thee.&nbsp; They have fought for
+thee, they have suffered by thee, they have borne much at thy
+hands to do thee good, O Mansoul.&nbsp; Hadst thou not had them
+to help thee, Diabolus had certainly made a hand of thee.&nbsp;
+Nourish them, therefore, my Mansoul.&nbsp; When thou dost well,
+they will be well; when thou dost ill, they will be ill, and
+sick, and weak.&nbsp; Make not my captains sick, O Mansoul; for
+if they be sick, thou canst not be well; if they be weak, thou
+canst not be strong; if they be faint, thou canst not be stout
+and valiant for thy King, O Mansoul.&nbsp; Nor must thou think
+always to live by sense: thou must live upon my word.&nbsp; Thou
+must believe, O my Mansoul, when I am from thee, that yet I love
+thee, and bear thee upon mine heart for ever.</p>
+<p>&lsquo;Remember, therefore, O my Mansoul, that thou art
+beloved of me: as I have, therefore, taught thee to watch, to
+fight, to pray, and to make war against my foes; so now I command
+thee to believe that my love is constant to thee.&nbsp; O my
+Mansoul, how have I set my heart, my love upon thee!&nbsp;
+Watch.&nbsp; Behold, I lay none other burden upon thee, than what
+thou hast already.&nbsp; Hold fast, till I come.&rsquo;</p>
+<h2>FOOTNOTES</h2>
+<p><a name="footnote0"></a><a href="#citation0"
+class="footnote">[0]</a>&nbsp; Unfortunately the illustrations
+are still in copyright in the UK (where I live), and so have not
+been included.&nbsp; They will be included when they come out of
+copyright in the UK.&mdash;DP.</p>
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HOLY WAR MADE BY SHADDAI UPON
+DIABOLUS***</p>
+<pre>
+
+
+***** This file should be named 395-h.htm or 395-h.zip******
+
+
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/3/9/395
+
+
+
+Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
+will be renamed.
+
+Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
+one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
+(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
+permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules,
+set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
+copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
+protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project
+Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
+charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you
+do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
+rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
+such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
+research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
+practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is
+subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
+redistribution.
+
+
+
+*** START: FULL LICENSE ***
+
+THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
+PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK
+
+To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
+distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
+(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License available with this file or online at
+ www.gutenberg.org/license.
+
+
+Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic works
+
+1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
+and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
+(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all
+the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
+all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
+If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
+terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
+entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.
+
+1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be
+used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
+agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few
+things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
+even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See
+paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
+and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works. See paragraph 1.E below.
+
+1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
+or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the
+collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an
+individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
+located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
+copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
+works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
+are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
+Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
+freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
+this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
+the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
+keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
+Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.
+
+1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
+what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in
+a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check
+the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
+before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
+creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
+Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning
+the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
+States.
+
+1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:
+
+1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
+access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
+whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
+phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
+Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
+copied or distributed:
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
+from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
+posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
+and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
+or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
+with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
+work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
+through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
+Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
+1.E.9.
+
+1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
+with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
+must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
+terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked
+to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
+permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.
+
+1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
+work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.
+
+1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
+electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
+prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
+active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm License.
+
+1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
+compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
+word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or
+distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
+"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
+posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
+you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
+copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
+request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
+form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.
+
+1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
+performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
+unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.
+
+1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
+access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
+that
+
+- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
+ the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
+ you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is
+ owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
+ has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
+ Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments
+ must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
+ prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
+ returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
+ sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
+ address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
+ the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
+ you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
+ does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
+ License. You must require such a user to return or
+ destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
+ and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
+ Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
+ money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
+ electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
+ of receipt of the work.
+
+- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
+ distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.
+
+1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
+electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
+forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
+both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
+Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the
+Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.
+
+1.F.
+
+1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
+effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
+public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
+collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
+"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
+property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
+computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
+your equipment.
+
+1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
+of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
+Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
+Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
+liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
+fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
+LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
+PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
+TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
+LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
+INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
+DAMAGE.
+
+1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
+defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
+receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
+written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you
+received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
+your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with
+the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
+refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
+providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
+receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy
+is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
+opportunities to fix the problem.
+
+1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
+in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS', WITH NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
+WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.
+
+1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
+warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
+If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
+law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
+interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
+the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any
+provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.
+
+1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
+trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
+providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
+with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
+promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
+harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
+that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
+or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
+work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
+Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.
+
+
+Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
+electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
+including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists
+because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
+people in all walks of life.
+
+Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
+assistance they need are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
+goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
+remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project
+Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
+and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
+To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
+and the Foundation information page at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
+Foundation
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
+501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
+state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
+Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
+number is 64-6221541. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
+permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.
+
+The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
+Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
+throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at 809
+North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887. Email
+contact links and up to date contact information can be found at the
+Foundation's web site and official page at www.gutenberg.org/contact
+
+For additional contact information:
+ Dr. Gregory B. Newby
+ Chief Executive and Director
+ gbnewby@pglaf.org
+
+Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
+Literary Archive Foundation
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
+spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
+increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
+freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
+array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations
+($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
+status with the IRS.
+
+The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
+charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
+States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
+considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
+with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations
+where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To
+SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
+particular state visit www.gutenberg.org/donate
+
+While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
+have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
+against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
+approach us with offers to donate.
+
+International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
+any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
+outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.
+
+Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
+methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other
+ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
+To donate, please visit: www.gutenberg.org/donate
+
+
+Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
+works.
+
+Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
+concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
+with anyone. For forty years, he produced and distributed Project
+Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.
+
+Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:
+
+ www.gutenberg.org
+
+This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
+including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
+Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
+subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.
+</pre></body>
+</html>
diff --git a/395-h/images/p0b.jpg b/395-h/images/p0b.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..aef4923
--- /dev/null
+++ b/395-h/images/p0b.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/395-h/images/p0s.jpg b/395-h/images/p0s.jpg
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..400e5fb
--- /dev/null
+++ b/395-h/images/p0s.jpg
Binary files differ
diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..6312041
--- /dev/null
+++ b/LICENSE.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,11 @@
+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
diff --git a/README.md b/README.md
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..ad1129e
--- /dev/null
+++ b/README.md
@@ -0,0 +1,2 @@
+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #395 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/395)
diff --git a/old/hlywr10.txt b/old/hlywr10.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..47a5361
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/hlywr10.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,10093 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Holy War, by John Bunyan
+(#2 in our series by John Bunyan)
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing
+this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook.
+
+This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project
+Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do not change or edit the
+header without written permission.
+
+Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the
+eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included is
+important information about your specific rights and restrictions in
+how the file may be used. You can also find out about how to make a
+donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved.
+
+
+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
+
+**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: The Holy War
+
+Author: John Bunyan
+
+Release Date: January, 1996 [EBook #395]
+[This file was first posted on December 7, 1995]
+[Most recently updated: August 18, 2002]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, THE HOLY WAR ***
+
+
+
+
+Transcribed from the 1907 Religious Tract Society edition by David
+Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
+
+
+
+
+THE HOLY WAR
+
+
+
+
+TO THE READER.
+
+
+
+'Tis strange to me, that they that love to tell
+Things done of old, yea, and that do excel
+Their equals in historiology,
+Speak not of Mansoul's wars, but let them lie
+Dead, like old fables, or such worthless things,
+That to the reader no advantage brings:
+When men, let them make what they will their own,
+Till they know this, are to themselves unknown.
+Of stories, I well know, there's divers sorts,
+Some foreign, some domestic; and reports
+Are thereof made as fancy leads the writers:
+(By books a man may guess at the inditers.)
+Some will again of that which never was,
+Nor will be, feign (and that without a cause)
+Such matter, raise such mountains, tell such things
+Of men, of laws, of countries, and of kings;
+And in their story seem to be so sage,
+And with such gravity clothe every page,
+That though their frontispiece says all is vain,
+Yet to their way disciples they obtain.
+But, readers, I have somewhat else to do,
+Than with vain stories thus to trouble you.
+What here I say, some men do know so well,
+They can with tears and joy the story tell.
+The town of Mansoul is well known to many,
+Nor are her troubles doubted of by any
+That are acquainted with those Histories
+That Mansoul and her wars anatomize.
+Then lend thine ear to what I do relate,
+Touching the town of Mansoul and her state:
+How she was lost, took captive, made a slave:
+And how against him set, that should her save;
+Yea, how by hostile ways she did oppose
+Her Lord, and with his enemy did close.
+For they are true: he that will them deny
+Must needs the best of records vilify.
+For my part, I myself was in the town,
+Both when 'twas set up, and when pulling down.
+I saw Diabolus in his possession,
+And Mansoul also under his oppression.
+Yea, I was there when she own'd him for lord,
+And to him did submit with one accord.
+When Mansoul trampled upon things divine,
+And wallowed in filth as doth a swine;
+When she betook herself unto her arms,
+Fought her Emmanuel, despis'd his charms;
+Then I was there, and did rejoice to see
+Diabolus and Mansoul so agree.
+Let no men, then, count me a fable-maker,
+Nor make my name or credit a partaker
+Of their derision: what is here in view,
+Of mine own knowledge, I dare say is true.
+I saw the Prince's armed men come down
+By troops, by thousands, to besiege the town;
+I saw the captains, heard the trumpets sound,
+And how his forces covered all the ground.
+Yea, how they set themselves in battle-'ray,
+I shall remember to my dying day.
+I saw the colours waving in the wind,
+And they within to mischief how combin'd
+To ruin Mansoul, and to make away
+Her primum mobile without delay.
+I saw the mounts cast up against the town,
+And how the slings were placed to beat it down:
+I heard the stones fly whizzing by mine ears,
+(What longer kept in mind than got in fears?)
+I heard them fall, and saw what work they made.
+And how old Mors did cover with his shade
+The face of Mansoul; and I heard her cry,
+'Woe worth the day, in dying I shall die!'
+I saw the battering-rams, and how they play'd
+To beat open Ear-gate; and I was afraid
+Not only Ear-gate, but the very town
+Would by those battering-rams be beaten down.
+I saw the fights, and heard the captains shout,
+And in each battle saw who faced about;
+I saw who wounded were, and who were slain;
+And who, when dead, would come to life again.
+I heard the cries of those that wounded were,
+(While others fought like men bereft of fear,)
+And while the cry, 'Kill, kill,' was in mine ears,
+The gutters ran, not so with blood as tears.
+Indeed, the captains did not always fight,
+But then they would molest us day and night;
+Their cry, 'Up, fall on, let us take the town,'
+Kept us from sleeping, or from lying down.
+I was there when the gates were broken ope,
+And saw how Mansoul then was stripp'd of hope;
+I saw the captains march into the town,
+How there they fought, and did their foes cut down.
+I heard the Prince bid Boanerges go
+Up to the castle, and there seize his foe;
+And saw him and his fellows bring him down,
+In chains of great contempt quite through the town.
+I saw Emmanuel, when he possess'd
+His town of Mansoul; and how greatly blest
+A town his gallant town of Mansoul was,
+When she received his pardon, loved his laws.
+When the Diabolonians were caught,
+When tried, and when to execution brought,
+Then I was there; yea, I was standing by
+When Mansoul did the rebels crucify.
+I also saw Mansoul clad all in white,
+I heard her Prince call her his heart's delight.
+I saw him put upon her chains of gold,
+And rings, and bracelets, goodly to behold.
+What shall I say? I heard the people's cries,
+And saw the Prince wipe tears from Mansoul's eyes.
+And heard the groans, and saw the joy of many:
+Tell you of all, I neither will, nor can I.
+But by what here I say, you well may see
+That Mansoul's matchless wars no fables be.
+Mansoul, the desire of both princes was:
+One keep his gain would, t'other gain his loss.
+Diabolus would cry, 'The town is mine!'
+Emmanuel would plead a right divine
+Unto his Mansoul: then to blows they go,
+And Mansoul cries, 'These wars will me undo.'
+Mansoul! her wars seemed endless in her eyes;
+She's lost by one, becomes another's prize:
+And he again that lost her last would swear,
+'Have her I will, or her in pieces tear.'
+Mansoul! it was the very seat of war;
+Wherefore her troubles greater were by far
+Than only where the noise of war is heard,
+Or where the shaking of a sword is fear'd;
+Or only where small skirmishes are fought,
+Or where the fancy fighteth with a thought.
+She saw the swords of fighting men made red,
+And heard the cries of those with them wounded:
+Must not her frights, then, be much more by far
+Than theirs that to such doings strangers are?
+Or theirs that hear the beating of a drum,
+But not made fly for fear from house and home?
+Mansoul not only heard the trumpet's sound,
+But saw her gallants gasping on the ground:
+Wherefore we must not think that she could rest
+With them, whose greatest earnest is but jest:
+Or where the blust'ring threat'ning of great wars
+Do end in parlies, or in wording jars.
+Mansoul! her mighty wars, they did portend
+Her weal or woe, and that world without end:
+Wherefore she must be more concern'd than they
+Whose fears begin, and end the selfsame day;
+Or where none other harm doth come to him
+That is engaged, but loss of life or limb,
+As all must needs confess that now do dwell
+In Universe, and can this story tell.
+Count me not, then, with them that, to amaze
+The people, set them on the stars to gaze,
+Insinuating with much confidence,
+That each of them is now the residence
+Of some brave creatures: yea, a world they will
+Have in each star, though it be past their skill
+To make it manifest to any man,
+That reason hath, or tell his fingers can.
+But I have too long held thee in the porch,
+And kept thee from the sunshine with a torch,
+Well, now go forward, step within the door,
+And there behold five hundred times much more
+Of all sorts of such inward rarities
+As please the mind will, and will feed the eyes
+With those, which, if a Christian, thou wilt see
+Not small, but things of greatest moment be.
+Nor do thou go to work without my key;
+(In mysteries men soon do lose their way;)
+And also turn it right, if thou wouldst know
+My riddle, and wouldst with my heifer plough;
+It lies there in the window. Fare thee well,
+My next may be to ring thy passing-bell.
+
+JOHN BUNYAN.
+
+
+
+AN ADVERTISEMENT TO THE READER.
+
+
+
+Some say the 'Pilgrim's Progress' is not mine,
+Insinuating as if I would shine
+In name and fame by the worth of another,
+Like some made rich by robbing of their brother.
+Or that so fond I am of being sire,
+I'll father bastards; or, if need require,
+I'll tell a lie in print to get applause.
+I scorn it: John such dirt-heap never was,
+Since God converted him. Let this suffice
+To show why I my 'Pilgrim' patronize.
+It came from mine own heart, so to my head,
+And thence into my fingers trickled;
+Then to my pen, from whence immediately
+On paper I did dribble it daintily.
+Manner and matter, too, was all mine own,
+Nor was it unto any mortal known
+Till I had done it; nor did any then
+By books, by wits, by tongues, or hand, or pen,
+Add five words to it, or write half a line
+Thereof: the whole, and every whit is mine.
+Also for THIS, thine eye is now upon,
+The matter in this manner came from none
+But the same heart, and head, fingers, and pen,
+As did the other. Witness all good men;
+For none in all the world, without a lie,
+Can say that this is mine, excepting I
+I write not this of my ostentation,
+Nor 'cause I seek of men their commendation;
+I do it to keep them from such surmise,
+As tempt them will my name to scandalize.
+Witness my name, if anagram'd to thee,
+The letters make--'Nu hony in a B.'
+
+JOHN BUNYAN.
+
+
+
+A RELATION OF THE HOLY WAR.
+
+
+
+In my travels, as I walked through many regions and countries, it
+was my chance to happen into that famous continent of Universe. A
+very large and spacious country it is: it lieth between the two
+poles, and just amidst the four points of the heavens. It is a
+place well watered, and richly adorned with hills and valleys,
+bravely situate, and for the most part, at least where I was, very
+fruitful, also well peopled, and a very sweet air.
+
+The people are not all of one complexion, nor yet of one language,
+mode, or way of religion, but differ as much as, it is said, do the
+planets themselves. Some are right, and some are wrong, even as it
+happeneth to be in lesser regions.
+
+In this country, as I said, it was my lot to travel; and there
+travel I did, and that so long, even till I learned much of their
+mother tongue, together with the customs and manners of them among
+whom I was. And, to speak truth, I was much delighted to see and
+hear many things which I saw and heard among them; yea, I had, to
+be sure, even lived and died a native among them, (so was I taken
+with them and their doings,) had not my master sent for me home to
+his house, there to do business for him, and to oversee business
+done.
+
+Now there is in this gallant country of Universe a fair and
+delicate town, a corporation called Mansoul; a town for its
+building so curious, for its situation so commodious, for its
+privileges so advantageous, (I mean with reference to its origin,)
+that I may say of it, as was said before of the continent in which
+it is placed, There is not its equal under the whole heaven.
+
+As to the situation of this town, it lieth just between the two
+worlds; and the first founder and builder of it, so far as by the
+best and most authentic records I can gather, was one Shaddai; and
+he built it for his own delight. He made it the mirror and glory
+of all that he made, even the top-piece, beyond anything else that
+he did in that country. Yea, so goodly a town was Mansoul when
+first built, that it is said by some, the gods, at the setting up
+thereof, came down to see it, and sang for joy. And as he made it
+goodly to behold, so also mighty to have dominion over all the
+country round about. Yea, all were commanded to acknowledge
+Mansoul for their metropolitan, all were enjoined to do homage to
+it. Aye, the town itself had positive commission and power from
+her King to demand service of all, and also to subdue any that
+anyways denied to do it.
+
+There was reared up in the midst of this town a most famous and
+stately palace; for strength, it might be called a castle; for
+pleasantness, a paradise; for largeness, a place so copious as to
+contain all the world. This place the King Shaddai intended but
+for himself alone, and not another with him; partly because of his
+own delights, and partly because he would not that the terror of
+strangers should be upon the town. This place Shaddai made also a
+garrison of, but committed the keeping of it only to the men of the
+town.
+
+The walls of the town were well built, yea, so fast and firm were
+they knit and compact together, that, had it not been for the
+townsmen themselves, they could not have been shaken or broken for
+ever. For here lay the excellent wisdom of him that builded
+Mansoul, that the walls could never be broken down nor hurt by the
+most mighty adverse potentate, unless the townsmen gave consent
+thereto.
+
+This famous town of Mansoul had five gates, in at which to come,
+out at which to go; and these were made likewise answerable to the
+walls, to wit, impregnable, and such as could never be opened nor
+forced but by the will and leave of those within. The names of the
+gates were these: Ear-gate, Eye-gate, Mouth-gate, Nose-gate, and
+Feel-gate.
+
+Other things there were that belonged to the town of Mansoul, which
+if you adjoin to these, will yet give farther demonstration to all,
+of the glory and strength of the place. It had always a
+sufficiency of provision within its walls; it had the best, most
+wholesome, and excellent law that then was extant in the world.
+There was not a rascal, rogue, or traitorous person then within its
+walls; they were all true men, and fast joined together; and this,
+you know, is a great matter. And to all these, it had always (so
+long as it had the goodness to keep true to Shaddai the King) his
+countenance, his protection, and it was his delight, etc.
+
+Well, upon a time, there was one Diabolus, a mighty giant, made an
+assault upon this famous town of Mansoul, to take it, and make it
+his own habitation. This giant was king of the blacks, and a most
+raving prince he was. We will, if you please, first discourse of
+the origin of this Diabolus, and then of his taking of this famous
+town of Mansoul.
+
+This Diabolus is indeed a great and mighty prince, and yet both
+poor and beggarly. As to his origin, he was at first one of the
+servants of King Shaddai, made, and taken, and put by him into most
+high and mighty place; yea, was put into such principalities as
+belonged to the best of his territories and dominions. This
+Diabolus was made 'son of the morning,' and a brave place he had of
+it: it brought him much glory, and gave him much brightness, an
+income that might have contented his Luciferian heart, had it not
+been insatiable, and enlarged as hell itself.
+
+Well, he seeing himself thus exalted to greatness and honour, and
+raging in his mind for higher state and degree, what doth he but
+begins to think with himself how he might be set up as lord over
+all, and have the sole power under Shaddai. (Now that did the King
+reserve for his Son, yea, and had already bestowed it upon him.)
+Wherefore he first consults with himself what had best to be done;
+and then breaks his mind to some other of his companions, to the
+which they also agreed. So, in fine, they came to this issue that
+they should make an attempt upon the King's Son to destroy him,
+that the inheritance might be theirs. Well, to be short, the
+treason, as I said, was concluded, the time appointed, the word
+given, the rebels rendezvoused, and the assault attempted. Now the
+King and his Son being all and always eye, could not but discern
+all passages in his dominions; and he, having always love for his
+Son as for himself, could not at what he saw but be greatly
+provoked and offended: wherefore what does he, but takes them in
+the very nick and first trip that they made towards their design,
+convicts them of the treason, horrid rebellion, and conspiracy that
+they had devised, and now attempted to put into practice, and casts
+them altogether out of all place of trust, benefit, honour, and
+preferment. This done, he banishes them the court, turns them down
+into the horrible pits, as fast bound in chains, never more to
+expect the least favour from his hands, but to abide the judgment
+that he had appointed, and that for ever.
+
+Now they being thus cast out of all place of trust, profit, and
+honour, and also knowing that they had lost their prince's favour
+for ever, (being banished his court, and cast down to the horrible
+pits,) you may he sure they would now add to their former pride
+what malice and rage against Shaddai, and against his Son, they
+could. Wherefore, roving and ranging in much fury from place to
+place, if, perhaps, they might find something that was the King's,
+by spoiling of that, to revenge themselves on him; at last they
+happened into this spacious country of Universe, and steer their
+course towards the town of Mansoul; and considering that that town
+was one of the chief works and delights of King Shaddai, what do
+they but, after counsel taken, make an assault upon that. I say,
+they knew that Mansoul belonged unto Shaddai; for they were there
+when he built it and beautified it for himself. So when they had
+found the place, they shouted horribly for joy, and roared on it as
+a lion upon the prey, saying, 'Now we have found the prize, and how
+to be revenged on King Shaddai for what he hath done to us.' So
+they sat down and called a council of war, and considered with
+themselves what ways and methods they had best to engage in for the
+winning to themselves this famous town of Mansoul, and these four
+things were then propounded to be considered of.
+
+First. Whether they had best all of them to show themselves in
+this design to the town of Mansoul.
+
+Secondly. Whether they had best to go and sit down against Mansoul
+in their now ragged and beggarly guise.
+
+Thirdly. Whether they had best show to Mansoul their intentions,
+and what design they came about, or whether to assault it with
+words and ways of deceit.
+
+Fourthly. Whether they had not best to some of their companions to
+give out private orders to take the advantage, if they see one or
+more of the principal townsmen, to shoot them, if thereby they
+shall judge their cause and design will the better be promoted.
+
+1. It was answered to the first of these proposals in the negative,
+to wit, that it would not be best that all should show themselves
+before the town, because the appearance of many of them might alarm
+and frighten the town; whereas a few or but one of them was not so
+likely to do it. And to enforce this advice to take place it was
+added further, that if Mansoul was frighted, or did take the alarm,
+'It is impossible,' said Diabolus (for he spake now), 'that we
+should take the town: for that none can enter into it without its
+own consent. Let, therefore, but few, or but one, assault Mansoul;
+and in mine opinion,' said Diabolus, 'let me be he.' Wherefore to
+this they all agreed.
+
+2. And then to the second proposal they came, namely, Whether they
+had best go and sit down before Mansoul in their now ragged and
+beggarly guise. To which it was answered also in the negative, By
+no means; and that because, though the town of Mansoul had been
+made to know, and to have to do, before now, with things that are
+invisible, they did never as yet see any of their fellow-creatures
+in so sad and rascally condition as they; and this was the advice
+of that fierce Alecto. Then said Apollyon, 'The advice is
+pertinent; for even one of us appearing to them as we are now, must
+needs both beget and multiply such thoughts in them as will both
+put them into a consternation of spirit, and necessitate them to
+put themselves upon their guard. And if so,' said he, 'then, as my
+Lord Diabolus said but now, it is in vain for us to think of taking
+the town.' Then said that mighty giant Beelzebub, 'The advice that
+already is given is safe; for though the men of Mansoul have seen
+such things as we once were, yet hitherto they did never behold
+such things as we now are; and it is best, in mine opinion, to come
+upon them in such a guise as is common to, and most familiar among
+them.' To this, when they had consented, the next thing to be
+considered was, in what shape, hue, or guise Diabolus had best to
+show himself when he went about to make Mansoul his own. Then one
+said one thing, and another the contrary. At last Lucifer
+answered, that, in his opinion, it was best that his lordship
+should assume the body of some of those creatures that they of the
+town had dominion over; 'for,' quoth he, 'these are not only
+familiar to them, but, being under them, they will never imagine
+that an attempt should by them be made upon the town; and, to blind
+all, let him assume the body of one of those beasts that Mansoul
+deems to be wiser than any of the rest.' This advice was applauded
+of all: so it was determined that the giant Diabolus should assume
+the dragon, for that he was in those days as familiar with the town
+of Mansoul as now is the bird with the boy; for nothing that was in
+its primitive state was at all amazing to them. Then they
+proceeded to the third thing, which was:
+
+3. Whether they had best to show their intentions, or the design of
+his coming, to Mansoul, or no. This also was answered in the
+negative, because of the weight that was in the former reasons, to
+wit, for that Mansoul were a strong people, a strong people in a
+strong town, whose wall and gates were impregnable, (to say nothing
+of their castle,) nor can they by any means be won but by their own
+consent. 'Besides,' said Legion, (for he gave answer to this,) 'a
+discovery of our intentions may make them send to their king for
+aid; and if that be done, I know quickly what time of day it will
+be with us. Therefore let us assault them in all pretended
+fairness, covering our intentions with all manner of lies,
+flatteries, delusive words; feigning things that never will be, and
+promising that to them that they shall never find. This is the way
+to win Mansoul, and to make them of themselves open their gates to
+us; yea, and to desire us too to come in to them. And the reason
+why I think that this project will do is, because the people of
+Mansoul now are, every one, simple and innocent, all honest and
+true; nor do they as yet know what it is to be assaulted with
+fraud, guile, and hypocrisy. They are strangers to lying and
+dissembling lips; wherefore we cannot, if thus we be disguised, by
+them at all be discerned; our lies shall go for true sayings, and
+our dissimulations for upright dealings. What we promise them they
+will in that believe us, especially if, in all our lies and feigned
+words, we pretend great love to them, and that our design is only
+their advantage and honour.' Now there was not one bit of a reply
+against this; this went as current down as doth the water down a
+steep descent. Wherefore they go to consider of the last proposal,
+which was:
+
+4. Whether they had not best to give out orders to some of their
+company to shoot some one or more of the principal of the townsmen,
+if they judge that their cause may be promoted thereby. This was
+carried in the affirmative, and the man that was designed by this
+stratagem to be destroyed was one Mr. Resistance, otherwise called
+Captain Resistance. And a great man in Mansoul this Captain
+Resistance was, and a man that the giant Diabolus and his band more
+feared than they feared the whole town of Mansoul besides. Now who
+should be the actor to do the murder? That was the next, and they
+appointed one Tisiphone, a fury of the lake, to do it.
+
+They thus having ended their council of war, rose up, and essayed
+to do as they had determined; they marched towards Mansoul, but all
+in a manner invisible, save one, only one; nor did he approach the
+town in his own likeness, but under the shade and in the body of
+the dragon.
+
+So they drew up and sat down before Ear-gate, for that was the
+place of hearing for all without the town, as Eye-gate was the
+place of perspection. So, as I said, he came up with his train to
+the gate, and laid his ambuscado for Captain Resistance within bow-
+shot of the town. This done, the giant ascended up close to the
+gate, and called to the town of Mansoul for audience. Nor took he
+any with him but one Ill-pause, who was his orator in all difficult
+matters. Now, as I said, he being come up to the gate, (as the
+manner of those times was,) sounded his trumpet for audience; at
+which the chief of the town of Mansoul, such as my Lord Innocent,
+my Lord Willbewill, my Lord Mayor, Mr. Recorder, and Captain
+Resistance, came down to the wall to see who was there, and what
+was the matter. And my Lord Willbewill, when he had looked over
+and saw who stood at the gate, demanded what he was, wherefore he
+was come, and why he roused the town of Mansoul with so unusual a
+sound.
+
+Diabolus, then, as if he had been a lamb, began his oration, and
+said: 'Gentlemen of the famous town of Mansoul, I am, as you may
+perceive, no far dweller from you, but near, and one that is bound
+by the king to do you my homage and what service I can; wherefore,
+that I may be faithful to myself and to you, I have somewhat of
+concern to impart unto you. Wherefore, grant me your audience, and
+hear me patiently. And first, I will assure you, it is not myself,
+but you--not mine, but your advantage that I seek by what I now do,
+as will full well be made manifest, by that I have opened my mind
+unto you. For, gentlemen, I am (to tell you the truth) come to
+show you how you may obtain great and ample deliverance from a
+bondage that, unawares to yourselves, you are captivated and
+enslaved under.' At this the town of Mansoul began to prick up its
+ears. And 'What is it? Pray what is it?' thought they. And he
+said, 'I have somewhat to say to you concerning your King,
+concerning his law, and also touching yourselves. Touching your
+King, I know he is great and potent; but yet all that he hath said
+to you is neither true nor yet for your advantage. 1. It is not
+true, for that wherewith he hath hitherto awed you, shall not come
+to pass, nor be fulfilled, though you do the thing that he hath
+forbidden. But if there was danger, what a slavery is it to live
+always in fear of the greatest of punishments, for doing so small
+and trivial a thing as eating of a little fruit is. 2. Touching
+his laws, this I say further, they are both unreasonable,
+intricate, and intolerable. Unreasonable, as was hinted before;
+for that the punishment is not proportioned to the offence: there
+is great difference and disproportion between the life and an
+apple; yet the one must go for the other by the law of your
+Shaddai. But it is also intricate, in that he saith, first, you
+may eat of all; and yet after forbids the eating of one. And then,
+in the last place, it must needs be intolerable, forasmuch as that
+fruit which you are forbidden to eat of (if you are forbidden any)
+is that, and that alone, which is able, by your eating, to minister
+to you a good as yet unknown by you. This is manifest by the very
+name of the tree; it is called the "tree of knowledge of good and
+evil;" and have you that knowledge as yet? No, no; nor can you
+conceive how good, how pleasant, and how much to be desired to make
+one wise it is, so long as you stand by your King's commandment.
+Why should you be holden in ignorance and blindness? Why should
+you not be enlarged in knowledge and understanding? And now, O ye
+inhabitants of the famous town of Mansoul, to speak more
+particularly to yourselves you are not a free people! You are kept
+both in bondage and slavery, and that by a grievous threat; no
+reason being annexed but, "So I will have it; so it shall be." And
+is it not grievous to think on, that that very thing which you are
+forbidden to do might you but do it, would yield you both wisdom
+and honour? for then your eyes will be opened, and you shall be as
+gods. Now, since this is thus,' quoth he, 'can you be kept by any
+prince in more slavery and in greater bondage than you are under
+this day? You are made underlings, and are wrapped up in
+inconveniences, as I have well made appear. For what bondage
+greater than to be kept in blindness? Will not reason tell you
+that it is better to have eyes than to be without them? and so to
+be at liberty to be better than to be shut up in a dark and
+stinking cave?'
+
+And just now, while Diabolus was speaking these words to Mansoul,
+Tisiphone shot at Captain Resistance, where he stood on the gate,
+and mortally wounded him in the head; so that he, to the amazement
+of the townsmen, and the encouragement of Diabolus, fell down dead
+quite over the wall. Now, when Captain Resistance was dead, (and
+he was the only man of war in the town,) poor Mansoul was wholly
+left naked of courage, nor had she now any heart to resist. But
+this was as the devil would have it. Then stood forth he, Mr. Ill-
+pause, that Diabolus brought with him, who was his orator; and he
+addressed himself to speak to the town of Mansoul; the tenour of
+whose speech here follows:-
+
+'Gentlemen,' quoth he, 'it is my master's happiness that he has
+this day a quiet and teachable auditory; and it is hoped by us that
+we shall prevail with you not to cast off good advice. My master
+has a very great love for you; and although, as he very well knows,
+that he runs the hazard of the anger of King Shaddai, yet love to
+you will make him do more than that. Nor doth there need that a
+word more should be spoken to confirm for truth what he hath said;
+there is not a word but carries with it self-evidence in its
+bowels; the very name of the tree may put an end to all controversy
+in this matter. I therefore, at this time, shall only add this
+advice to you, under and by the leave of my lord;' (and with that
+he made Diabolus a very low congee;) 'consider his words, look on
+the tree and the promising fruit thereof; remember also that yet
+you know but little, and that this is the way to know more: and if
+your reasons be not conquered to accept of such good counsel, you
+are not the men that I took you to be.'
+
+But when the townsfolk saw that the tree was good for food, and
+that it was pleasant to the eye, and a tree to be desired to make
+one wise, they did as old Ill-pause advised; they took and did eat
+thereof. Now this I should have told you before, that even then,
+when this Ill-pause was making his speech to the townsmen, my Lord
+Innocency (whether by a shot from the camp of the giant, or from
+some sinking qualm that suddenly took him, or whether by the
+stinking breath of that treacherous villain old Ill-pause, for so I
+am most apt to think) sunk down in the place where he stood, nor
+could be brought to life again. Thus these two brave men died--
+brave men, I call them; for they were the beauty and glory of
+Mansoul, so long as they lived therein; nor did there now remain
+any more a noble spirit in Mansoul; they all fell down and yielded
+obedience to Diabolus; and became his slaves and vassals, as you
+shall hear.
+
+Now these being dead, what do the rest of the townsfolk, but, as
+men that had found a fool's paradise, they presently, as afore was
+hinted, fall to prove the truth of the giant's words. And, first,
+they did as Ill-pause had taught them; they looked, they considered
+they were taken with the forbidden fruit; they took thereof, and
+did eat; and having eaten, they became immediately drunken
+therewith. So they open the gate, both Ear-gate and Eye-gate, and
+let in Diabolus with all his bands, quite forgetting their good
+Shaddai, his law, and the judgment that he had annexed, with solemn
+threatening, to the breach thereof.
+
+ Diabolus, having now obtained entrance in at the gates of the
+town, marches up to the middle thereof, to make his conquest as
+sure as he could; and finding, by this time, the affections of the
+people warmly inclining to him, he, as thinking it was best
+striking while the iron is hot, made this further deceivable speech
+unto them, saying, 'Alas, my poor Mansoul! I have done thee indeed
+this service, as to promote thee to honour, and to greaten thy
+liberty; but, alas! alas! poor Mansoul, thou wantest now one to
+defend thee; for assure thyself that when Shaddai shall hear what
+is done, he will come; for sorry will he be that thou hast broken
+his bonds, and cast his cords away from thee. What wilt thou do?
+Wilt thou, after enlargement, suffer thy privileges to be invaded
+and taken away, or what wilt resolve with thyself?'
+
+Then they all with one consent said to this bramble, 'Do thou reign
+over us.' So he accepted the motion, and became the king of the
+town of Mansoul. This being done, the next thing was to give him
+possession of the castle, and so of the whole strength of the town.
+Wherefore, into the castle he goes; it was that which Shaddai built
+in Mansoul for his own delight and pleasure; this now was become a
+den and hold for the giant Diabolus.
+
+Now, having got possession of this stately palace or castle, what
+doth he but makes it a garrison for himself, and strengthens and
+fortifies it with all sorts of provision, against the King Shaddai,
+or those that should endeavour the regaining of it to him and his
+obedience again.
+
+This done, but not thinking himself yet secure enough, in the next
+place he bethinks himself of new modelling the town; and so he
+does, setting up one, and putting down another at pleasure.
+Wherefore my Lord Mayor, whose name was my Lord Understanding, and
+Mr. Recorder, whose name was Mr. Conscience, these he put out of
+place and power.
+
+As for my Lord Mayor, though he was an understanding man, and one
+too that had complied with the rest of the town of Mansoul in
+admitting the giant into the town, yet Diabolus thought not fit to
+let him abide in his former lustre and glory, because he was a
+seeing man. Wherefore he darkened him, not only by taking from him
+his office and power, but by building a high and strong tower, just
+between the sun's reflections and the windows of my lord's palace;
+by which means his house and all, and the whole of his habitation,
+were made as dark as darkness itself. And thus, being alienated
+from the light, he became as one that was born blind. To this, his
+house, my lord was confined as to a prison; nor might he, upon his
+parole, go farther than within his own bounds. And now, had he had
+a heart to do for Mansoul, what could he do for it, or wherein
+could he be profitable to her? So then, so long as Mansoul was
+under the power and government of Diabolus, (and so long it was
+under him, as it was obedient to him, which was even until by a war
+it was rescued out of his hand,) so long my Lord Mayor was rather
+an impediment in, than an advantage to the famous town of Mansoul.
+
+As for Mr. Recorder, before the town was taken, he was a man well
+read in the laws of his king, and also a man of courage and
+faithfulness to speak truth at every occasion; and he had a tongue
+as bravely hung as he had a head filled with judgment. Now, this
+man Diabolus could by no means abide, because, though he gave his
+consent to his coming into the town, yet he could not, by all the
+wiles, trials, stratagems, and devices that he could use, make him
+wholly his own. True, he was much degenerated from his former
+king, and also much pleased with many of the giant's laws and
+service; but all this would not do, forasmuch as he was not wholly
+his. He would now and then think upon Shaddai, and have dread of
+his law upon him, and then he would speak against Diabolus with a
+voice as great as when a lion roareth. Yea, and would also at
+certain times, when his fits were upon him, (for you must know that
+sometimes he had terrible fits,) make the whole town of Mansoul
+shake with his voice: and therefore the now king of Mansoul could
+not abide him.
+
+Diabolus, therefore, feared the Recorder more than any that was
+left alive in the town of Mansoul, because, as I said, his words
+did shake the whole town; they were like the rattling thunder, and
+also like thunder-claps. Since, therefore, the giant could not
+make him wholly his own, what doth he do but studies all that he
+could to debauch the old gentleman, and by debauchery to stupefy
+his mind, and more harden his heart in the ways of vanity. And as
+he attempted, so he accomplished his design: he debauched the man,
+and by little and little so drew him into sin and wickedness, that
+at last he was not only debauched, as at first, and so by
+consequence defiled, but was almost (at last, I say) past all
+conscience of sin. And this was the farthest Diabolus could go.
+Wherefore he bethinks him of another project, and that was, to
+persuade the men of the town that Mr. Recorder was mad, and so not
+to be regarded. And for this he urged his fits, and said, 'If he
+be himself, why doth he not do thus always? But,' quoth he, 'as
+all mad folks have their fits, and in them their raving language,
+so hath this old and doating gentleman.'
+
+Thus, by one means or another, he quickly got Mansoul to slight,
+neglect, and despise whatever Mr. Recorder could say. For, besides
+what already you have heard, Diabolus had a way to make the old
+gentleman, when he was merry, unsay and deny what he in his fits
+had affirmed. And, indeed, this was the next way to make himself
+ridiculous, and to cause that no man should regard him. Also now
+he never spake freely for King Shaddai, but also by force and
+constraint. Besides, he would at one time be hot against that at
+which, at another, he would hold his peace; so uneven was he now in
+his doings. Sometimes he would be as if fast asleep, and again
+sometimes as dead, even then when the whole town of Mansoul was in
+her career after vanity, and in her dance after the giant's pipe.
+
+Wherefore, sometimes when Mansoul did use to be frighted with the
+thundering voice of the Recorder that was, and when they did tell
+Diabolus of it, he would answer, that what the old gentleman said
+was neither of love to him nor pity to them, but of a foolish
+fondness that he had to be prating; and so would hush, still, and
+put all to quiet again. And that he might leave no argument
+unurged that might tend to make them secure, he said, and said it
+often, 'O Mansoul! consider that, notwithstanding the old
+gentleman's rage, and the rattle of his high and thundering words,
+you hear nothing of Shaddai himself;' when, liar and deceiver that
+he was, every outcry of Mr. Recorder against the sin of Mansoul was
+the voice of God in him to them. But he goes on, and says, 'You
+see that he values not the loss nor rebellion of the town of
+Mansoul, nor will he trouble himself with calling his town to a
+reckoning for their giving themselves to me. He knows that though
+you were his, now you are lawfully mine; so, leaving us one to
+another, he now hath shaken his hands of us.
+
+'Moreover, O Mansoul!' quoth he, 'consider how I have served you,
+even to the uttermost of my power; and that with the best that I
+have, could get, or procure for you in all the world: besides, I
+dare say that the laws and customs that you now are under, and by
+which you do homage to me, do yield you more solace and content
+than did the paradise that at first you possessed. Your liberty
+also, as yourselves do very well know, has been greatly widened and
+enlarged by me; whereas I found you a penned-up people. I have not
+laid any restraint upon you; you have no law, statute, or judgment
+of mine to fright you; I call none of you to account for your
+doings, except the madman--you know who I mean; I have granted you
+to live, each man like a prince in his own, even with as little
+control from me as I myself have from you.'
+
+And thus would Diabolus hush up and quiet the town of Mansoul, when
+the Recorder that was, did at times molest them: yea, and with
+such cursed orations as these, would set the whole town in a rage
+and fury against the old gentleman. Yea, the rascal crew at some
+times would be for destroying him. They have often wished, in my
+hearing, that he had lived a thousand miles off from them: his
+company, his words, yea, the sight of him, and specially when they
+remembered how in old times he did use to threaten and condemn
+them, (for all he was now so debauched,) did terrify and afflict
+them sore.
+
+But all wishes were vain, for I do not know how, unless by the
+power of Shaddai, and his wisdom, he was preserved in being amongst
+them. Besides, his house was as strong as a castle, and stood hard
+by a stronghold of the town: moreover, if at any time any of the
+crew or rabble attempted to make him away, he could pull up the
+sluices, and let in such floods as would drown all round about him.
+
+But to leave Mr. Recorder, and to come to my Lord Willbewill,
+another of the gentry of the famous town of Mansoul. This
+Willbewill was as high-born as any man in Mansoul, and was as much,
+if not more, a freeholder than many of them were; besides, if I
+remember my tale aright, he had some privileges peculiar to himself
+in the famous town of Mansoul. Now, together with these, he was a
+man of great strength, resolution, and courage, nor in his occasion
+could any turn him away. But I say, whether he was proud of his
+estate, privileges, strength, or what, (but sure it was through
+pride of something,) he scorns now to be a slave in Mansoul; and
+therefore resolves to bear office under Diabolus, that he might
+(such an one as he was) be a petty ruler and governor in Mansoul.
+And, headstrong man that he was! thus he began betimes; for this
+man, when Diabolus did make his oration at Ear-gate, was one of the
+first that was for consenting to his words, and for accepting his
+counsel at wholesome, and that was for the opening of the gate, and
+for letting him into the town; wherefore Diabolus had a kindness
+for him, and therefore he designed for him a place. And perceiving
+the valour and stoutness of the man, he coveted to have him for one
+of his great ones, to act and do in matters of the highest concern.
+
+So he sent for him, and talked with him of that secret matter that
+lay in his breast, but there needed not much persuasion in the
+case. For as at first he was willing that Diabolus should be let
+into the town, so now he was as willing to serve him there. When
+the tyrant, therefore, perceived the willingness of my lord to
+serve him, and that his mind stood bending that way, he forthwith
+made him the captain of the castle, governor of the wall, and
+keeper of the gates of Mansoul: yea, there was a clause in his
+commission, that nothing without him should be done in all the town
+of Mansoul. So that now, next to Diabolus himself, who but my Lord
+Willbewill in all the town of Mansoul! nor could anything now be
+done, but at his will and pleasure, throughout the town of Mansoul.
+He had also one Mr. Mind for his clerk, a man to speak on every way
+like his master: for he and his lord were in principle one, and in
+practice not far asunder. And now was Mansoul brought under to
+purpose, and made to fulfil the lusts of the will, and of the mind.
+
+But it will not out of my thoughts what a desperate one this
+Willbewill was when power was put into his hand. First, he flatly
+denied that he owed any suit or service to his former prince and
+liege lord. This done, in the next place he took an oath, and
+swore fidelity to his great master Diabolus, and then, being stated
+and settled in his places, offices, advancements, and preferments,
+oh! you cannot think, unless you had seen it, the strange work that
+this workman made in the town of Mansoul.
+
+First, he maligned Mr. Recorder to death; he would neither endure
+to see him, nor hear the words of his mouth; he would shut his eyes
+when he saw him, and stop his ears when he heard him speak. Also
+he could not endure that so much as a fragment of the law of
+Shaddai should be anywhere seen in the town. For example, his
+clerk, Mr. Mind, had some old, rent, and torn parchments of the law
+of Shaddai in his house, but when Willbewill saw them, he cast them
+behind his back. True, Mr. Recorder had some of the laws in his
+study; but my lord could by no means come at them. He also thought
+and said, that the windows of my old Lord Mayor's house were always
+too light for the profit of the town of Mansoul. The light of a
+candle he could not endure. Now nothing at all pleased Willbewill
+but what pleased Diabolus his lord.
+
+There was none like him to trumpet about the streets the brave
+nature, the wise conduct, and great glory of the king Diabolus. He
+would range and rove throughout all the streets of Mansoul to cry
+up his illustrious lord, and would make himself even as an abject,
+among the base and rascal crew, to cry up his valiant prince. And
+I say, when and wheresoever he found these vassals, he would even
+make himself as one of them. In all ill courses he would act
+without bidding, and do mischief without commandment.
+
+The Lord Willbewill also had a deputy under him, and his name was
+Mr. Affection, one that was also greatly debauched in his
+principles, and answerable thereto in his life: he was wholly
+given to the flesh, and therefore they called him Vile-Affection.
+Now there was he and one Carnal-Lust, the daughter of Mr. Mind,
+(like to like,) that fell in love, and made a match, and were
+married; and, as I take it, they had several children, as Impudent,
+Blackmouth, and Hate-Reproof. These three were black boys. And
+besides these they had three daughters, as Scorn-Truth and Slight-
+God, and the name of the youngest was Revenge. These were all
+married in the town, and also begot and yielded many bad brats, too
+many to be here inserted. But to pass by this.
+
+When the giant had thus engarrisoned himself in the town of
+Mansoul, and had put down and set up whom he thought good, he
+betakes himself to defacing. Now there was in the market-place in
+Mansoul, and also upon the gates of the castle, an image of the
+blessed King Shaddai. This image was so exactly engraven, (and it
+was engraven in gold,) that it did the most resemble Shaddai
+himself of anything that then was extant in the world. This he
+basely commanded to be defaced, and it was as basely done by the
+hand of Mr. No-Truth. Now you must know that, as Diabolus had
+commanded, and that by the hand of Mr. No-Truth, the image of
+Shaddai was defaced, he likewise gave order that the same Mr. No-
+Truth should set up in its stead the horrid and formidable image of
+Diabolus, to the great contempt of the former King, and debasing of
+his town of Mansoul.
+
+Moreover, Diabolus made havoc of all remains of the laws and
+statutes of Shaddai that could be found in the town of Mansoul; to
+wit, such as contained either the doctrines of morals, with all
+civil and natural documents. Also relative severities he sought to
+extinguish. To be short, there was nothing of the remains of good
+in Mansoul which he and Willbewill sought not to destroy; for their
+design was to turn Mansoul into a brute, and to make it like to the
+sensual sow, by the hand of Mr. No-Truth.
+
+When he had destroyed what law and good orders he could, then
+further to effect his design, namely, to alienate Mansoul from
+Shaddai her King, he commands, and they set up his own vain edicts,
+statutes, and commandments, in all places of resort or concourse in
+Mansoul, to wit, such as gave liberty to the lusts of the flesh,
+the lusts of the eyes, and the pride of life, which are not of
+Shaddai, but of the world. He encouraged, countenanced, and
+promoted lasciviousness, and all ungodliness there. Yea, much more
+did Diabolus to encourage wickedness in the town of Mansoul; he
+promised them peace, content, joy, and bliss, in doing his
+commands, and that they should never be called to an account for
+their not doing the contrary. And let this serve to give a taste
+to them that love to hear tell of what is done beyond their
+knowledge afar off in other countries.
+
+Now Mansoul being wholly at his beck, and brought wholly to his
+bow, nothing was heard or seen therein but that which tended to set
+up him.
+
+But now he, having disabled the Lord Mayor and Mr. Recorder from
+bearing of office in Mansoul, and seeing that the town, before he
+came to it, was the most ancient of corporations in the world, and
+fearing, if he did not maintain greatness, they at any time should
+object that he had done them an injury; therefore, I say, (that
+they might see that he did not intend to lessen their grandeur, or
+to take from them any of their advantageous things,) he did choose
+for them a Lord Mayor and a Recorder himself, and such as contented
+them at the heart, and such also as pleased him wondrous well.
+
+The name of the Mayor that was of Diabolus' making was the Lord
+Lustings, a man that had neither eyes nor ears. All that he did,
+whether as a man or an officer, he did it naturally, as doth the
+beast. And that which made him yet the more ignoble, though not to
+Mansoul, yet to them that beheld and were grieved for its ruin,
+was, that he never could favour good, but evil.
+
+The Recorder was one whose name was Forget-Good, and a very sorry
+fellow he was. He could remember nothing but mischief, and to do
+it with delight. He was naturally prone to do things that were
+hurtful, even hurtful to the town of Mansoul, and to all the
+dwellers there. These two, therefore, by their power and practice,
+examples, and smiles upon evil, did much more grammar and settle
+the common people in hurtful ways. For who doth not perceive that
+when those that sit aloft are vile and corrupt themselves, they
+corrupt the whole region and country where they are?
+
+Besides these, Diabolus made several burgesses and aldermen in
+Mansoul, such as out of whom the town, when it needed, might choose
+them officers, governors, and magistrates. And these are the names
+of the chief of them: Mr. Incredulity, Mr. Haughty, Mr. Swearing,
+Mr. Whoring, Mr. Hard-Heart, Mr. Pitiless, Mr. Fury, Mr. No-Truth,
+Mr. Stand-to-Lies, Mr. False-Peace, Mr. Drunkenness, Mr. Cheating,
+Mr. Atheism--thirteen in all. Mr. Incredulity is the eldest, and
+Mr. Atheism the youngest of the company.
+
+There was also an election of common councilmen and others, as
+bailiffs, sergeants, constables, and others; but all of them like
+to those afore-named, being either fathers, brothers, cousins, or
+nephews to them, whose names, for brevity's sake, I omit to
+mention.
+
+When the giant had thus far proceeded in his work, in the next
+place, he betook him to build some strongholds in the town, and he
+built three that seemed to be impregnable. The first he called the
+Hold of Defiance, because it was made to command the whole town,
+and to keep it from the knowledge of its ancient King. The second
+he called Midnight Hold, because it was built on purpose to keep
+Mansoul from the true knowledge of itself. The third was called
+Sweet-Sin Hold, because by that he fortified Mansoul against all
+desires of good. The first of these holds stood close by Eye-gate,
+that, as much might be, light might be darkened there; the second
+was built hard by the old castle, to the end that that might be
+made more blind, if possible; and the third stood in the market-
+place.
+
+He that Diabolus made governor over the first of these was one
+Spite-God, a most blasphemous wretch: he came with the whole
+rabble of them that came against Mansoul at first, and was himself
+one of themselves. He that was made the governor of Midnight Hold
+was one Love-no-Light; he was also of them that came first against
+the town. And he that was made the governor of the hold called
+Sweet-Sin Hold was one whose name was Love-Flesh: he was also a
+very lewd fellow, but not of that country where the other are
+bound. This fellow could find more sweetness when he stood sucking
+of a lust than he did in all the paradise of God.
+
+And now Diabolus thought himself safe. He had taken Mansoul, he
+had engarrisoned himself therein; he had put down the old officers,
+and had set up new ones; he had defaced the image of Shaddai, and
+had set up his own; he had spoiled the old law books, and had
+promoted his own vain lies; he had made him new magistrates, and
+set up new aldermen; he had builded him new holds, and had manned
+them for himself: and all this he did to make himself secure, in
+case the good Shaddai, or his Son, should come to make an incursion
+upon him.
+
+Now you may well think, that long before this time, word, by some
+one or other, could not but be carried to the good King Shaddai,
+how his Mansoul, in the continent of Universe, was lost; and that
+the runagate giant Diabolus, once one of his Majesty's servants,
+had, in rebellion against the King, made sure thereof for himself.
+Yea, tidings were carried and brought to the King thereof, and that
+to a very circumstance.
+
+At first, how Diabolus came upon Mansoul (they being a simple
+people and innocent) with craft, subtlety, lies, and guile. Item,
+that he had treacherously slain the right noble and valiant
+captain, their Captain Resistance, as he stood upon the gate with
+the rest of the townsmen. Item, how my brave Lord Innocent fell
+down dead (with grief, some say, or with being poisoned with the
+stinking breath of one Ill-Pause, as say others) at the hearing of
+his just lord and rightful prince, Shaddai, so abused by the mouth
+of so filthy a Diabolian as that varlet Ill-Pause was. The
+messenger further told, that after this Ill-Pause had made a short
+oration to the townsmen in behalf of Diabolus, his master; the
+simple town, believing that what was said was true, with one
+consent did open Ear-gate, the chief gate of the corporation, and
+did let him, with his crew, into a possession of the famous town of
+Mansoul. He further showed how Diabolus had served the Lord Mayor
+and Mr. Recorder, to wit, that he had put them from all place of
+power and trust. Item, he showed also that my Lord Willbewill was
+turned a very rebel, and runagate, and that so was one Mr. Mind,
+his clerk; and that they two did range and revel it all the town
+over, and teach the wicked ones their ways. He said, moreover,
+that this Willbewill was put into great trust, and particularly
+that Diabolus had put into Willbewill's hand all the strong places
+in Mansoul; and that Mr. Affection was made my Lord Willbewill's
+deputy in his most rebellious affairs. 'Yea,' said the messenger,
+'this monster, Lord Willbewill, has openly disavowed his King
+Shaddai, and hath horribly given his faith and plighted his troth
+to Diabolus.'
+
+'Also,' said the messenger, 'besides all this, the new king, or
+rather rebellious tyrant, over the once famous, but now perishing
+town of Mansoul, has set up a Lord Mayor and a Recorder of his own.
+For Mayor, he has set up one Mr. Lustings; and for Recorder, Mr.
+Forget-Good; two of the vilest of all the town of Mansoul.' This
+faithful messenger also proceeded, and told what a sort of new
+burgesses Diabolus had made; also that he had built several strong
+forts, towers, and strongholds in Mansoul. He told, too, the which
+I had almost forgot, how Diabolus had put the town of Mansoul into
+arms, the better to capacitate them, on his behalf, to make
+resistance against Shaddai their King, should he come to reduce
+them to their former obedience.
+
+Now this tidings-teller did not deliver his relation of things in
+private, but in open court, the King and his Son, high lords, chief
+captains, and nobles, being all there present to hear. But by that
+they had heard the whole of the story, it would have amazed one to
+have seen, had he been there to behold it, what sorrow and grief,
+and compunction of spirit, there was among all sorts, to think that
+famous Mansoul was now taken: only the King and his Son foresaw
+all this long before, yea, and sufficiently provided for the relief
+of Mansoul, though they told not everybody thereof. Yet because
+they also would have a share in condoling of the Misery of Mansoul,
+therefore they also did, and that at a rate of the highest degree,
+bewail the losing of Mansoul. The King said plainly that it
+grieved him at the heart, and you may be sure that his Son was not
+a whit behind him. Thus gave they conviction to all about them
+that they had love and compassion for the famous town of Mansoul.
+Well, when the King and his Son were retired into the privy
+chamber, there they again consulted about what they had designed
+before, to wit, that as Mansoul should in time be suffered to be
+lost, so as certainly it should be recovered again; recovered, I
+say, in such a way, as that both the King and his Son would get
+themselves eternal fame and glory thereby. Wherefore, after this
+consult, the Son of Shaddai (a sweet and comely Person, and one
+that had always great affection for those that were in affliction,
+but one that had mortal enmity in his heart against Diabolus,
+because he was designed for it, and because he sought his crown and
+dignity)--this Son of Shaddai, I say, having stricken hands with
+his Father and promised that he would be his servant to recover his
+Mansoul again, stood by his resolution, nor would he repent of the
+same. The purport of which agreement was this: to wit, that at a
+certain time, prefixed by both, the King's Son should take a
+journey into the country of Universe, and there, in a way of
+justice and equity, by making amends for the follies of Mansoul, he
+should lay a foundation of perfect deliverance from Diabolus and
+from his tyranny.
+
+Moreover Emmanuel resolved to make, at a time convenient, a war
+upon the giant Diabolus, even while he was possessed of the town of
+Mansoul; and that he would fairly by strength of hand drive him out
+of his hold, his nest, and take it to himself to be his habitation.
+
+This now being resolved upon, order was given to the Lord Chief
+Secretary to draw up a fair record of what was determined, and to
+cause that it should be published in all the corners of the kingdom
+of Universe. A short breviate of the contents thereof you may, if
+you please, take here as follows:
+
+'Let all men know who are concerned, that the Son of Shaddai, the
+great King, is engaged by covenant to his Father to bring his
+Mansoul to him again; yea, and to put Mansoul, too, through the
+power of his matchless love, into a far better and more happy
+condition than it was in before it was taken by Diabolus.'
+
+These papers, therefore, were published in several places, to the
+no little molestation of the tyrant Diabolus; 'for now,' thought
+he, 'I shall be molested, and my habitation will be taken from me.'
+
+But when this matter, I mean this purpose of the King and his Son,
+did at first take air at court, who can tell how the high lords,
+chief captains, and noble princes that were there, were taken with
+the business! First, they whispered it one to another, and after
+that it began to ring out through the King's palace, all wondering
+at the glorious design that between the King and his Son was on
+foot for the miserable town of Mansoul. Yea, the courtiers could
+scarce do anything either for the King or kingdom, but they would
+mix, with the doing thereof, a noise of the love of the King and
+his Son, that they had for the town of Mansoul.
+
+Nor could these lords, high captains, and princes be content to
+keep this news at court; yea, before the records thereof were
+perfected, themselves came down and told it in Universe. At last
+it came to the ears, as I said, of Diabolus, to his no little
+discontent; for you must think it would perplex him to hear of such
+a design against him. Well, but after a few casts in his mind, he
+concluded upon these four things.
+
+First, that this news, these good tidings, (if possible,) should be
+kept from the ears of the town of Mansoul; 'for,' said he, 'if they
+should once come to the knowledge that Shaddai, their former King,
+and Emmanuel his Son, are contriving good for the town of Mansoul,
+what can be expected by me, but that Mansoul will make a revolt
+from under my hand and government, and return again to him?'
+
+Now, to accomplish this his design, he renews his flattery with my
+Lord Willbewill, and also gives him strict charge and command, that
+he should keep watch by day and by night at all the gates of the
+town, especially Ear-gate and Eye-gate; 'for I hear of a design,'
+quoth he, 'a design to make us all traitors, and that Mansoul must
+be reduced to its first bondage again. I hope they are but flying
+stories,' quoth he; 'however, let no such news by any means be let
+into Mansoul, lest the people be dejected thereat. I think, my
+lord, it can be no welcome news to you; I am sure it is none to me;
+and I think that, at this time, it should be all our wisdom and
+care to nip the head of all such rumours as shall tend to trouble
+our people. Wherefore I desire, my lord, that you will in this
+matter do as I say. Let there be strong guards daily kept at every
+gate of the town. Stop also and examine from whence such come that
+you perceive do from far come hither to trade, nor let them by any
+means be admitted into Mansoul, unless you shall plainly perceive
+that they are favourers of our excellent government. I command,
+moreover,' said Diabolus, 'that there be spies continually walking
+up and down the town of Mansoul, and let them have power to
+suppress and destroy any that they shall perceive to be plotting
+against us, or that shall prate of what by Shaddai and Emmanuel is
+intended.'
+
+This, therefore, was accordingly done; my Lord Willbewill hearkened
+to his lord and master, went willingly after the commandment, and,
+with all the diligence he could, kept any that would from going out
+abroad, or that sought to bring these tidings to Mansoul, from
+coming into the town.
+
+Secondly, this done, in the next place, Diabolus, that he might
+make Mansoul as sure as he could, frames and imposes a new oath and
+horrible covenant upon the townsfolk:- To wit, that they should
+never desert him nor his government, nor yet betray him, nor seek
+to alter his laws; but that they should own, confess, stand by, and
+acknowledge him for their rightful king, in defiance to any that do
+or hereafter shall, by any pretence, law, or title whatever, lay
+claim to the town of Mansoul; thinking, belike, that Shaddai had
+not power to absolve them from this covenant with death, and
+agreement with hell. Nor did the silly Mansoul stick or boggle at
+all at this most monstrous engagement; but, as if it had been a
+sprat in the mouth of a whale, they swallowed it without any
+chewing. Were they troubled at all? Nay, they rather bragged and
+boasted of their so brave fidelity to the tyrant, their pretended
+king, swearing that they would never be changelings, nor forsake
+their old lord for a new. Thus did Diabolus tie poor Mansoul fast.
+
+Thirdly. But jealousy, that never thinks itself strong enough, put
+him, in the next place, upon another exploit, which was, yet more,
+if possible, to debauch this town of Mansoul. Wherefore he caused,
+by the hand of one Mr. Filth, an odious, nasty, lascivious piece of
+beastliness to be drawn up in writing, and to be set upon the
+castle gates; whereby he granted and gave license to all his true
+and trusty sons in Mansoul to do whatsoever their lustful appetites
+prompted them to do; and that no man was to let, hinder, or control
+them, upon pain of incurring the displeasure of their prince.
+
+Now this he did for these reasons:-
+
+1. That the town of Mansoul might be yet made weaker and weaker,
+and so more unable, should tidings come that their redemption was
+designed, to believe, hope, or consent to the truth thereof; for
+reason says, The bigger the sinner, the less grounds of hopes of
+mercy.
+
+2. The second reason was, if perhaps Emmanuel, the Son of Shaddai
+their King, by seeing the horrible and profane doings of the town
+of Mansoul, might repent, though entered into a covenant of
+redeeming them, of pursuing that covenant of their redemption; for
+he knew that Shaddai was holy, and that his Son Emmanuel was holy;
+yea, he knew it by woeful experience, for for his iniquity and sin
+was Diabolus cast from the highest orbs. Wherefore what more
+rational than for him to conclude that thus, for sin, it might fare
+with Mansoul? But fearing also lest this knot should break, he
+bethinks himself of another, to wit:-
+
+Fourthly. To endeavour to possess all hearts in the town of
+Mansoul that Shaddai was raising an army, to come to overthrow and
+utterly to destroy this town of Mansoul. And this he did to
+forestall any tidings that might come to their ears of their
+deliverance: 'For,' thought he, 'if I first bruit this, the
+tidings that shall come after will all be swallowed up of this; for
+what else will Mansoul say, when they shall hear that they must be
+delivered, but that the true meaning is, Shaddai intends to destroy
+them? Wherefore he summons the whole town into the market-place,
+and there, with deceitful tongue, thus he addressed himself unto
+them:-
+
+'Gentlemen, and my very good friends, you are all, as you know, my
+legal subjects, and men of the famous town of Mansoul. You know
+how, from the first day that I have been with you until now, I have
+behaved myself among you, and what liberty and great privileges you
+have enjoyed under my government, I hope to your honour and mine,
+and also to your content and delight. Now, my famous Mansoul, a
+noise of trouble there is abroad, of trouble to the town of
+Mansoul; sorry I am thereof for your sakes: for I received but now
+by the post from my Lord Lucifer, (and he useth to have good
+intelligence,) that your old King Shaddai is raising an army to
+come against you, to destroy you root and branch; and this, O
+Mansoul, is now the cause that at this time I have called you
+together, namely, to advise what in this juncture is best to be
+done. For my part, I am but one, and can with ease shift for
+myself, did I list to seek my own case, and to leave my Mansoul in
+all the danger; but my heart is so firmly united to you, and so
+unwilling am I to leave you, that I am willing to stand and fall
+with you, to the utmost hazard that shall befall me. What say you,
+O my Mansoul? Will you now desert your old friend, or do you think
+of standing by me?'
+
+Then, as one man, with one mouth, they cried out together, 'Let him
+die the death that will not.'
+
+Then said Diabolus again, 'It is in vain for us to hope for
+quarter, for this King knows not how to show it. True, perhaps,
+he, at his first sitting down before us, will talk of and pretend
+to mercy, that thereby, with the more ease, and less trouble, he
+may again make himself the master of Mansoul. Whatever, therefore,
+he shall say, believe not one syllable or tittle of it; for all
+such language is but to overcome us, and to make us, while we
+wallow in our blood, the trophies of his merciless victory. My
+mind is, therefore, that we resolve to the last man to resist him,
+and not to believe him upon any terms, for in at that door will
+come our danger. But shall we be flattered out of our lives? I
+hope you know more of the rudiments of politics than to suffer
+yourselves so pitifully to be served.
+
+'But suppose he should, if he get us to yield, save some of our
+lives, or the lives of some of them that are underlings in Mansoul,
+what help will that be to you that are the chief of the town,
+especially you whom I have set up and whose greatness has been
+procured by you through your faithful sticking to me? And suppose,
+again, that he should give quarter to every one of you, be sure he
+will bring you into that bondage under which you were captivated
+before, or a worse, and then what good will your lives do you?
+Shall you with him live in pleasure as you do now? No, no; you
+must be bound by laws that will pinch you, and be made to do that
+which at present is hateful to you. I am for you, if you are for
+me; and it is better to die valiantly than to live like pitiful
+slaves. But, I say, the life of a slave will be counted a life too
+good for Mansoul now. Blood, blood, nothing but blood is in every
+blast of Shaddai's trumpet against poor Mansoul now. Pray, be
+concerned; I hear he is coming. Up, and stand to your arms that
+now, while you have any leisure, I may learn you some feats of war.
+Armour for you I have, and by me it is; yea, and it is sufficient
+for Mansoul from top to toe; nor can you be hurt by what his force
+can do, if you shall keep it well girt and fastened about you.
+Come, therefore, to my castle, and welcome, and harness yourselves
+for the war. There is helmet, breastplate, sword, and shield, and
+what not, that will make you fight like men.
+
+'1. My helmet, otherwise called an head-piece, is in hope of doing
+well at last, what lives soever you live. This is that which they
+had who said, that they should have peace, though they walked in
+the wickedness of their heart, to add drunkenness to thirst. A
+piece of approved armour this is, and whoever has it, and can hold
+it, so long no arrow, dart, sword, or shield can hurt him. This,
+therefore, keep on, and thou wilt keep off many a blow, my Mansoul.
+
+'2. My breastplate is a breastplate of iron. I had it forged in
+mine own country, and all my soldiers are armed therewith. In
+plain language, it is a hard heart, a heart as hard as iron, and as
+much past feeling as a stone; the which if you get and keep,
+neither mercy shall win you, nor judgment fright you. This
+therefore, is a piece of armour most necessary for all to put on
+that hate Shaddai, and that would fight against him under my
+banner.
+
+'3. My sword is a tongue that is set on fire of hell, and that can
+bend itself to speak evil of Shaddai, his Son, his ways, and
+people. Use this; it has been tried a thousand times twice told.
+Whoever hath it, keeps it, and makes that use of it as I would have
+him, can never be conquered by mine enemy.
+
+'4. My, shield is unbelief, or calling into question the truth of
+the word, or all the sayings that speak of the judgment that
+Shaddai has appointed for wicked men. Use this shield; many
+attempts he has made upon it, and sometimes, it is true, it has
+been bruised; but they that have writ of the wars of Emmanuel
+against my servants, have testified that he could do no mighty work
+there because of their unbelief. Now, to handle this weapon of
+mine aright, it is not to believe things because they are true, of
+what sort or by whomsoever asserted. If he speaks of judgment,
+care not for it; if he speaks of mercy, care not for it; if he
+promises, if he swears that he would do to Mansoul, if it turns, no
+hurt, but good, regard not what is said, question the truth of all,
+for it is to wield the shield of unbelief aright, and as my
+servants ought and do; and he that doth otherwise loves me not, nor
+do I count him but an enemy to me.
+
+'5. Another part or piece,' said Diabolus, 'of mine excellent
+armour is a dumb and prayerless spirit, a spirit that scorns to cry
+for mercy: wherefore be you, my Mansoul, sure that you make use of
+this. What! cry for quarter! Never do that, if you would be mine.
+I know you are stout men, and am sure that I have clad you with
+that which is armour of proof. Wherefore, to cry to Shaddai for
+mercy, let that be far from you. Besides all this, I have a maul,
+firebrands, arrows, and death, all good hand-weapons, and such as
+will do execution.'
+
+After he had thus furnished his men with armour and arms, he
+addressed himself to them in such like words as these: 'Remember,'
+quoth he, 'that I am your rightful king, and that you have taken an
+oath and entered into covenant to be true to me and my cause: I
+say, remember this, and show yourselves stout and valiant men of
+Mansoul. Remember also the kindness that I have always showed to
+you, and that without your petition I have granted to you external
+things; wherefore the privileges, grants, immunities, profits, and
+honours wherewith I have endowed you do call for, at your hands,
+returns of loyalty, my lion-like men of Mansoul: and when so fit a
+time to show it as when another shall seek to take my dominion over
+you into his own hands? One word more, and I have done. Can we
+but stand, and overcome this one shock or brunt, I doubt not but in
+little time all the world will be ours; and when that day comes, my
+true hearts, I will make you kings, princes, and captains, and what
+brave days shall we have then!'
+
+Diabolus having thus armed and forearmed his servants and vassals
+in Mansoul against their good and lawful King Shaddai, in the next
+place, he doubleth his guards at the gates of the town, and he
+takes himself to the castle, which was his stronghold. His vassals
+also, to show their wills, and supposed (but ignoble) gallantry,
+exercise themselves in their arms every day, and teach one another
+feats of war; they also defied their enemies, and sang up the
+praises of their tyrant; they threatened also what men they would
+be if ever things should rise so high as a war between Shaddai and
+their king.
+
+Now all this time the good King, the King Shaddai, was preparing to
+send an army to recover the town of Mansoul again from under the
+tyranny of their pretended king Diabolus; but he thought good, at
+first, not to send them by the hand and conduct of brave Emmanuel
+his Son, but under the hand of some of his servants, to see first
+by them the temper of Mansoul, and whether by them they would be
+won to the obedience of their King. The army consisted of above
+forty thousand, all true men, for they came from the King's own
+court, and were those of his own choosing.
+
+They came up to Mansoul under the conduct of four stout generals,
+each man being a captain of ten thousand men, and these are their
+names and their ensigns. The name of the first was Boanerges, the
+name of the second was Captain Conviction, the name of the third
+was Captain Judgment, and the name of the fourth was Captain
+Execution. These were the captains that Shaddai sent to regain
+Mansoul.
+
+These four captains, as was said, the King thought fit, in the
+first place, to send to Mansoul, to make an attempt upon it; for
+indeed generally in all his wars he did use to send these four
+captains in the van, for they were very stout and rough-hewn men,
+men that were fit to break the ice, and to make their way by dint
+of sword, and their men were like themselves.
+
+To each of these captains the King gave a banner, that it might be
+displayed, because of the goodness of his cause, and because of the
+right that he had to Mansoul.
+
+First, to Captain Boanerges, for he was the chief, to him, I say,
+were given ten thousand men. His ensign was Mr. Thunder; he bare
+the black colours, and his scutcheon was the three burning
+thunderbolts.
+
+The second captain was Captain Conviction; to him also were given
+ten thousand men. His ensign's name was Mr. Sorrow; he did bear
+the pale colours, and his scutcheon was the book of the law wide
+open, from whence issued a flame of fire.
+
+The third captain was Captain Judgment; to him were given ten
+thousand men. His ensign's name was Mr. Terror; he bare the red
+colours, and his scutcheon was a burning fiery furnace.
+
+The fourth captain was Captain Execution; to him were given ten
+thousand men. His ensign was one Mr. Justice; he also bare the red
+colours, and his scutcheon was a fruitless tree, with an axe lying
+at the root thereof.
+
+These four captains, as I said, had every one of them under his
+command ten thousand men, all of good fidelity to the King, and
+stout at their military actions.
+
+Well, the captains and their forces, their men and under officers,
+being had upon a day by Shaddai into the field, and there called
+all over by their names, were then and there put into such harness
+as became their degree and that service which now they were going
+about for their King.
+
+Now, when the King had mustered his forces, (for it is he that
+mustereth the host to the battle,) he gave unto the captains their
+several commissions, with charge and commandment in the audience of
+all the soldiers, that they should take heed faithfully and
+courageously to do and execute the same. Their commissions were,
+for the substance of them, the same in form, though, as to name,
+title, place and degree of the captains, there might be some, but
+very small variation. And here let me give you an account of the
+matter and sum contained in their commission.
+
+
+A Commission from the great Shaddai, King of Mansoul, to his trusty
+and noble Captain, the Captain Boanerges, for his making War upon
+the town of Mansoul.
+
+
+'O, thou Boanerges, one of my stout and thundering captains over
+one ten thousand of my valiant and faithful servants, go thou in my
+name, with this thy force, to the miserable town of Mansoul; and
+when thou comest thither, offer them first conditions of peace; and
+command them that, casting off the yoke and tyranny of the wicked
+Diabolus, they return to me, their rightful Prince and Lord.
+Command them also that they cleanse themselves from all that is his
+in the town of Mansoul, and look to thyself, that thou hast good
+satisfaction touching the truth of their obedience. Thus when thou
+hast commanded them, (if they in truth submit thereto,) then do
+thou, to the uttermost of thy power, what in thee lies to set up
+for me a garrison in the famous town of Mansoul; nor do thou hurt
+the least native that moveth or breatheth therein, if they will
+submit themselves to me, but treat thou such as if they were thy
+friend or brother; for all such I love, and they shall be dear unto
+me, and tell them that I will take a time to come unto them, and to
+let them know that I am merciful.
+
+'But if they shall, notwithstanding thy summons and the producing
+of thy authority, resist, stand out against thee, and rebel, then
+do I command thee to make use of all thy cunning, power, might, and
+force, to bring them under by strength of hand. Farewell.'
+
+
+Thus you see the sum of their commissions; for, as I said before,
+for the substance of them, they were the same that the rest of the
+noble captains had.
+
+Wherefore they, having received each commander his authority at the
+hand of their King, the day being appointed, and the place of their
+rendezvous prefixed, each commander appeared in such gallantry as
+became his cause and calling. So, after a new entertainment from
+Shaddai, with flying colours they set forward to march towards the
+famous town of Mansoul. Captain Boanerges led the van, Captain
+Conviction and Captain Judgment made up the main body, and Captain
+Execution brought up the rear. They then, having a great way to
+go, (for the town of Mansoul was far off from the court of
+Shaddai,) marched through the regions and countries of many people,
+not hurting or abusing any, but blessing wherever they came. They
+also lived upon the King's cost in all the way they went.
+
+Having travelled thus for many days, at last they came within sight
+of Mansoul; the which when they saw, the captains could for their
+hearts do no less than for a while bewail the condition of the
+town; for they quickly saw how that it was prostrate to the will of
+Diabolus, and to his ways and designs.
+
+Well, to be short, the captains came up before the town, march up
+to Ear-gate, sit down there (for that was the place of hearing).
+So, when they had pitched their tents and entrenched themselves,
+they addressed themselves to make their assault.
+
+Now the townsfolk at first, beholding so gallant a company, so
+bravely accoutred, and so excellently disciplined, having on their
+glittering armour, and displaying of their flying colours, could
+not but come out of their houses and gaze. But the cunning fox
+Diabolus, fearing that the people, after this sight, should, on a
+sudden summons, open the gates to the captains, came down with all
+haste from the castle, and made them retire into the body of the
+town, who, when he had them there, made this lying and deceivable
+speech unto them:
+
+'Gentlemen,' quoth he, 'although you are my trusty and well-beloved
+friends, yet I cannot but a little chide you for your late
+uncircumspect action, in going out to gaze on that great and mighty
+force that but yesterday sat down before, and have now entrenched
+themselves in order to the maintaining of a siege against the
+famous town of Mansoul. Do you know who they are, whence they
+come, and what is their purpose in sitting down before the town of
+Mansoul? They are they of whom I have told you long ago, that they
+would come to destroy this town, and against whom I have been at
+the cost to arm you with cap-a-pie for your body, besides great
+fortifications for your mind. Wherefore, then, did you not rather,
+even at the first appearance of them, cry out, "Fire the beacons!"
+and give the whole town an alarm concerning them, that we might all
+have been in a posture of defence, and been ready to have received
+them with the highest acts of defiance? Then had you showed
+yourselves men to my liking; whereas, by what you have done, you
+have made me half afraid--I say, half afraid--that when they and we
+shall come to push a pike, I shall find you want courage to stand
+it out any longer. Wherefore have I commanded a watch, and that
+you should double your guards at the gates? Wherefore have I
+endeavoured to make you as hard as iron, and your hearts as a piece
+of the nether millstone? Was it, think you, that you might show
+yourselves women, and that you might go out like a company of
+innocents to gaze on your mortal foes? Fie, fie! put yourselves
+into a posture of defence, beat up the drum, gather together in
+warlike manner, that our foes may know that, before they shall
+conquer this corporation, there are valiant men in the town of
+Mansoul.
+
+'I will leave off now to chide, and will not further rebuke you;
+but I charge you, that henceforwards you let me see no more such
+actions. Let not henceforward a man of you, without order first
+obtained from me, so much as show his head over the wall of the
+town of Mansoul. You have now heard me; do as I have commanded,
+and you shall cause me that I dwell securely with you, and that I
+take care, as for myself, so for your safety and honour also.
+Farewell."
+
+Now were the townsmen strangely altered; they were as men stricken
+with a panic fear; they ran to and fro through the streets of the
+town of Mansoul, crying out, 'Help, help! the men that turn the
+world upside down are come hither also.' Nor could any of them be
+quiet after; but still, as men bereft of wit, they cried out, 'The
+destroyers of our peace and people are come.' This went down with
+Diabolus. 'Ah,' quoth he to himself, 'this I like well: now it is
+as I would have it; now you show your obedience to your prince.
+Hold you but here, and then let them take the town if they can.'
+
+Well, before the King's forces had sat before Mansoul three days,
+Captain Boanerges commanded his trumpeter to go down to Ear-gate,
+and there, in the name of the great Shaddai, to summon Mansoul to
+give audience to the message that he, in his Master's name, was to
+them commanded to deliver. So the trumpeter, whose name was Take-
+heed-what-you-hear, went up, as he was commanded, to Ear-gate, and
+there sounded his trumpet for a hearing; but there was none that
+appeared that gave answer or regard, for so had Diabolus commanded.
+So the trumpeter returned to his captain, and told him what he had
+done, and also how he had sped; whereat the captain was grieved,
+but bid the trumpeter go to his tent.
+
+Again Captain Boanerges sendeth his trumpeter to Ear-gate, to sound
+as before for a hearing; but they again kept close, came not out,
+nor would they give him an answer, so observant were they of the
+command of Diabolus their king.
+
+Then the captains and other field officers called a council of war,
+to consider what further was to be done for the gaining of the town
+of Mansoul; and, after some close and thorough debate upon the
+contents of their commissions, they concluded yet to give to the
+town, by the hand of the fore-named trumpeter, another summons to
+hear; but if that shall be refused, said they, and that the town
+shall stand it out still, then they determined, and bid the
+trumpeter tell them so, that they would endeavour, by what means
+they could, to compel them by force to the obedience of their King.
+
+So Captain Boanerges commanded his trumpeter to go up to Ear-gate
+again, and, in the name of the great King Shaddai, to give it a
+very loud summons to come down without delay to Ear-gate, there to
+give audience to the King's most noble captains. So the trumpeter
+went, and did as he was commanded: he went up to Ear-gate, and
+sounded his trumpet, and gave a third summons to Mansoul. He said,
+moreover, that if this they should still refuse to do, the captains
+of his prince would with might come down upon them, and endeavour
+to reduce them to their obedience by force.
+
+Then stood up my Lord Willbewill, who was the governor of the town,
+(this Willbewill was that apostate of whom mention was made
+before,) and the keeper of the gates of Mansoul. He therefore,
+with big and ruffling words, demanded of the trumpeter who he was,
+whence he came, and what was the cause of his making so hideous a
+noise at the gate, and speaking such insufferable words against the
+town of Mansoul.
+
+The trumpeter answered, 'I am servant to the most noble captain,
+Captain Boanerges, general of the forces of the great King Shaddai,
+against whom both thyself, with the whole town of Mansoul, have
+rebelled, and lift up the heel; and my master, the captain, hath a
+special message to this town, and to thee, as a member thereof; the
+which if you of Mansoul shall peaceably hear, so; and if not, you
+must take what follows.'
+
+Then said the Lord Willbewill, 'I will carry thy words to my lord,
+and will know what he will say.'
+
+But the trumpeter soon replied, saying. 'Our message is not to the
+giant Diabolus, but to the miserable town of Mansoul; nor shall we
+at all regard what answer by him is made, nor yet by any for him.
+We are sent to this town to recover it from under his cruel
+tyranny, and to persuade it to submit, as in former times it did,
+to the most excellent King Shaddai.'
+
+Then said the Lord Willbewill, 'I will do your errand to the town.'
+
+The trumpeter then replied, 'Sir, do not deceive us, lest, in so
+doing, you deceive yourselves much more.' He added, moreover, 'For
+we are resolved, if in peaceable manner you do not submit
+yourselves, then to make a war upon you, and to bring you under by
+force. And of the truth of what I now say, this shall be a sign
+unto you,--you shall see the black flag, with its hot, burning
+thunder-bolts, set upon the mount to-morrow, as a token of defiance
+against your prince, and of our resolutions to reduce you to your
+Lord and rightful King.'
+
+So the said Lord Willbewill returned from off the wall, and the
+trumpeter came into the camp. When the trumpeter was come into the
+camp, the captains and officers of the mighty King Shaddai came
+together to know if he had obtained a hearing, and what was the
+effect of his errand. So the trumpeter told, saying, 'When I had
+sounded my trumpet, and had called aloud to the town for a hearing,
+my Lord Willbewill, the governor of the town, and he that hath
+charge of the gates, came up when he heard me sound, and, looking
+over the wall, he asked me what I was, whence I came, and what was
+the cause of my making this noise. So I told him my errand, and by
+whose authority I brought it. "Then," said he, "I will tell it to
+the governor and to Mansoul;" and then I returned to my lords.'
+
+Then said the brave Boanerges, 'Let us yet for a while lie still in
+our trenches, and see what these rebels will do.'
+
+Now when the time drew nigh that audience by Mansoul must be given
+to the brave Boanerges and his companions, it was commanded that
+all the men of war throughout the whole camp of Shaddai should as
+one man stand to their arms, and make themselves ready, if the town
+of Mansoul shall hear, to receive it forthwith to mercy; but if
+not, to force a subjection. So the day being come, the trumpeters
+sounded, and that throughout the whole camp, that the men of war
+might be in a readiness for that which then should be the work of
+the day. But when they that were in the town of Mansoul heard the
+sound of the trumpets throughout the camp of Shaddai, and thinking
+no other but that it must be in order to storm the corporation,
+they at first were put to great consternation of spirit; but after
+they a little were settled again, they also made what preparation
+they could for a war, if they did storm; else, to secure
+themselves.
+
+Well, when the utmost time was come, Boanerges was resolved to hear
+their answer; wherefore he sent out his trumpeter again to summon
+Mansoul to a hearing of the message that they had brought from
+Shaddai.
+
+So he went and sounded, and the townsmen came up, but made Ear-gate
+as sure as they could. Now when they were come up to the top of
+the wall, Captain Boanerges desired to see the Lord Mayor; but my
+Lord Incredulity was then Lord Mayor, for he came in the room of my
+Lord Lustings. So Incredulity came up and showed himself over the
+wall; but when the Captain Boanerges had set his eyes upon him, he
+cried out aloud, 'This is not he: where is my Lord Understanding,
+the ancient Lord Mayor of the town of Mansoul? for to him I would
+deliver my message.'
+
+Then said the giant (for Diabolus was also come down) to the
+captain, 'Mr. Captain, you have by your boldness given to Mansoul
+at least four summonses to subject herself to your King, by whose
+authority I know not, nor will I dispute that now. I ask,
+therefore, what is the reason of all this ado, or what would you be
+at if you knew yourselves?'
+
+Then Captain Boanerges, whose were the black colours, and whose
+scutcheon was the three burning thunderbolts, taking no notice of
+the giant or of his speech, thus addressed himself to the town of
+Mansoul: 'Be it known unto you, O unhappy and rebellious Mansoul,
+that the most gracious King, the great King Shaddai, my Master,
+hath sent me unto you with commission' (and so he showed to the
+town his broad seal) 'to reduce you to his obedience; and he hath
+commanded me, in case you yield upon my summons, to carry it to you
+as if you were my friends or brethren; but he also hath bid, that
+if, after summons to submit you still stand out and rebel, we
+should endeavour to take you by force.'
+
+Then stood forth Captain Conviction, and said, (his were the pale
+colours, and for a scutcheon he had the book of the law wide open,
+etc.,) 'Hear, O Mansoul! Thou, O Mansoul, wast once famous for
+innocency, but now thou art degenerated into lies and deceit. Thou
+hast heard what my brother, the Captain Boanerges, hath said; and
+it is your wisdom, and will be your happiness, to stoop to, and
+accept of conditions of peace and mercy when offered, specially
+when offered by one against whom thou hast rebelled, and one who is
+of power to tear thee in pieces, for so is Shaddai, our King; nor,
+when he is angry, can anything stand before him. If you say you
+have not sinned, or acted rebellion against our King, the whole of
+your doings since the day that you cast off his service (and there
+was the beginning of your sin) will sufficiently testify against
+you. What else means your hearkening to the tyrant, and your
+receiving him for your king? What means else your rejecting of the
+laws of Shaddai, and your obeying of Diabolus? Yea, what means
+this your taking up of arms against, and the shutting of your gates
+upon us, the faithful servants of your King? Be ruled then, and
+accept of my brother's invitation, and overstand not the time of
+mercy, but agree with thine adversary quickly. Ah, Mansoul! suffer
+not thyself to be kept from mercy, and to be run into a thousand
+miseries, by the flattering wiles of Diabolus. Perhaps that piece
+of deceit may attempt to make you believe that we seek our own
+profit in this our service, but know it is obedience to our King,
+and love to your happiness, that is the cause of this undertaking
+of ours.
+
+'Again I say to thee, O Mansoul, consider if it be not amazing
+grace that Shaddai should so humble himself as he doth: now he, by
+us, reasons with you, in a way of entreaty and sweet persuasions,
+that you would subject yourselves to him. Has he that need of you
+that we are sure you have of him? No, no; but he is merciful, and
+will not that Mansoul should die, but turn to him and live.'
+
+Then stood forth Captain Judgment, whose were the red colours, and
+for a scutcheon he had the burning fiery furnace, and he said, 'O
+ye, the inhabitants of the town of Mansoul, that have lived so long
+in rebellion and acts of treason against the King Shaddai, know
+that we come not to-day to this place, in this manner, with our
+message of our own minds, or to revenge our own quarrel; it is the
+King, my Master, that hath sent us to reduce you to your obedience
+to him; the which if you refuse in a peaceable way to yield, we
+have commission to compel you thereto. And never think of
+yourselves, nor yet suffer the tyrant Diabolus to persuade you to
+think, that our King, by his power, is not able to bring you down,
+and to lay you under his feet; for he is the former of all things,
+and if he touches the mountains, they smoke. Nor will the gate of
+the King's clemency stand always open; for the day that shall burn
+like an oven is before him; yea, it hasteth greatly, it slumbereth
+not.
+
+'O Mansoul, is it little in thine eyes that our King doth offer
+thee mercy, and that after so many provocations? Yea, he still
+holdeth out his golden sceptre to thee, and will not yet suffer his
+gate to be shut against thee: wilt thou provoke him to do it? If
+so, consider of what I say; to thee it is opened no more for ever.
+If thou sayest thou shalt not see him, yet judgment is before him;
+therefore trust thou in him. Yea, because there is wrath, beware
+lest he take thee away with his stroke; then a great ransom cannot
+deliver thee. Will he esteem thy riches? No, not gold, nor all
+the forces of strength. He hath prepared his throne for judgment,
+for he will come with fire, and with his chariots like a whirlwind,
+to render his anger with fury, and his rebukes with flames of fire.
+Therefore, O Mansoul, take heed lest, after thou hast fulfilled the
+judgment of the wicked, justice and judgment should take hold of
+thee.'
+
+Now while the Captain Judgment was making this oration to the town
+of Mansoul, it was observed by some that Diabolus trembled; but he
+proceeded in his parable and said, 'O thou woful town of Mansoul,
+wilt thou not yet set open thy gate to receive us, the deputies of
+thy King, and those that would rejoice to see thee live? Can thine
+heart endure, or can thy hands be strong, in the day that he shall
+deal in judgment with thee? I say, canst thou endure to be forced
+to drink, as one would drink sweet wine, the sea of wrath that our
+King has prepared for Diabolus and his angels? Consider, betimes
+consider.'
+
+Then stood forth the fourth captain, the noble Captain Execution,
+and said, 'O town of Mansoul, once famous, but now like the
+fruitless bough, once the delight of the high ones, but now a den
+for Diabolus, hearken also to me, and to the words that I shall
+speak to thee in the name of the great Shaddai. Behold, the axe is
+laid to the root of the trees: every tree, therefore, that
+bringeth not forth good fruit, is hewn down and cast into the fire.
+
+'Thou, O town of Mansoul, hast hitherto been this fruitless tree;
+thou bearest nought but thorns and briars. Thy evil fruit bespeaks
+thee not to be a good tree; thy grapes are grapes of gall, thy
+clusters are bitter. Thou hast rebelled against thy King; and, lo!
+we, the power and force of Shaddai, are the axe that is laid to thy
+root. What sayest thou? Wilt thou turn? I say again, tell me,
+before the first blow is given, wilt thou turn? Our axe must first
+be laid TO thy root before it be laid AT thy root; it must first be
+laid TO thy root in a way of threatening, before it is laid AT thy
+root by way of execution; and between these two is required thy
+repentance, and this is all the time that thou hast. What wilt
+thou do? Wilt thou turn, or shall I smite? If I fetch my blow,
+Mansoul, down you go; for I have commission to lay my axe AT as
+well as TO thy roots, nor will anything but yielding to our King
+prevent doing of execution. What art thou fit for, O Mansoul, if
+mercy preventeth not, but to be hewn down, and cast into the fire
+and burned?
+
+'O Mansoul, patience and forbearance do not act for ever: a year,
+or two, or three, they may; but if thou provoke by a three years'
+rebellion, (and thou hast already done more than this,) then what
+follows but, 'Cut it down'? nay, 'After that thou shalt cut it
+down.' And dost thou think that these are but threatenings, or
+that our King has not power to execute his words? O Mansoul, thou
+wilt find that in the words of our King, when they are by sinners
+made little or light of, there is not only threatening, but burning
+coals of fire.
+
+'Thou hast been a cumber-ground long already, and wilt thou
+continue so still? Thy sin has brought this army to thy walls, and
+shall it bring it in judgment to do execution into thy town? Thou
+hast heard what the captains have said, but as yet thou shuttest
+thy gates. Speak out, Mansoul; wilt thou do so still, or wilt thou
+accept of conditions of peace?'
+
+These brave speeches of these four noble captains the town of
+Mansoul refused to hear; yet a sound thereof did beat against Ear-
+gate, though the force thereof could not break it open. In fine,
+the town desired a time to prepare their answer to these demands.
+The captains then told them, that if they would throw out to them
+one Ill-Pause that was in the town, that they might reward him
+according to his works, then they would give them time to consider;
+but if they would not cast him to them over the wall of Mansoul,
+then they would give them none; 'for,' said they, 'we know that, so
+long as Ill-Pause draws breath in Mansoul, all good consideration
+will be confounded, and nothing but mischief will come thereon.'
+
+Then Diabolus, who was there present, being loath to lose his Ill-
+Pause, because he was his orator, (and yet be sure he had, could
+the captains have laid their fingers on him,) was resolved at this
+instant to give them answer by himself; but then changing his mind,
+he commanded the then Lord Mayor, the Lord Incredulity, to do it,
+saying, 'My lord, do you give these runagates an answer, and speak
+out, that Mansoul may hear and understand you.'
+
+So Incredulity, at Diabolus' command, began, and said, 'Gentlemen,
+you have here, as we do behold, to the disturbance of our prince
+and the molestation of the town of Mansoul, camped against it: but
+from whence you come, we will not know; and what you are, we will
+not believe. Indeed, you tell us in your terrible speech that you
+have this authority from Shaddai, but by what right he commands you
+to do it, of that we shall yet be ignorant.
+
+'You have also, by the authority aforesaid, summoned this town to
+desert her lord, and, for protection, to yield up herself to the
+great Shaddai, your King; flatteringly telling her, that if she
+will do it, he will pass by and not charge her with her past
+offences.
+
+'Further, you have also, to the terror of the town of Mansoul,
+threatened with great and sore destructions to punish this
+corporation, if she consents not to do as your wills would have
+her.
+
+'Now, captains, from whencesoever you come, and though your designs
+be ever so right, yet know ye that neither my Lord Diabolus, nor I,
+his servant, Incredulity, nor yet our brave Mansoul, doth regard
+either your persons, message, or the King that you say hath sent
+you. His power, his greatness, his vengeance, we fear not; nor
+will we yield at all to your summons.
+
+'As for the war that you threaten to make upon us, we must therein
+defend ourselves as well as we can; and know ye, that we are not
+without wherewithal to bid defiance to you; and, in short, (for I
+will not be tedious,) I tell you, that we take you to be some
+vagabond runagate crew, that having shaken off all obedience to
+your King, have gotten together in tumultuous manner, and are
+ranging from place to place to see if, through the flatteries you
+are skilled to make on the one side, and threats wherewith you
+think to fright on the other, to make some silly town, city, or
+country, desert their place, and leave it to you; but Mansoul is
+none of them.
+
+'To conclude: we dread you not, we fear you not, nor will we obey
+your summons. Our gates we will shut upon you, our place we will
+keep you out of. Nor will we long thus suffer you to sit down
+before us: our people must live in quiet: your appearance doth
+disturb them. Wherefore arise with bag and baggage, and begone, or
+we will let fly from the walls against you.'
+
+This oration, made by old Incredulity, was seconded by desperate
+Willbewill, in words to this effect: 'Gentlemen, we have heard
+your demands, and the noise of your threats, and have heard the
+sound of your summons; but we fear not your force, we regard not
+your threats, but will still abide as you found us. And we command
+you, that in three days' time you cease to appear in these parts,
+or you shall know what it is once to dare offer to rouse the lion
+Diabolus when asleep in his town of Mansoul.'
+
+The Recorder, whose name was Forget-Good, he also added as
+followeth: 'Gentlemen, my lords, as you see, have with mild and
+gentle words answered your rough and angry speeches: they have,
+moreover, in my hearing, given you leave quietly to depart as you
+came; wherefore, take their kindness and be gone. We might have
+come out with force upon you, and have caused you to feel the dint
+of our swords; but as we love ease and quiet ourselves, so we love
+not to hurt or molest others.'
+
+Then did the town of Mansoul shout for joy, as if by Diabolus and
+his crew some great advantage had been gotten of the captains.
+They also rang the bells, and made merry, and danced upon the
+walls.
+
+Diabolus also returned to the castle, and the Lord Mayor and
+Recorder to their place; but the Lord Willbewill took special care
+that the gates should be secured with double guards, double bolts,
+and double locks and bars; and that Ear-gate especially might the
+better be looked to, for that was the gate in at which the King's
+forces sought most to enter. The Lord Willbewill made one old Mr.
+Prejudice, an angry and ill-conditioned fellow, captain of the ward
+at that gate, and put under his power sixty men, called deaf men;
+men advantageous for that service, forasmuch as they mattered no
+words of the captains, nor of the soldiers.
+
+Now when the captains saw the answer of the great ones, and that
+they could not get a hearing from the old natives of the town, and
+that Mansoul was resolved to give the King's army battle, they
+prepared themselves to receive them, and to try it out by the power
+of the arm. And, first, they made their force more formidable
+against Ear-gate; for they knew that, unless they could penetrate
+that, no good could be done upon the town. This done, they put the
+rest of their men in their places; after which, they gave out the
+word, which was, 'YE MUST BE BORN AGAIN.' Then they sounded the
+trumpet; then they in the town made them answer, with shout against
+shout, charge against charge, and so the battle began. Now they in
+the town had planted upon the tower over Ear-gate two great guns,
+the one called High-mind, and the other Heady. Unto these two guns
+they trusted much; they were cast in the castle by Diabolus'
+founder, whose name was Mr. Puff-up, and mischievous pieces they
+were. But so vigilant and watchful, when the captains saw them,
+were they, that though sometimes their shot would go by their ears
+with a whiz, yet they did them no harm. By these two guns the
+townsfolk made no question but greatly to annoy the camp of
+Shaddai, and well enough to secure the gate; but they had not much
+cause to boast of what execution they did, as by what follows will
+be gathered.
+
+The famous Mansoul had also some other small pieces in it, of the
+which they made use against the camp of Shaddai.
+
+They from the camp also did as stoutly, and with as much of that as
+may in truth be called valour, let fly as fast at the town and at
+Ear-gate; for they saw that, unless they could break open Ear-gate,
+it would be but in vain to batter the wall. Now the King's
+captains had brought with them several slings, and two or three
+battering-rams; with their slings, therefore, they battered the
+houses and people of the town, and with their rams they sought to
+break Ear-gate open.
+
+The camp and the town had several skirmishes and brisk encounters,
+while the captains with their engines made many brave attempts to
+break open or beat down the tower that was over Ear-gate, and at
+the said gate to make their entrance; but Mansoul stood it out so
+lustily, through the rage of Diabolus, the valour of the Lord
+Willbewill, and the conduct of old Incredulity, the Mayor, and Mr.
+Forget-Good, the Recorder, that the charge and expense of that
+summer's wars, on the King's side, seemed to be almost quite lost,
+and the advantage to return to Mansoul. But when the captains saw
+how it was they made a fair retreat, and entrenched themselves in
+their winter quarters. Now, in this war, you must needs think
+there was much loss on both sides, of which be pleased to accept of
+this brief account following.
+
+The King's captains, when they marched from the court to come up
+against Mansoul to war, as they came crossing over the country,
+they happened to light upon three young fellows that had a mind to
+go for soldiers: proper men they were, and men of courage and
+skill, to appearance. Their names were Mr. Tradition, Mr. Human-
+Wisdom, and Mr. Man's-Invention. So they came up to the captains,
+and proffered their service to Shaddai. The captains then told
+them of their design, and bid them not to be rash in their offers;
+but the young men told them they had considered the thing before,
+and that hearing they were upon their march for such a design, came
+hither on purpose to meet them, that they might be listed under
+their excellencies. Then Captain Boanerges, for that they were men
+of courage, listed them into his company, and so away they went to
+the war.
+
+Now, when the war was begun, in one of the briskest skirmishes, so
+it was, that a company of the Lord Willbewill's men sallied out at
+the sallyport or postern of the town, and fell in upon the rear of
+Captain Boanerges' men, where these three fellows happened to be;
+so they took them prisoners, and away they carried them into the
+town, where they had not lain long in durance, but it began to be
+noised about the streets of the town what three notable prisoners
+the Lord Willbewill's men had taken, and brought in prisoners out
+of the camp of Shaddai. At length tidings thereof were carried to
+Diabolus to the castle, to wit what my Lord Willbewill's men had
+done, and whom they had taken prisoners.
+
+Then Diabolus called for Willbewill, to know the certainty of this
+matter. So he asked him, and he told him. Then did the giant send
+for the prisoners, and, when they were come, demanded of them who
+they were, whence they came, and what they did in the camp of
+Shaddai; and they told him. Then he sent them to ward again. Not
+many days after, he sent for them to him again, and then asked them
+if they would be willing to serve him against their former
+captains. They then told him that they did not so much live by
+religion as by the fates of fortune; and that since his lordship
+was willing to entertain them, they should be willing to serve him.
+Now while things were thus in hand, there was one Captain Anything,
+a great doer, in the town of Mansoul; and to this Captain Anything
+did Diabolus send these men, and a note under his hand, to receive
+them into his company, the contents of which letter were thus:
+
+'Anything, my darling,--The three men that are the bearers of this
+letter have a desire to serve me in the war; nor know I better to
+whose conduct to commit them than to thine. Receive them,
+therefore, in my name, and, as need shall require, make use of them
+against Shaddai and his men. Farewell.'
+
+So they came, and he received them; and he made of two of them
+sergeants; but he made Mr. Man's-Invention his ancient-bearer. But
+thus much for this, and now to return to the camp.
+
+They of the camp did also some execution upon the town; for they
+did beat down the roof of the Lord Mayor's house, and so laid him
+more open than he was before. They had almost, with a sling, slain
+my Lord Willbewill outright; but he made a shift to recover again.
+But they made a notable slaughter among the aldermen, for with one
+only shot they cut off six of them; to wit, Mr. Swearing, Mr.
+Whoring, Mr. Fury, Mr. Stand-to-Lies, Mr. Drunkenness, and Mr.
+Cheating.
+
+They also dismounted the two guns that stood upon the tower over
+Ear-gate, and laid them flat in the dirt. I told you before that
+the King's noble captains had drawn off to their winter quarters,
+and had there entrenched themselves and their carriages, so as with
+the best advantage to their King, and the greatest annoyance to the
+enemy, they might give seasonable and warm alarms to the town of
+Mansoul. And this design of them did so hit, that I may say they
+did almost what they would to the molestation of the corporation.
+For now could not Mansoul sleep securely as before, nor could they
+now go to their debaucheries with that quietness as in times past;
+for they had from the camp of Shaddai such frequent, warm, and
+terrifying alarms, yea, alarms upon alarms, first at one gate and
+then at another, and again at all the gates at once, that they were
+broken as to former peace. Yea, they had their alarms so
+frequently, and that when the nights were at longest, the weather
+coldest, and so consequently the season most unseasonable, that
+that winter was to the town of Mansoul a winter by itself.
+Sometimes the trumpets would sound, and sometimes the slings would
+whirl the stones into the town. Sometimes ten thousand of the
+King's soldiers would be running round the walls of Mansoul at
+midnight, shouting and lifting up the voice for the battle.
+Sometimes, again, some of them in the town would be wounded, and
+their cry and lamentable voice would be heard, to the great
+molestation of the now languishing town of Mansoul. Yea, so
+distressed with those that laid siege against them were they, that,
+I dare say, Diabolus, their king, had in these days his rest much
+broken.
+
+In these days, as I was informed, new thoughts, and thoughts that
+began to run counter one to another, began to possess the minds of
+the men of the town of Mansoul. Some would say, 'There is no
+living thus.' Others would then reply, 'This will be over
+shortly.' Then would a third stand up and answer, 'Let us turn to
+the King Shaddai, and so put an end to these troubles.' And a
+fourth would come in with a fear, saying, 'I doubt he will not
+receive us.' The old gentleman, too, the Recorder, that was so
+before Diabolus took Mansoul, he also began to talk aloud, and his
+words were now to the town of Mansoul as if they were great claps
+of thunder. No noise now so terrible to Mansoul as was his, with
+the noise of the soldiers and shoutings of the captains.
+
+Also things began to grow scarce in Mansoul; now the things that
+her soul lusted after were departing from her. Upon all her
+pleasant things there was a blast, and burning instead of beauty.
+Wrinkles now, and some shows of the shadow of death, were upon the
+inhabitants of Mansoul. And now, O how glad would Mansoul have
+been to have enjoyed quietness and satisfaction of mind, though
+joined with the meanest condition in the world!
+
+The captains also, in the deep of this winter, did send by the
+mouth of Boanerges' trumpeter a summons to Mansoul to yield up
+herself to the King, the great King Shaddai. They sent it once,
+and twice, and thrice; not knowing but that at some times there
+might be in Mansoul some willingness to surrender up themselves
+unto them, might they but have the colour of an invitation to do it
+under. Yea, so far as I could gather, the town had been
+surrendered up to them before now, had it not been for the
+opposition of old Incredulity, and the fickleness of the thoughts
+of my Lord Willbewill. Diabolus also began to rave; wherefore
+Mansoul, as to yielding, was not yet all of one mind; therefore
+they still lay distressed under these perplexing fears.
+
+I told you but now that they of the King's army had this winter
+sent three times to Mansoul to submit herself.
+
+The first time the trumpeter went he went with words of peace,
+telling them that the captains, the noble captains of Shaddai, did
+pity and bewail the misery of the now perishing town of Mansoul,
+and were troubled to see them so much to stand in the way of their
+own deliverance. He said, moreover, that the captains bid him tell
+them, that if now poor Mansoul would humble herself and turn, her
+former rebellions and most notorious treasons should by their
+merciful King be forgiven them, yea, and forgotten too. And having
+bid them beware that they stood not in their own way, that they
+opposed not themselves, nor made themselves their own losers, he
+returned again into the camp.
+
+The second time the trumpeter went, he did treat them a little more
+roughly; for, after sound of trumpet, he told them that their
+continuing in their rebellion did but chafe and heat the spirit of
+the captains, and that they were resolved to make a conquest of
+Mansoul, or to lay their bones before the town walls.
+
+He went again the third time, and dealt with them yet more roughly;
+telling them that now, since they had been so horribly profane, he
+did not know, not certainly know, whether the captains were
+inclining to mercy or judgment. 'Only,' said he, 'they commanded
+me to give you a summons to open the gates unto them.' So he
+returned, and went into the camp.
+
+These three summonses, and especially the last two, did so distress
+the town that they presently call a consultation, the result of
+which was this--That my Lord Willbewill should go up to Ear-gate,
+and there, with sound of trumpet, call to the captains of the camp
+for a parley. Well, the Lord Willbewill sounded upon the wall; so
+the captains came up in their harness, with their ten thousands at
+their feet. The townsmen then told the captains that they had
+heard and considered their summons, and would come to an agreement
+with them, and with their King Shaddai, upon such certain terms,
+articles, and propositions as, with and by the order of their
+prince, they to them were appointed to propound; to wit, they would
+agree upon these grounds to be one people with them.
+
+1. If that those of their own company, as the now Lord Mayor and
+their Mr. Forget-Good, with then brave Lord Willbewill, might,
+under Shaddai, be still the governors of the town, castle, and
+gates of Mansoul.
+
+2. Provided that no man that now serveth under their great giant
+Diabolus be by Shaddai cast out of house, harbour, or the freedom
+that he hath hitherto enjoyed in the famous town of Mansoul.
+
+3. That it shall be granted them, that they of the town of Mansoul
+shall enjoy certain of their rights and privileges; to wit, such as
+have formerly been granted them, and that they have long lived in
+the enjoyment of, under the reign of their king Diabolus, that now
+is, and long has been, their only lord and great defender.
+
+4. That no new law, officer, or executioner of law or office, shall
+have any power over them, without their own choice and consent.
+
+'These be our propositions, or conditions of peace; and upon these
+terms,' said they, 'we will submit to your King.'
+
+But when the captains had heard this weak and feeble offer of the
+town of Mansoul, and their high and bold demands, they made to them
+again, by their noble captain, the Captain Boanerges, this speech
+following:
+
+'O ye inhabitants of the town of Mansoul, when I heard your trumpet
+sound for a parley with us, I can truly say I was glad; but when
+you said you were willing to submit yourselves to our King and
+Lord, then I was yet more glad; but when, by your silly provisos
+and foolish cavils, you laid the stumbling-block of your iniquity
+before your own faces, then was my gladness turned into sorrows,
+and my hopeful beginnings of your return, into languishing fainting
+fears.
+
+'I count that old Ill-Pause, the ancient enemy of Mansoul, did draw
+up those proposals that now you present us with as terms of an
+agreement; but they deserve not to be admitted to sound in the ear
+of any man that pretends to have service for Shaddai. We do
+therefore jointly, and that with the highest disdain, refuse and
+reject such things, as the greatest of iniquities.
+
+'But, O Mansoul, if you will give yourselves into our hands, or
+rather into the hands of our King, and will trust him to make such
+terms with and for you as shall seem good in his eyes, (and I dare
+say they shall be such as you shall find to be most profitable to
+you,) then we will receive you, and be at peace with you; but if
+you like not to trust yourselves in the arms of Shaddai our King,
+then things are but where they were before, and we know also what
+we have to do.'
+
+Then cried out old Incredulity, the Lord Mayor, and said, 'And who,
+being out of the hands of their enemies, as ye see we are now, will
+be so foolish as to put the staff out of their own hands into the
+hands of they know not who? I, for my part, will never yield to so
+unlimited a proposition. Do we know the manner and temper of their
+King? It is said by some that he will be angry with his subjects
+if but the breadth of an hair they chance to step out of the way;
+and by others, that he requireth of them much more than they can
+perform. Wherefore, it seems, O Mansoul, to be thy wisdom to take
+good heed what thou dost in this matter; for if you once yield, you
+give up yourselves to another, and so you are no more your own.
+Wherefore, to give up yourselves to an unlimited power, is the
+greatest folly in the world; for now you indeed may repent, but can
+never justly complain. But do you indeed know, when you are his,
+which of you he will kill, and which of you he will save alive; or
+whether he will not cut off every one of us, and send out of his
+own country another new people, and cause them to inhabit this
+town?'
+
+This speech of the Lord Mayor undid all, and threw flat to the
+ground their hopes of an accord. Wherefore the captains returned
+to their trenches, to their tents, and to their men, as they were;
+and the Mayor to the castle and to his King.
+
+Now Diabolus had waited for his return, for he had heard that they
+had been at their points. So, when he was come into the chamber of
+state, Diabolus saluted him with--'Welcome, my lord. How went
+matters betwixt you to-day?' So the Lord Incredulity, with a low
+congee, told him the whole of the matter, saying, 'Thus and thus
+said the captains of Shaddai, and thus and thus said I.' The which
+when it was told to Diabolus, he was very glad to hear it, and
+said, 'My Lord Mayor, my faithful Incredulity, I have proved thy
+fidelity above ten times already, but never yet found thee false.
+I do promise thee, if we rub over this brunt, to prefer thee to a
+place of honour, a place far better than to be Lord Mayor of
+Mansoul. I will make thee my universal deputy, and thou shalt,
+next to me, have all nations under thy hand; yea, and thou shalt
+lay bands upon them, that they may not resist thee; nor shall any
+of our vassals walk more at liberty, but those that shall be
+content to walk in thy fetters.'
+
+Now came the Lord Mayor out from Diabolus, as if he had obtained a
+favour indeed. Wherefore to his habitation he goes in great state,
+and thinks to feed himself well enough with hopes, until the time
+came that his greatness should be enlarged.
+
+But now, though the Lord Mayor and Diabolus did thus well agree,
+yet this repulse to the brave captains put Mansoul into a mutiny.
+For while old Incredulity went into the castle to congratulate his
+lord with what had passed, the old Lord Mayor, that was so before
+Diabolus came to the town, to wit, my Lord Understanding, and the
+old Recorder, Mr. Conscience, getting intelligence of what had
+passed at Ear-gate, (for you must know that they might not be
+suffered to be at that debate, lest they should then have mutinied
+for the captains; but, I say, they got intelligence of what had
+passed there, and were much concerned therewith,) wherefore they,
+getting some of the town together, began to possess them with the
+reasonableness of the noble captains' demands, and with the bad
+consequences that would follow upon the speech of old Incredulity,
+the Lord Mayor; to wit how little reverence he showed therein
+either to the captains or to their King; also how he implicitly
+charged them with unfaithfulness and treachery. 'For what less,'
+quoth they, 'could be made of his words, when he said he would not
+yield to their proposition; and added, moreover, a supposition that
+he would destroy us, when before he had sent us word that he would
+show us mercy!' The multitude, being now possessed with the
+conviction of the evil that old Incredulity had done, began to run
+together by companies in all places, and in every corner of the
+streets of Mansoul; and first they began to mutter, then to talk
+openly, and after that they run to and fro, and cried as they run,
+'Oh the brave captains of Shaddai! would we were under the
+government of the captains, and of Shaddai their King!' When the
+Lord Mayor had intelligence that Mansoul was in an uproar, down he
+comes to appease the people, and thought to have quashed their heat
+with the bigness and the show of his countenance; but when they saw
+him, they came running upon him, and had doubtless done him a
+mischief, had he not betaken himself to house. However, they
+strongly assaulted the house where he was, to have pulled it down
+about his ears; but the place was too strong, so they failed of
+that. So he, taking some courage, addressed himself, out at a
+window, to the people in this manner:
+
+'Gentlemen, what is the reason that there is here such an uproar
+to-day?'
+
+Then answered my Lord Understanding, 'It is even because that thou
+and thy master have carried it not rightly, and as you should, to
+the captains of Shaddai; for in three things you are faulty.
+First, in that you would not let Mr. Conscience and myself be at
+the hearing of your discourse. Secondly, in that you propounded
+such terms of peace to the captains that by no means could be
+granted, unless they had intended that their Shaddai should have
+been only a titular prince, and that Mansoul should still have had
+power by law to have lived in all lewdness and vanity before him,
+and so by consequence Diabolus should still here be king in power,
+and the other only king in name. Thirdly, for that thou didst
+thyself, after the captains had showed us upon what conditions they
+would have received us to mercy, even undo all again with thy
+unsavoury, unseasonable, and ungodly speech.'
+
+When old Incredulity had heard this speech, he cried out, 'Treason!
+treason! To your arms! to your arms! O ye, the trusty friends of
+Diabolus in Mansoul.'
+
+Und.--Sir, you may put upon my words what meaning you please; but I
+am sure that the captains of such an high lord as theirs is,
+deserved a better treatment at your hands.
+
+Then said old Incredulity, 'This is but little better. But, Sir,'
+quoth he, 'what I spake I spake for my prince, for his government,
+and the quieting of the people, whom by your unlawful actions you
+have this day set to mutiny against us.'
+
+Then replied the old Recorder, whose name was Mr. Conscience, and
+said, 'Sir, you ought not thus to retort upon what my Lord
+Understanding hath said. It is evident enough that he hath spoken
+the truth, and that you are an enemy to Mansoul. Be convinced,
+then, of the evil of your saucy and malapert language, and of the
+grief that you have put the captains to; yea, and of the damages
+that you have done to Mansoul thereby. Had you accepted of the
+conditions, the sound of the trumpet and the alarm of war had now
+ceased about the town of Mansoul; but that dreadful sound abides,
+and your want of wisdom in your speech has been the cause of it.'
+
+Then said old Incredulity, 'Sir, if I live, I will do your errand
+to Diabolus, and there you shall have an answer to your words.
+Meanwhile we will seek the good of the town, and not ask counsel of
+you.'
+
+Und.--Sir, your prince and you are both foreigners to Mansoul, and
+not the natives thereof; and who can tell but that, when you have
+brought us into greater straits, (when you also shall see that
+yourselves can be safe by no other means than by flight,) you may
+leave us and shift for yourselves, or set us on fire, and go away
+in the smoke, or by the light of our burning, and so leave us in
+our ruins?
+
+Incred.--Sir, you forget that you are under a governor, and that
+you ought to demean yourself like a subject; and know ye, when my
+lord the king shall hear of this day's work, he will give you but
+little thanks for your labour.
+
+Now while these gentlemen were thus in their chiding words, down
+come from the walls and gates of the town the Lord Willbewill, Mr.
+Prejudice, old Ill-Pause, and several of the new-made aldermen and
+burgesses, and they asked the reason of the hubbub and tumult; and
+with that every man began to tell his own tale, so that nothing
+could be heard distinctly. Then was a silence commanded, and the
+old fox Incredulity began to speak. 'My lord,' quoth he, 'here are
+a couple of peevish gentlemen, that have, as a fruit of their bad
+dispositions, and, as I fear, through the advice of one Mr.
+Discontent, tumultuously gathered this company against me this day,
+and also attempted to run the town into acts of rebellion against
+our prince.'
+
+Then stood up all the Diabolonians that were present, and affirmed
+these things to be true.
+
+Now when they that took part with my Lord Understanding and with
+Mr. Conscience perceived that they were like to come to the worst,
+for that force and power was on the other side, they came in for
+their help and relief; so a great company was on both sides. Then
+they on Incredulity's side would have had the two old gentlemen
+presently away to prison; but they on the other side said they
+should not. Then they began to cry up parties again: the
+Diabolonians cried up old Incredulity, Forget-Good, the new
+aldermen, and their great one Diabolus; and the other party, they
+as fast cried up Shaddai, the captains, his laws, their
+mercifulness, and applauded their conditions and ways. Thus the
+bickerment went awhile; at last they passed from words to blows,
+and now there were knocks on both sides. The good old gentleman,
+Mr. Conscience, was knocked down twice by one of the Diabolonians,
+whose name was Mr. Benumbing; and my Lord Understanding had like to
+have been slain with an arquebuse, but that he that shot did not
+take his aim aright. Nor did the other side wholly escape; for
+there was one Mr. Rashhead, a Diabolonian, that had his brains
+beaten out by Mr. Mind, the Lord Willbewill's servant; and it made
+me laugh to see how old Mr. Prejudice was kicked and tumbled about
+in the dirt; for though, a while since, he was made captain of a
+company of the Diabolonians, to the hurt and damage of the town,
+yet now they had got him under their feet, and, I'll assure you, he
+had, by some of the Lord Understanding's party, his crown cracked
+to boot. Mr. Anything also, he became a brisk man in the broil;
+but both sides were against him, because he was true to none. Yet
+he had, for his malapertness, one of his legs broken, and he that
+did it wished it had been his neck. Much more harm was done on
+both sides, but this must not be forgotten; it was now a wonder to
+see my Lord Willbewill so indifferent as he was: he did not seem
+to take one side more than another, only it was perceived that he
+smiled to see how old Prejudice was tumbled up and down in the
+dirt. Also, when Captain Anything came halting up before him, he
+seemed to take but little notice of him.
+
+Now, when the uproar was over, Diabolus sends for my Lord
+Understanding and Mr. Conscience, and claps them both up in prison
+as the ringleaders and managers of this most heavy, riotous rout in
+Mansoul. So now the town began to be quiet again, and the
+prisoners were used hardly; yea, he thought to have made them away,
+but that the present juncture did not serve for that purpose, for
+that war was in all their gates.
+
+But let us return again to our story. The captains, when they were
+gone back from the gate, and were come into the camp again, called
+a council of war, to consult what was further for them to do. Now,
+some said, 'Let us go up presently, and fall upon the town;' but
+the greatest part thought rather better it would be to give them
+another summons to yield; and the reason why they thought this to
+be best was, because that, so far as could be perceived, the town
+of Mansoul now was more inclinable than heretofore. 'And if,' said
+they, 'while some of them are in a way of inclination, we should by
+ruggedness give them distaste, we may set them further from closing
+with our summons than we would be willing they should.' Wherefore
+to this advice they agreed, and called a trumpeter, put words into
+his mouth, set him his time, and bid him God speed. Well, many
+hours were not expired before the trumpeter addressed himself to
+his journey. Wherefore, coming up to the wall of the town, he
+steereth his course to Ear-gate, and there sounded, as he was
+commanded. They then that were within came out to see what was the
+matter, and the trumpeter made them this speech following:
+
+'O hard-hearted and deplorable town of Mansoul, how long wilt thou
+love thy sinful, sinful simplicity, and, ye fools, delight in your
+scorning? As yet despise you the offers of peace and deliverance?
+As yet will ye refuse the golden offers of Shaddai, and trust to
+the lies and falsehoods of Diabolus? Think you, when Shaddai shall
+have conquered you, that the remembrance of these your carriages
+towards him will yield you peace and comfort, or that by ruffling
+language you can make him afraid as a grasshopper? Doth he entreat
+you for fear of you? Do you think that you are stronger than he?
+Look to the heavens, and behold and consider the stars, how high
+are they? Can you stop the sun from running his course, and hinder
+the moon from giving her light? Can you count the number of the
+stars, or stay the bottles of heaven? Can you call for the waters
+of the sea, and cause them to cover the face of the ground? Can
+you behold every one that is proud, and abase him, and bind their
+faces in secret? Yet these are some of the works of our King, in
+whose name this day we come up unto you, that you may be brought
+under his authority. In his name, therefore, I summon you again to
+yield up yourselves to his captains.'
+
+At this summons the Mansoulians seemed to be at a stand, and knew
+not what answer to make. Wherefore Diabolus forthwith appeared,
+and took upon him to do it himself; and thus he begins, but turns
+his speech to them of Mansoul.
+
+'Gentlemen,' quoth he, 'and my faithful subjects, if it is true
+that this summoner hath said concerning the greatness of their
+King, by his terror you will always be kept in bondage, and so be
+made to sneak. Yea, how can you now, though he is at a distance,
+endure to think of such a mighty one? And if not to think of him
+while at a distance, how can you endure to be in his presence? I,
+your prince, am familiar with you, and you may play with me as you
+would with a grasshopper. Consider, therefore, what is for your
+profit, and remember the immunities that I have granted you.
+
+'Farther, if all be true that this man hath said, how comes it to
+pass that the subjects of Shaddai are so enslaved in all places
+where they come? None in the universe so unhappy as they, none so
+trampled upon as they.
+
+'Consider, my Mansoul: would thou wert as loath to leave me as I
+am loath to leave thee. But consider, I say, the ball is yet at
+thy foot; liberty you have, if you know how to use it; yea, a king
+you have too, if you can tell how to love and obey him.'
+
+Upon this speech, the town of Mansoul did again harden their hearts
+yet more against the captains of Shaddai. The thoughts of his
+greatness did quite quash them, and the thoughts of his holiness
+sunk them in despair. Wherefore, after a short consult, they (of
+the Diabolonian party they were) sent back this word by the
+trumpeter, That, for their parts, they were resolved to stick to
+their king, but never to yield to Shaddai; so it was but in vain to
+give them any further summons, for they had rather die upon the
+place than yield. And now things seemed to be gone quite back, and
+Mansoul to be out of reach or call, yet the captains who knew what
+their Lord could do, would not yet be beat out of heart; they
+therefore sent them another summons, more sharp and severe than the
+last; but the oftener they were sent to, to reconcile to Shaddai,
+the further off they were. 'As they called them, so they went from
+them--yea, though they called them to the Most High.'
+
+So they ceased that way to deal with them any more, and inclined to
+think of another way. The captains, therefore, did gather
+themselves together, to have free conference among themselves, to
+know what was yet to be done to gain the town, and to deliver it
+from the tyranny of Diabolus; and one said after this manner, and
+another after that. Then stood up the right noble the Captain
+Conviction, and said, 'My brethren, mine opinion is this:
+
+'First, that we continually play our slings into the town, and keep
+it in a continual alarm, molesting them day and night. By thus
+doing, we shall stop the growth of their rampant spirit; for a lion
+may be tamed by continual molestation.
+
+'Secondly, this done, I advise that, in the next place, we with one
+consent draw up a petition to our Lord Shaddai, by which, after we
+have showed our King the condition of Mansoul and of affairs here,
+and have begged his pardon for our no better success, we will
+earnestly implore his Majesty's help, and that he will please to
+send us more force and power, and some gallant and well-spoken
+commander to head them, that so his Majesty may not lose the
+benefit of these his good beginnings, but may complete his conquest
+upon the town of Mansoul.'
+
+To this speech of the noble Captain Conviction they as one man
+consented, and agreed that a petition should forthwith be drawn up,
+and sent by a fit man away to Shaddai with speed. The contents of
+the petition were thus:-
+
+'Most gracious and glorious King, the Lord of the best world, and
+the builder of the town of Mansoul, we have, dread Sovereign, at
+thy commandment, put our lives in jeopardy, and at thy bidding made
+a war upon the famous town of Mansoul. When we went up against it,
+we did, according to our commission, first offer conditions of
+peace unto it. But they, great King, set light by our counsel, and
+would none of our reproof. They were for shutting their gates, and
+for keeping us out of the town. They also mounted their guns, they
+sallied out upon us, and have done us what damage they could; but
+we pursued them with alarm upon alarm, requiting them with such
+retribution as was meet, and have done some execution upon the
+town.
+
+'Diabolus, Incredulity, and Willbewill are the great doers against
+us: now we are in our winter quarters, but so as that we do yet
+with an high hand molest and distress the town.
+
+'Once, as we think, had we had but one substantial friend in the
+town, such as would but have seconded the sound of our summons as
+they ought, the people might have yielded themselves; but there
+were none but enemies there, nor any to speak in behalf of our Lord
+to the town. Wherefore, though we have done as we could, yet
+Mansoul abides in a state of rebellion against thee.
+
+'Now, King of kings, let it please thee to pardon the
+unsuccessfulness of thy servants, who have been no more
+advantageous in so desirable a work as the conquering of Mansoul
+is. And send, Lord, as we now desire, more forces to Mansoul, that
+it may be subdued; and a man to head them, that the town may both
+love and fear.
+
+'We do not thus speak because we are willing to relinquish the
+wars, (for we are for laying of our bones against the place,) but
+that the town of Mansoul may be won for thy Majesty. We also pray
+thy Majesty, for expedition in this matter, that, after their
+conquest, we may be at liberty to be sent about other thy gracious
+designs. Amen.'
+
+The petition, thus drawn up, was sent away with haste to the King
+by the hand of that good man, Mr. Love-to-Mansoul.
+
+When this petition was come to the palace of the King, who should
+it be delivered to but to the King's Son? So he took it and read
+it, and because the contents of it pleased him well, he mended, and
+also in some things added to the petition himself. So, after he
+had made such amendments and additions as he thought convenient,
+with his own hand, he carried it in to the King; to whom, when he
+had with obeisance delivered it, he put on authority, and spake to
+it himself.
+
+Now the King, at the sight of the petition, was glad; but how much
+more, think you, when it was seconded by his Son! It pleased him
+also to hear that his servants who camped against Mansoul were so
+hearty in the work, and so steadfast in their resolves, and that
+they had already got some ground upon the famous town of Mansoul.
+
+Wherefore the King called to him Emmanuel, his Son, who said, 'Here
+am I, my Father.' Then said the King, 'Thou knowest, as I do
+myself, the condition of the town of Mansoul, and what we have
+purposed, and what thou hast done to redeem it. Come now,
+therefore, my Son, and prepare thyself for the war, for thou shalt
+go to my camp at Mansoul. Thou shalt also there prosper and
+prevail, and conquer the town of Mansoul.'
+
+Then said the King's Son, 'Thy law is within my heart: I delight
+to do thy will. This is the day that I have longed for, and the
+work that I have waited for all this while. Grant me, therefore,
+what force thou shalt in thy wisdom think meet; and I will go and
+will deliver from Diabolus, and from his power, thy perishing town
+of Mansoul. My heart has been often pained within me for the
+miserable town of Mansoul; but now it is rejoiced, but now it is
+glad,'
+
+And with that he leaped over the mountains for joy, saying, 'I have
+not, in my heart, thought anything too dear for Mansoul: the day
+of vengeance is in mine heart for thee, my Mansoul: and glad am I
+that thou, my Father, hast made me the Captain of their salvation.
+And I will now begin to plague all those that have been a plague to
+my town of Mansoul, and will deliver it from their hand.'
+
+When the King's Son had said thus to his Father, it presently flew
+like lightning round about at court; yea, it there became the only
+talk what Emmanuel was to go to do for the famous town of Mansoul.
+But you cannot think how the courtiers, too, were taken with this
+design of the Prince; yea, so affected were they with this work,
+and with the justness of the war, that the highest lord and
+greatest peer of the kingdom did covet to have commissions under
+Emmanuel, to go to help to recover again to Shaddai the miserable
+town of Mansoul.
+
+Then was it concluded that some should go and carry tidings to the
+camp, that Emmanuel was to come to recover Mansoul, and that he
+would bring along with him so mighty, so impregnable a force, that
+he could not be resisted. But, oh! how ready were the high ones at
+court to run like lackeys to carry these tidings to the camp that
+was at Mansoul. Now, when the captains perceived that the King
+would send Emmanuel his Son, and that it also delighted the Son to
+be sent on this errand by the great Shaddai his Father, they also,
+to show how they were pleased at the thoughts of his coming gave a
+shout that made the earth rend at the sound thereof. Yea, the
+mountains did answer again by echo, and Diabolus himself did totter
+and shake.
+
+For you must know, that though the town of Mansoul itself was not
+much, if at all concerned with the project, (for, alas for them!
+they were wofully besotted, for they chiefly regarded their
+pleasure and their lusts,) yet Diabolus their governor was; for he
+had his spies continually abroad, who brought him intelligence of
+all things, and they told him what was doing at court against him,
+and that Emmanuel would shortly certainly come with a power to
+invade him. Nor was there any man at court, nor peer of the
+kingdom, that Diabolus so feared as he feared this Prince; for, if
+you remember, I showed you before that Diabolus had felt the weight
+of his hand already; so that, since it was he that was to come,
+this made him the more afraid.
+
+Well, you see how I have told you that the King's Son was engaged
+to come from the court to save Mansoul, and that his Father had
+made him the Captain of the forces. The time, therefore, of his
+setting forth being now expired, he addressed himself for his
+march, and taketh with him, for his power, five noble captains and
+their forces.
+
+1. The first was that famous captain, the noble Captain Credence.
+His were the red colours, and Mr. Promise bare them; and for a
+scutcheon he had the holy lamb and golden shield; and he had ten
+thousand men at his feet.
+
+2. The second was that famous captain, the Captain Good-Hope. His
+were the blue colours; his standard-bearer was Mr. Expectation, and
+for his scutcheon he had the three golden anchors; and he had ten
+thousand men at his feet.
+
+3. The third was that valiant captain, the Captain Charity. His
+standard-bearer was Mr. Pitiful: his were the green colours, and
+for his scutcheon he had three naked orphans embraced in the bosom;
+and he had ten thousand men at his feet.
+
+4. The fourth was that gallant commander, the Captain Innocent.
+His standard-bearer was Mr. Harmless: his were the white colours,
+and for his scutcheon he had the three golden doves.
+
+5. The fifth was the truly loyal and well-beloved captain, the
+Captain Patience. His standard-bearer was Mr. Suffer-Long: his
+were the black colours, and for a scutcheon he had three arrows
+through the golden heart.
+
+These were Emmanuel's captains; these their standard-bearers, their
+colours, and their scutcheons; and these the men under their
+command. So, as was said, the brave Prince took his march to go to
+the town of Mansoul. Captain Credence led the van, and Captain
+Patience brought up the rear; so the other three, with their men,
+made up the main body, the Prince himself riding in his chariot at
+the head of them.
+
+But when they set out for their march, oh, how the trumpets
+sounded, their armour glittered, and how the colours waved in the
+wind! The Prince's armour was all of gold, and it shone like the
+sun in the firmament; the captains' armour was of proof, and was in
+appearance like the glittering stars. There were also some from
+the court that rode reformades for the love that they had to the
+King Shaddai, and for the happy deliverance of the town of Mansoul.
+
+Emmanuel also, when he had thus set forwards to go to recover the
+town of Mansoul, took with him, at the commandment of his Father,
+fifty-four battering-rams, and twelve slings to whirl stones
+withal. Every one of these was made of pure gold, and these they
+carried with them, in the heart and body of their army, all along
+as they went to Mansoul.
+
+So they marched till they came within less than a league of the
+town; there they lay till the first four captains came thither to
+acquaint them with matters. Then they took their journey to go to
+the town of Mansoul, and unto Mansoul they came; but when the old
+soldiers that were in the camp saw that they had new forces to join
+with, they again gave such a shout before the walls of the town of
+Mansoul, that it put Diabolus into another fright. So they sat
+down before the town, not now as the other four captains did, to
+wit, against the gates of Mansoul only; but they environed it round
+on every side, and beset it behind and before; so that now, let
+Mansoul look which way it will, it saw force and power lie in siege
+against it. Besides, there were mounts cast up against it. The
+Mount Gracious was on the one side, and Mount Justice was on the
+other. Further, there were several small banks and advance-
+grounds, as Plain-Truth Hill and No-Sin Banks, where many of the
+slings were placed against the town. Upon Mount Gracious were
+planted four, and upon Mount Justice were placed as many, and the
+rest were conveniently placed in several parts round about the
+town. Five of the best battering-rams, that is, of the biggest of
+them, were placed upon Mount Hearken, a mount cast up hard by Ear-
+gate, with intent to break that open.
+
+Now when the men of the town saw the multitude of the soldiers that
+were come up against the place, and the rams and slings, and the
+mounts on which they were planted, together with the glittering of
+the armour and the waving of their colours, they were forced to
+shift, and shift, and again to shift their thoughts; but they
+hardly changed for thoughts more stout, but rather for thoughts
+more faint; for though before they thought themselves sufficiently
+guarded, yet now they began to think that no man knew what would be
+their hap or lot.
+
+When the good Prince Emmanuel had thus beleaguered Mansoul, in the
+first place he hangs out the white flag, which he caused to be set
+up among the golden slings that were planted upon Mount Gracious.
+And this he did for two reasons: 1. To give notice to Mansoul that
+he could and would yet be gracious if they turned to him. 2. And
+that he might leave them the more without excuse, should he destroy
+them, they continuing in their rebellion.
+
+So the white flag, with the three golden doves in it, was hung out
+for two days together, to give them time and space to consider; but
+they, as was hinted before, as if they were unconcerned, made no
+reply to the favourable signal of the Prince.
+
+Then he commanded, and they set the red flag upon that mount called
+Mount Justice. It was the red flag of Captain Judgment, whose
+scutcheon was the burning fiery furnace; and this also stood waving
+before them in the wind for several days together. But look how
+they carried it under the white flag, when that was hung out, so
+did they also when the red one was; and yet he took no advantage of
+them.
+
+Then he commanded again that his servants should hang out the black
+flag of defiance against them, whose scutcheon was the three
+burning thunderbolts; but as unconcerned was Mansoul at this as at
+those that went before. But when the Prince saw that neither mercy
+nor judgment, nor execution of judgment, would or could come near
+the heart of Mansoul, he was touched with much compunction, and
+said, 'Surely this strange carriage of the town of Mansoul doth
+rather arise from ignorance of the manner and feats of war, than
+from a secret defiance of us, and abhorrence of their own lives; or
+if they know the manner of the war of their own, yet not the rites
+and ceremonies of the wars in which we are concerned, when I make
+wars upon mine enemy Diabolus.'
+
+Therefore he sent to the town of Mansoul, to let them know what he
+meant by those signs and ceremonies of the flag; and also to know
+of them which of the things they would choose, whether grace and
+mercy, or judgment and the execution of judgment. All this while
+they kept their gates shut with locks, bolts, and bars, as fast as
+they could. Their guards also were doubled, and their watch made
+as strong as they could. Diabolus also did pluck up what heart he
+could, to encourage the town to make resistance.
+
+The townsmen also made answer to the Prince's messenger, in
+substance according to that which follows:-
+
+'Great Sir,--As to what, by your messenger, you have signified to
+us, whether we will accept of your mercy, or fall by your justice,
+we are bound by the law and custom of this place, and can give you
+no positive answer; for it is against the law, government, and the
+prerogative royal of our king, to make either peace or war without
+him. But this we will do,--we will petition that our prince will
+come down to the wall, and there give you such treatment as he
+shall think fit and profitable for us.'
+
+When the good Prince Emmanuel heard this answer, and saw the
+slavery and bondage of the people, and how much content they were
+to abide in the chains of the tyrant Diabolus, it grieved him at
+the heart; and, indeed, when at any time he perceived that any were
+contented under the slavery of the giant, he would be affected with
+it.
+
+But to return again to our purpose. After the town had carried
+this news to Diabolus, and had told him, moreover, that the Prince,
+that lay in the leaguer without the wall, waited upon them for an
+answer, he refused, and huffed as well as he could; but in heart he
+was afraid.
+
+Then said he, 'I will go down to the gates myself, and give him
+such an answer as I think fit.' So he went down to Mouth-gate, and
+there addressed himself to speak to Emmanuel, (but in such language
+as the town understood not,) the contents whereof were as follows:-
+
+'O thou great Emmanuel, Lord of all the world, I know thee, that
+thou art the Son of the great Shaddai! Wherefore art thou come to
+torment me, and to cast me out of my possession? This town of
+Mansoul, as thou very well knowest, is mine, and that by a twofold
+right. 1. It is mine by right of conquest; I won it in the open
+field; and shall the prey be taken from the mighty, or the lawful
+captive be delivered? 2. This town of Mansoul is mine also by
+their subjection. They have opened the gates of their town unto
+me; they have sworn fidelity to me, and have openly chosen me to be
+their king; they have also given their castle into my hands; yea,
+they have put the whole strength of Mansoul under me.
+
+'Moreover, this town of Mansoul hath disavowed thee, yea, they have
+cast thy law, thy name, thy image, and all that is thine, behind
+their back, and have accepted and set up in their room my law, my
+name, my image, and all that ever is mine. Ask else thy captains,
+and they will tell thee that Mansoul hath, in answer to all their
+summonses, shown love and loyalty to me, but always disdain,
+despite, contempt, and scorn to thee and thine. Now, thou art the
+Just One and the Holy, and shouldest do no iniquity. Depart, then,
+I pray thee, therefore, from me, and leave me to my just
+inheritance peaceably.'
+
+This oration was made in the language of Diabolus himself; for
+although he can, to every man, speak in their own language, (else
+he could not tempt them all as he does,) yet he has a language
+proper to himself, and it is the language of the infernal cave, or
+black pit.
+
+Wherefore the town of Mansoul (poor hearts!) understood him not;
+nor did they see how he crouched and cringed while he stood before
+Emmanuel, their Prince.
+
+Yea, they all this while took him to be one of that power and force
+that by no means could be resisted. Wherefore, while he was thus
+entreating that he might have yet his residence there, and that
+Emmanuel would not take it from him by force, the inhabitants
+boasted even of his valour, saying, 'Who is able to make war with
+him?'
+
+Well, when this pretended king had made an end of what he would
+say, Emmanuel, the golden Prince, stood up and spake; the contents
+of whose words follow:-
+
+'Thou deceiving one,' said he, 'I have, in my Father's name, in
+mine own name, and on the behalf and for the good of this wretched
+town of Mansoul, somewhat to say unto thee. Thou pretendest a
+right, a lawful right, to the deplorable town of Mansoul, when it
+is most apparent to all my Father's court that the entrance which
+thou hast obtained in at the gates of Mansoul was through thy lie
+and falsehood; thou beliedst my Father, thou beliedst his law, and
+so deceivedst the people of Mansoul. Thou pretendest that the
+people have accepted thee for their king, their captain, and right
+liege lord; but that also was by the exercise of deceit and guile.
+Now, if lying, wiliness, sinful craft, and all manner of horrible
+hypocrisy, will go in my Father's court (in which court thou must
+be tried) for equity and right, then will I confess unto thee that
+thou hast made a lawful conquest. But, alas! what thief, what
+tyrant, what devil is there that may not conquer after this sort?
+But I can make it appear, O Diabolus, that thou, in all thy
+pretences to a conquest of Mansoul, hast nothing of truth to say.
+Thinkest thou this to be right, that that didst put the lie upon my
+Father, and madest him (to Mansoul) the greatest deluder in the
+world? And what sayest thou to thy perverting knowingly the right
+purport and intent of the law? Was it good also that thou madest a
+prey of the innocency and simplicity of the now miserable town of
+Mansoul? Yea, thou didst overcome Mansoul by promising to them
+happiness in their transgressions against my Father's law, when
+thou knewest, and couldest not but know, hadst thou consulted
+nothing but thine own experience, that that was the way to undo
+them. Thou hast also thyself, O thou master of enmity, of spite
+defaced my Father's image in Mansoul, and set up thy own in its
+place, to the great contempt of my Father, the heightening of thy
+sin, and to the intolerable damage of the perishing town of
+Mansoul.
+
+'Thou hast, moreover, (as if all these were but little things with
+thee,) not only deluded and undone this place, but, by thy lies and
+fradulent carriage, hast set them against their own deliverance.
+How hast thou stirred them up against my Father's captains, and
+made them to fight against those that were sent of him to deliver
+them from their bondage! All these things, and very many more,
+thou hast done against thy light, and in contempt of my Father and
+of his law, yea, and with design to bring under his displeasure for
+ever the miserable town of Mansoul. I am therefore come to avenge
+the wrong that thou hast done to my Father, and to deal with thee
+for the blasphemies wherewith thou hast made poor Mansoul blaspheme
+his name. Yea, upon thy head, thou prince of the infernal cave,
+will I requite it.
+
+'As for myself, O Diabolus, I am come against thee by lawful power,
+and to take, by strength of hand, this town of Mansoul out of thy
+burning fingers; for this town of Mansoul is mine, O Diabolus, and
+that by undoubted right, as all shall see that will diligently
+search the most ancient and most authentic records, and I will
+plead my title to it, to the confusion of thy face.
+
+'First, for the town of Mansoul, my Father built and did fashion it
+with his hand. The palace also that is in the midst of that town,
+he built it for his own delight. This town of Mansoul, therefore,
+is my Father's, and that by the best of titles, and he that
+gainsays the truth of this must lie against his soul.
+
+'Secondly, O thou master of the lie, this town of Mansoul is mine.
+
+'1. For that I am my Father's heir, his firstborn, and the only
+delight of his heart. I am therefore come up against thee in mine
+own right, even to recover mine own inheritance out of thine hand.
+
+'2. But further, as I have a right and title to Mansoul by being my
+Father's heir, so I have also by my Father's donation. His it was,
+and he gave it me; nor have I at any time offended my Father, that
+he should take it from me, and give it to thee. Nor have I been
+forced, by playing the bankrupt, to sell or set to sale to thee my
+beloved town of Mansoul. Mansoul is my desire, my delight, and the
+joy of my heart. But,
+
+'3. Mansoul is mine by right of purchase. I have bought it, O
+Diabolus, I have bought it to myself. Now, since it was my
+Father's and mine, as I was his heir, and since also I have made it
+mine by virtue of a great purchase, it followeth that, by all
+lawful right, the town of Mansoul is mine, and that thou art an
+usurper, a tyrant, and traitor, in thy holding possession thereof.
+Now, the cause of my purchasing of it was this: Mansoul had
+trespassed against my Father; now my Father had said, that in the
+day that they broke his law they should die. Now, it is more
+possible for heaven and earth to pass away than for my Father to
+break his word. Wherefore when Mansoul had sinned indeed by
+hearkening to thy lie, I put in and became a surety to my Father,
+body for body, and soul for soul, that I would make amends for
+Mansoul's transgressions, and my Father did accept thereof. So,
+when the time appointed was come, I gave body for body, soul for
+soul, life for life, blood for blood, and so redeemed my beloved
+Mansoul.
+
+'4. Nor did I do this by halves: my Father's law and justice, that
+were both concerned in the threatening upon transgression, are both
+now satisfied, and very well content that Mansoul should be
+delivered.
+
+'5. Nor am I come out this day against thee, but by commandment of
+my Father; it was he that said unto me, "Go down and deliver
+Mansoul."
+
+'Wherefore be it known unto thee, O thou fountain of deceit, and be
+it also known to the foolish town of Mansoul, that I am not come
+against thee this day without my Father.
+
+'And now,' said the golden-headed Prince, 'I have a word to the
+town of Mansoul.' But so soon as mention was made that he had a
+word to speak to the besotted town of Mansoul, the gates were
+double-guarded, and all men commanded not to give him audience. So
+he proceeded and said, 'O unhappy town of Mansoul, I cannot but be
+touched with pity and compassion for thee. Thou hast accepted of
+Diabolus for thy king, and art become a nurse and minister of
+Diabolonians against thy sovereign Lord. Thy gates thou hast
+opened to him, but hast shut them fast against me; thou hast given
+him an hearing, but hast stopped thine ears at my cry. He brought
+to thee thy destruction, and thou didst receive both him and it: I
+am come to thee bringing salvation, but thou regardest me not.
+Besides, thou hast, as with sacrilegious hands, taken thyself, with
+all that was mine in thee, and hast given all to my foe, and to the
+greatest enemy my Father has. You have bowed and subjected
+yourselves to him, you have vowed and sworn yourselves to be his.
+Poor Mansoul! what shall I do unto thee? Shall I save thee?--shall
+I destroy thee? What shall I do unto thee? Shall I fall upon
+thee, and grind thee to powder, or make thee a monument of the
+richest grace? What shall I do unto thee? Hearken, therefore,
+thou town of Mansoul, hearken to my word, and thou shalt live. I
+am merciful, Mansoul, and thou shalt find me so: shut me not out
+of thy gates.
+
+'O Mansoul, neither is my commission nor inclination at all to do
+thee hurt. Why fliest thou so fast from thy friend, and stickest
+so close to thine enemy? Indeed, I would have thee, because it
+becomes thee to be sorry for thy sin, but do not despair of life;
+this great force is not to hurt thee, but to deliver thee from thy
+bondage, and to reduce thee to thy obedience.
+
+'My commission, indeed, is to make a war upon Diabolus thy king,
+and upon all Diabolonians with him; for he is the strong man armed
+that keeps the house, and I will have him out: his spoils I must
+divide, his armour I must take from him, his hold I must cast him
+out of, and must make it a habitation for myself. And this, O
+Mansoul, shall Diabolus know when he shall be made to follow me in
+chains, and when Mansoul shall rejoice to see it so.
+
+ 'I could, would I now put forth my might, cause that forthwith he
+should leave you and depart; but I have it in my heart so to deal
+with him, as that the justice of the war that I shall make upon him
+may be seen and acknowledged by all. He hath taken Mansoul by
+fraud, and keeps it by violence and deceit, and I will make him
+bare and naked in the eyes of all observers.
+
+'All my words are true. I am mighty to save, and will deliver my
+Mansoul out of his hand.'
+
+This speech was intended chiefly for Mansoul, but Mansoul would not
+have the hearing of it. They shut up Ear-gate, they barricaded it
+up, they kept it locked and bolted, they set a guard thereat, and
+commanded that no Mansoulonian should go out to him, nor that any
+from the camp should be admitted into the town. All this they did,
+so horribly had Diabolus enchanted them to do, and seek to do for
+him, against their rightful Lord and Prince; wherefore no man, nor
+voice, nor sound of man that belonged to the glorious host, was to
+come into the town.
+
+So when Emmanuel saw that Mansoul was thus involved in sin, he
+calls his army together, (since now also his words were despised,)
+and gave out a commandment throughout all his host to be ready
+against the time appointed. Now, forasmuch as there was no way
+lawfully to take the town of Mansoul but to get in by the gates,
+and at Ear-gate as the chief, therefore he commanded his captains
+and commanders to bring their rams, their slings and their men, and
+place them at Eye-gate and Ear-gate, in order to his taking the
+town.
+
+When Emmanuel had put all things in a readiness to give Diabolus
+battle, he sent again to know of the town of Mansoul, if in
+peaceable manner they would yield themselves, or whether they were
+yet resolved to put him to try the utmost extremity? They then,
+together with Diabolus their king, called a council of war, and
+resolved upon certain propositions that should be offered to
+Emmanuel, if he will accept thereof, so they agreed; and then the
+next was, who should be sent on this errand. Now, there was in the
+town of Mansoul an old man, a Diabolonian, and his name was Mr.
+Loth-to-stoop, a stiff man in his way, and a great doer for
+Diabolus; him, therefore, they sent, and put into his mouth what he
+should say. So he went and came to the camp to Emmanuel, and when
+he was come, a time was appointed to give him audience. So at the
+time he came, and after a Diabolonian ceremony or two, he thus
+began and said, 'Great sir, that it may be known unto all men how
+good-natured a prince my master is, he has sent me to tell your
+lordship that he is very willing, rather than go to war, to deliver
+up into your hands one half of the town of Mansoul. I am therefore
+to know if your Mightiness will accept of this proposition.'
+
+Then said Emmanuel, 'The whole is mine by gift and purchase,
+wherefore I will never lose one half.'
+
+Then said Mr. Loth-to-stoop, 'Sir, my master hath said that he will
+be content that you shall be the nominal and titular Lord of all,
+if he may possess but a part.'
+
+Then Emmanuel answered, 'The whole is mine really, not in name and
+word only; wherefore I will be the sole lord and possessor of all,
+or of none at all, of Mansoul.'
+
+Then Mr. Loth-to-stoop said again, 'Sir, behold the condescension
+of my master! He says, that he will be content, if he may but have
+assigned to him some place in Mansoul as a place to live privately
+in, and you shall be Lord of all the rest.'
+
+Then said the golden Prince, 'All that the Father giveth me shall
+come to me; and of all that he giveth me I will lose nothing--no,
+not a hoof nor a hair. I will not, therefore, grant him, no, not
+the least corner of Mansoul to dwell in; I will have all to
+myself.'
+
+Then Loth-to-stoop said again, 'But, sir, suppose that my Lord
+should resign the whole town to you, only with this proviso, that
+he sometimes, when he comes into this country, may, for old
+acquaintance' sake, be entertained as a wayfaring man for two days,
+or ten days or a month, or so. May not this small matter be
+granted?'
+
+Then said Emmanuel, 'No. He came as a wayfaring man to David, nor
+did he stay long with him, and yet it had like to have cost David
+his soul. I will not consent that he ever should have any harbour
+more there.'
+
+Then said Mr. Loth-to-stoop, 'Sir, you seem to be very hard.
+Suppose my master should yield to all that your lordship hath said,
+provided that his friends and kindred in Mansoul may have liberty
+to trade in the town, and to enjoy their present dwellings. May
+not that be granted, sir?'
+
+Then said Emmanuel, 'No; that is contrary to my Father's will; for
+all, and all manner of Diabolonians that now are, or that at any
+time shall be found in Mansoul, shall not only lose their lands and
+liberties, but also their lives.'
+
+Then said Mr. Loth-to-stoop again, 'But, sir, may not my master and
+great lord, by letters, by passengers, by accidental opportunities,
+and the like, maintain, if he shall deliver up all unto thee, some
+kind of old friendship with Mansoul?'
+
+Emmanuel answered, 'No, by no means; forasmuch as any such
+fellowship, friendship, intimacy, or acquaintance, in what way,
+sort, or mode soever maintained, will tend to the corrupting of
+Mansoul, the alienating of their affections from me, and the
+endangering of their peace with my Father.'
+
+Mr. Loth-to-stoop yet added further, saying, 'But, great sir, since
+my master hath many friends, and those that are dear to him, in
+Mansoul, may he not, if he shall depart from them, even of his
+bounty and good-nature, bestow upon them, as he sees fit, some
+tokens of his love and kindness that he had for them, to the end
+that Mansoul, when he is gone, may look upon such tokens of
+kindness once received from their old friend, and remember him who
+was once their king, and the merry times that they sometimes
+enjoyed one with another, while he and they lived in peace
+together?'
+
+Then said Emmanuel, 'No; for if Mansoul come to be mine, I shall
+not admit of nor consent that there should be the least scrap,
+shred, or dust of Diabolus left behind, as tokens of gifts bestowed
+upon any in Mansoul, thereby to call to remembrance the horrible
+communion that was betwixt them and him.'
+
+'Well, sir,' said Mr. Loth-to-stoop, 'I have one thing more to
+propound, and then I am got to the end of my commission. Suppose
+that, when my master is gone from Mansoul, any that shall yet live
+in the town should have such business of high concerns to do, that
+if they be neglected the party shall be undone; and suppose, sir,
+that nobody can help in that case so well as my master and lord,
+may not now my master be sent for upon so urgent an occasion as
+this? Or if he may not be admitted into the town, may not he and
+the person concerned meet in some of the villages near Mansoul, and
+there lay their heads together, and there consult of matters?'
+
+This was the last of those ensnaring propositions that Mr. Loth-to-
+stoop had to propound to Emmanuel on behalf of his master Diabolus;
+but Emmanuel would not grant it; for he said, 'There can be no
+case, or thing, or matter fall out in Mansoul, when thy master
+shall be gone, that may not be solved by my Father; besides, it
+will be a great disparagement to my Father's wisdom and skill to
+admit any from Mansoul to go out to Diabolus for advice, when they
+are bid before, in everything, by prayer and supplication to let
+their requests be made known to my Father. Further, this, should
+it be granted, would be to grant that a door should be set open for
+Diabolus, and the Diabolonians in Mansoul, to hatch, and plot, and
+bring to pass treasonable designs, to the grief of my Father and
+me, and to the utter destruction of Mansoul.'
+
+When Mr. Loth-to-stoop had heard this answer, he took his leave of
+Emmanuel, and departed, saying that he would carry word to his
+master concerning this whole affair. So he departed, and came to
+Diabolus to Mansoul, and told him the whole of the matter, and how
+Emmanuel would not admit, no, not by any means, that he, when he
+was once gone out, should for ever have anything more to do either
+in, or with any that are of the town of Mansoul. When Mansoul and
+Diabolus had heard this relation of things, they with one consent
+concluded to use their best endeavour to keep Emmanuel out of
+Mansoul, and sent old Ill-Pause, of whom you have heard before, to
+tell the Prince and his captains so. So the old gentleman came up
+to the top of Ear-gate, and called to the camp for a hearing, who
+when they gave audience, he said, 'I have in commandment from my
+high lord to bid you tell it to your Prince Emmanuel, that Mansoul
+and their king are resolved to stand and fall together; and that it
+is in vain for your Prince to think of ever having Mansoul in his
+hand, unless he can take it by force.' So some went and told to
+Emmanuel what old Ill-Pause, a Diabolonian in Mansoul, had said.
+Then said the Prince, 'I must try the power of my sword, for I will
+not (for all the rebellions and repulses that Mansoul has made
+against me) raise my siege and depart, but will assuredly take my
+Mansoul, and deliver it from the hand of her enemy.' And with that
+he gave out a commandment that Captain Boanerges, Captain
+Conviction, Captain Judgment, and Captain Execution should
+forthwith march up to Ear-gate with trumpets sounding, colours
+flying, and with shouting for the battle. Also he would that
+Captain Credence should join himself with them. Emmanuel,
+moreover, gave order that Captain Good-Hope and Captain Charity
+should draw themselves up before Eye-gate. He bid also that the
+rest of his captains and their men should place themselves for the
+best of their advantage against the enemy round about the town; and
+all was done as he had commanded.
+
+Then he bid that the word should be given forth, and the word was
+at that time, 'EMMANUEL.' Then was an alarm sounded, and the
+battering-rams were played, and the slings did whirl stones into
+the town amain, and thus the battle began. Now Diabolus himself
+did manage the townsmen in the war, and that at every gate;
+wherefore their resistance was the more forcible, hellish, and
+offensive to Emmanuel. Thus was the good Prince engaged and
+entertained by Diabolus and Mansoul for several days together; and
+a sight worth seeing it was to behold how the captains of Shaddai
+behaved themselves in this war.
+
+And first for Captain Boanerges, (not to under-value the rest,) he
+made three most fierce assaults, one after another, upon Ear-gate,
+to the shaking of the posts thereof. Captain Conviction, he also
+made up as fast with Boanerges as possibly he could, and both
+discerning that the gate began to yield, they commanded that the
+rams should still be played against it. Now, Captain Conviction,
+going up very near to the gate, was with great force driven back,
+and received three wounds in the mouth. And those that rode
+reformades, they went about to encourage the captains.
+
+For the valour of the two captains, made mention of before, the
+Prince sent for them to his pavilion, and commanded that a while
+they should rest themselves, and that with somewhat they should be
+refreshed. Care also was taken for Captain Conviction, that he
+should be healed of his wounds. The Prince also gave to each of
+them a chain of gold, and bid them yet be of good courage.
+
+Nor did Captain Good-Hope nor Captain Charity come behind in this
+most desperate fight, for they so well did behave themselves at
+Eye-gate, that they had almost broken it quite open. These also
+had a reward from their Prince, as also had the rest of the
+captains, because they did valiantly round about the town.
+
+In this engagement several of the officers of Diabolus were slain,
+and some of the townsmen wounded. For the officers, there was one
+Captain Boasting slain. This Boasting thought that nobody could
+have shaken the posts of Ear-gate, nor have shaken the heart of
+Diabolus. Next to him there was one Captain Secure slain: this
+Secure used to say that the blind and lame in Mansoul were able to
+keep the gates of the town against Emmanuel's army. This Captain
+Secure did Captain Conviction cleave down the head with a two-
+handed sword, when he received himself three wounds in his mouth.
+
+Besides these there was one Captain Bragman, a very desperate
+fellow, and he was captain over a band of those that threw
+firebrands, arrows, and death: he also received, by the hand of
+Captain Good-Hope at Eye-gate, a mortal wound in the breast.
+
+There was, moreover, one Mr. Feeling; but he was no captain, but a
+great stickler to encourage Mansoul to rebellion. He received a
+wound in the eye by the hand of one of Boanerges' soldiers, and had
+by the captain himself been slain, but that he made a sudden
+retreat.
+
+But I never saw Willbewill so daunted in all my life; he was not
+able to do as he was wont, and some say that he also received a
+wound in the leg, and that some of the men in the Prince's army
+have certainly seen him limp as he afterwards walked on the wall.
+
+I shall not give you a particular account of the names of the
+soldiers that were slain in the town, for many were maimed, and
+wounded, and slain; for when they saw that the posts of Ear-gate
+did shake, and Eye-gate was well-nigh broken quite open, and also
+that their captains were slain, this took away the hearts of many
+of the Diabolonians; they fell also by the force of the shot that
+were sent by the golden slings into the midst of the town of
+Mansoul.
+
+Of the townsmen, there was one Love-no-Good; he was a townsman, but
+a Diabolonian; he also received his mortal wound in Mansoul, but he
+died not very soon.
+
+Mr. Ill-Pause also, who was the man that came along with Diabolus
+when at first he attempted the taking of Mansoul, he also received
+a grievous wound in the head; some say that his brain-pan was
+cracked. This I have taken notice of, that he was never after this
+able to do that mischief to Mansoul as he had done in times past.
+Also old Prejudice and Mr. Anything fled.
+
+Now, when the battle was over, the Prince commanded that yet once
+more the white flag should be set upon Mount Gracious in sight of
+the town of Mansoul, to show that yet Emmanuel had grace for the
+wretched town of Mansoul.
+
+When Diabolus saw the white flag hung out again, and knowing that
+it was not for him, but Mansoul, he cast in his mind to play
+another prank, to wit, to see if Emmanuel would raise his siege and
+begone, upon promise of reformation. So he comes down to the gate
+one evening, a good while after the sun was gone down, and calls to
+speak with Emmanuel, who presently came down to the gate, and
+Diabolus saith unto him:
+
+'Forasmuch as thou makest it appear by thy white flag that thou art
+wholly given to peace and quiet, I thought meet to acquaint thee
+that we are ready to accept thereof upon terms which thou mayest
+admit.
+
+'I know that thou art given to devotion, and that holiness pleaseth
+thee; yea, that thy great end in making a war upon Mansoul is, that
+it may be a holy habitation. Well, draw off thy forces from the
+town, and I will bend Mansoul to thy bow.
+
+'First, I will lay down all acts of hostility against thee, and
+will be willing to become thy deputy, and will, as I have formerly
+been against thee, now serve thee in the town of Mansoul. And more
+particularly,
+
+'1. I will persuade Mansoul to receive thee for their Lord; and I
+know that they will do it the sooner when they shall understand
+that I am thy deputy.
+
+'2. I will show them wherein they have erred, and that
+transgression stands in the way to life.
+
+'3. I will show them the holy law unto which they must conform,
+even that which they have broken.
+
+'4. I will press upon them the necessity of a reformation according
+to thy law.
+
+'5. And, moreover, that none of these things may fail, I myself, at
+my own proper cost and charge, will set up and maintain a
+sufficient ministry, besides lectures, in Mansoul.
+
+'6. Thou shalt receive, as a token of our subjection to thee, year
+by year, what thou shalt think fit to lay and levy upon us in token
+of our subjection to thee.'
+
+Then said Emmanuel to him, 'O full of deceit, how movable are thy
+ways! How often hast thou changed and rechanged, if so be thou
+mightest still keep possession of my Mansoul, though, as has been
+plainly declared before, I am the right heir thereof! Often hast
+thou made thy proposals already, nor is this last a whit better
+than they. And failing to deceive when thou showedst thyself in
+thy black, thou hast now transformed thyself into an angel of
+light, and wouldst, to deceive, be now as a minister of
+righteousness.
+
+'But know thou, O Diabolus, that nothing must be regarded that thou
+canst propound, for nothing is done by thee but to deceive. Thou
+neither hast conscience to God, nor love to the town of Mansoul;
+whence, then, should these thy sayings arise but from sinful craft
+and deceit? He that can of list and will propound what he pleases,
+and that wherewith he may destroy them that believe him, is to be
+abandoned, with all that he shall say. But if righteousness be
+such a beauty-spot in thine eyes now, how is it that wickedness was
+so closely stuck to by thee before? But this is by-the-bye.
+
+'Thou talkest now of a reformation in Mansoul, and that thou
+thyself, if I will please, wilt be at the head of that reformation;
+all the while knowing that the greatest proficiency that man can
+make in the law, and the righteousness thereof, will amount to no
+more, for the taking away of the curse from Mansoul, than just
+nothing at all; for a law being broken by Mansoul, that had before,
+upon a supposition of the breach thereof, a curse pronounced
+against him for it of God, can never, by his obeying of the law,
+deliver himself therefrom (to say nothing of what a reformation is
+like to be set up in Mansoul when the devil is become corrector of
+vice). Thou knowest that all that thou hast now said in this
+matter is nothing but guile and deceit; and is, as it was the
+first, so is it the last card that thou hast to play. Many there
+be that do soon discern thee when thou showest them thy cloven
+foot; but in thy white, thy light, and in thy transformation, thou
+art seen but of a few. But thou shalt not do thus with my Mansoul,
+O Diabolus; for I do still love my Mansoul.
+
+'Besides, I am not come to put Mansoul upon works to live thereby;
+should I do so, I should be like unto thee: but I am come that by
+me, and by what I have and shall do for Mansoul, they may to my
+Father be reconciled, though by their sin they have provoked him to
+anger, and though by the law they cannot obtain mercy.
+
+'Thou talkest of subjecting of this town to good, when none
+desireth it at thy hands. I am sent by my Father to possess it
+myself, and to guide it by the skilfulness of my hands into such a
+conformity to him as shall be pleasing in his sight. I will
+therefore possess it myself; I will dispossess and cast thee out; I
+will set up mine own standard in the midst of them; I will also
+govern them by new laws, new officers, new motives, and new ways;
+yea, I will pull down this town, and build it again; and it shall
+be as though it had not been, and it shall then be the glory of the
+whole universe.'
+
+When Diabolus heard this, and perceived that he was discovered in
+all his deceits, he was confounded, and utterly put to a nonplus;
+but having in himself the fountain of iniquity, rage, and malice
+against both Shaddai and his Son, and the beloved town of Mansoul,
+what doth he but strengthen himself what he could to give fresh
+battle to the noble Prince Emmanuel? So, then, now we must have
+another fight before the town of Mansoul is taken. Come up, then,
+to the mountains, you that love to see military actions, and behold
+by both sides how the fatal blow is given, while one seeks to hold,
+and the other seeks to make himself master of the famous town of
+Mansoul.
+
+Diabolus, therefore, having withdrawn himself from the wall to his
+force that was in the heart of the town of Mansoul, Emmanuel also
+returned to the camp; and both of them, after their divers ways,
+put themselves into a posture fit to give battle one to another.
+
+Diabolus, as filled with despair of retaining in his hands the
+famous town of Mansoul, resolved to do what mischief he could (if,
+indeed, he could do any) to the army of the Prince and to the
+famous town of Mansoul; for, alas! it was not the happiness of the
+silly town of Mansoul that was designed by Diabolus, but the utter
+ruin and overthrow thereof, as now is enough in view. Wherefore,
+he commands his officers that they should then, when they see that
+they could hold the town no longer, do it what harm and mischief
+they could, rendering and tearing men, women, and children. 'For,'
+said he, 'we had better quite demolish the place, and leave it like
+a ruinous heap, than so leave it that it may be an habitation for
+Emmanuel.'
+
+Emmanuel again, knowing that the next battle would issue in his
+being made master of the place, gave out a royal commandment to all
+his officers, high captains, and men of war, to be sure to show
+themselves men of war against Diabolus and all Diabolonians; but
+favourable, merciful, and meek to the old inhabitants of Mansoul.
+'Bend, therefore,' said the noble Prince, 'the hottest front of the
+battle against Diabolus and his men.'
+
+So the day being come, the command was given, and the Prince's men
+did bravely stand to their arms, and did, as before, bend their
+main force against Ear-gate and Eye-gate. The word was then,
+'Mansoul is won!' so they made their assault upon the town.
+Diabolus also, as fast as he could, with the main of his power,
+made resistance from within; and his high lords and chief captains
+for a time fought very cruelly against the Prince's army.
+
+But after three or four notable charges by the Prince and his noble
+captains, Ear-gate was broken open, and the bars and bolts
+wherewith it was used to be fast shut up against the Prince, were
+broken into a thousand pieces. Then did the Prince's trumpets
+sound, the captains shout, the town shake, and Diabolus retreat to
+his hold. Well, when the Prince's forces had broken open the gate,
+himself came up and did set his throne in it; also he set his
+standard thereby, upon a mount that before by his men was cast up
+to place the mighty slings thereon. The mount was called Mount
+Hear-well. There, therefore, the Prince abode, to wit, hard by the
+going in at the gate. He commanded also that the golden slings
+should yet be played upon the town, especially against the castle,
+because for shelter thither was Diabolus retreated. Now, from Ear-
+gate the street was straight even to the house of Mr. Recorder that
+so was before Diabolus took the town; and hard by his house stood
+the castle, which Diabolus for a long time had made his irksome
+den. The captains, therefore, did quickly clear that street by the
+use of their slings, so that way was made up to the heart of the
+town. Then did the Prince command that Captain Boanerges, Captain
+Conviction, and Captain Judgment, should forthwith march up the
+town to the old gentleman's gate. Then did the captains in the
+most warlike manner enter into the town of Mansoul, and marching in
+with flying colours, they came up to the Recorder's house, and that
+was almost as strong as was the castle. Battering-rams they took
+also with them, to plant against the castle gates. When they were
+come to the house of Mr. Conscience, they knocked, and demanded
+entrance. Now, the old gentleman, not knowing as yet fully their
+design, kept his gates shut all the time of this fight. Wherefore
+Boanerges demanded entrance at his gates; and no man making answer,
+he gave it one stroke with the head of a ram, and this made the old
+gentleman shake, and his house to tremble and totter. Then came
+Mr. Recorder down to the gates, and, as he could, with quivering
+lips he asked who was there? Boanerges answered, 'We are the
+captains and commanders of the great Shaddai and of the blessed
+Emmanuel, his Son, and we demand possession of your house for the
+use of our noble Prince.' And with that the battering-ram gave the
+gate another shake. This made the old gentleman tremble the more,
+yet durst he not but open the gate: then the King's forces marched
+in, namely, the three brave captains mentioned before. Now, the
+Recorder's house was a place of much convenience for Emmanuel, not
+only because it was near to the castle and strong, but also because
+it was large, and fronted the castle, the den where now Diabolus
+was, for he was now afraid to come out of his hold. As for Mr.
+Recorder, the captains carried it very reservedly to him; as yet he
+knew nothing of the great designs of Emmanuel, so that he did not
+know what judgment to make, nor what would be the end of such
+thundering beginnings. It was also presently noised in the town
+how the Recorder's house was possessed, his rooms taken up, and his
+palace made the seat of the war; and no sooner was it noised
+abroad, but they took the alarm as warmly, and gave it out to
+others of his friends, and you know, as a snowball loses nothing by
+rolling, so in little time the whole town was possessed that they
+must expect nothing from the Prince but destruction; and the ground
+of the business was this, the Recorder was afraid, the Recorder
+trembled, and the captains carried it strangely to the Recorder.
+So many came to see, but when they with their own eyes did behold
+the captains in the palace, and their battering-rams ever playing
+at the castle gates to beat them down, they were riveted in their
+fears, and it made them all in amaze. And, as I said, the man of
+the house would increase all this; for whoever came to him, or
+discoursed with him, nothing would he talk of, tell them, or hear,
+but that death and destruction now attended Mansoul.
+
+'For,' quoth the old gentleman, 'you are all of you sensible that
+we all have been traitors to that once despised, but now famously
+victorious and glorious Prince Emmanuel; for he now, as you see,
+doth not only lie in close siege about us, but hath forced his
+entrance in at our gates. Moreover, Diabolus flees before him; and
+he hath, as you behold, made of my house a garrison against the
+castle where he is. I, for my part, have transgressed greatly, and
+he that is clean, it is well for him. But I say I have
+transgressed greatly in keeping silence when I should have spoken,
+and in perverting justice when I should have executed the same.
+True, I have suffered something at the hand of Diabolus for taking
+part with the laws of King Shaddai; but that, alas! what will that
+do? Will that make compensation for the rebellions and treasons
+that I have done, and have suffered without gainsaying to be
+committed in the town of Mansoul? Oh! I tremble to think what will
+be the end of this so dreadful and so ireful a beginning!'
+
+Now, while these brave captains were thus busy in the house of the
+old Recorder, Captain Execution was as busy in other parts of the
+town, in securing the back streets and the walls. He also hunted
+the Lord Willbewill sorely; he suffered him not to rest in any
+corner; he pursued him so hard that he drove his men from him, and
+made him glad to thrust his head into a hole. Also this mighty
+warrior did cut three of the Lord Willbewill's officers down to the
+ground: one was old Mr. Prejudice, he that had his crown cracked
+in the mutiny. This man was made by Lord Willbewill keeper of the
+Ear-gate, and fell by the hand of Captain Execution. There was
+also one Mr. Backward-to-all-but-naught, and he also was one of
+Lord Willbewill's officers, and was the captain of the two guns
+that once were mounted on the top of Ear-gate; he also was cut down
+to the ground by the hands of Captain Execution. Besides these two
+there was another, a third, and his name was Captain Treacherous; a
+vile man this was, but one that Willbewill did put a great deal of
+confidence in; but him also did this Captain Execution cut down to
+the ground with the rest.
+
+He also made a very great slaughter among my Lord Willbewill's
+soldiers, killing many that were stout and sturdy, and wounding
+many that for Diabolus were nimble and active. But all these were
+Diabolonians; there was not a man, a native of Mansoul, hurt.
+
+Other feats of war were also likewise performed by other of the
+captains, as at Eye-gate, where Captain Good-Hope and Captain
+Charity had a charge, was great execution done; for the Captain
+Good-Hope, with his own hands, slew one Captain Blindfold, the
+keeper of that gate. This Blindfold was captain of a thousand men,
+and they were they that fought with mauls; he also pursued his men,
+slew many, and wounded more, and made the rest hide their heads in
+corners.
+
+There was also at that gate Mr. Ill-Pause, of whom you have heard
+before. He was an old man, and had a beard that reached down to
+his girdle: the same was he that was orator to Diabolus: he did
+much mischief in the town of Mansoul, and fell by the hand of
+Captain Good-Hope.
+
+What shall I say? The Diabolonians in these days lay dead in every
+corner, though too many yet were alive in Mansoul.
+
+Now, the old Recorder and my Lord Understanding, with some others
+of the chief of the town, to wit, such as knew they must stand and
+fall with the famous town of Mansoul, came together upon a day, and
+after consultation had, did jointly agree to draw up a petition,
+and to send it to Emmanuel, now while he sat in the gate of
+Mansoul. So they drew up their petition to Emmanuel, the contents
+whereof were these: That they, the old inhabitants of the now
+deplorable town of Mansoul, confessed their sin, and were sorry
+that they had offended his princely Majesty, and prayed that he
+would spare their lives.
+
+Unto this petition he gave no answer at all, and that did trouble
+them yet so much the more. Now, all this while the captains that
+were in the Recorder's house were playing with the battering-rams
+at the gates of the castle, to beat them down. So after some time,
+labour, and travail, the gate of the castle that was called
+Impregnable was beaten open, and broken into several splinters, and
+so a way made to go up to the hold in which Diabolus had hid
+himself. Then were tidings sent down to Ear-gate, for Emmanuel
+still abode there, to let him know that a way was made in at the
+gates of the castle of Mansoul. But, oh! how the trumpets at the
+tidings sounded throughout the Prince's camp, for that now the war
+was so near an end, and Mansoul itself of being set free.
+
+Then the Prince arose from the place where he was, and took with
+him such of his men of war as were fittest for that expedition, and
+marched up the street of Mansoul to the old Recorder's house.
+
+Now, the Prince himself was clad all in armour of gold, and so he
+marched up the town with his standard borne before him; but he kept
+his countenance much reserved all the way as he went, so that the
+people could not tell how to gather to themselves love or hatred by
+his looks. Now, as he marched up the street, the townsfolk came
+out at every door to see, and could not but be taken with his
+person and the glory thereof, but wondered at the reservedness of
+his countenance; for as yet he spake more to them by his actions
+and works than he did by words or smiles. But also poor Mansoul,
+(as in such cases all are apt to do,) they interpreted the carriage
+of Emmanuel to them as did Joseph's brethren his to them, even all
+the quite contrary way. 'For,' thought they, 'if Emmanuel loved
+us, he would show it to us by word of carriage; but none of these
+he doth, therefore Emmanuel hates us. Now, if Emmanuel hates us,
+then Mansoul shall be slain, then Mansoul shall become a dunghill.'
+They knew that they had transgressed his Father's law, and that
+against him they had been in with Diabolus, his enemy. They also
+knew that the Prince Emmanuel knew all this; for they were
+convinced that he was an angel of God, to know all things that are
+done in the earth; and this made them think that their condition
+was miserable, and that the good Prince would make them desolate.
+
+'And,' thought they, 'what time so fit to do this in as now, when
+he has the bridle of Mansoul in his hand?' And this I took special
+notice of, that the inhabitants, notwithstanding all this, could
+not--no, they could not, when they see him march through the town,
+but cringe, bow, bend, and were ready to lick the dust of his feet.
+They also wished a thousand times over that he would become their
+Prince and Captain, and would become their protection. They would
+also one to another talk of the comeliness of his person, and how
+much for glory and valour he outstripped the great ones of the
+world. But, poor hearts, as to themselves, their thoughts would
+chance, and go upon all manner of extremes. Yea, through the
+working of them backward and forward, Mansoul became as a ball
+tossed, and as a rolling thing before the whirlwind.
+
+Now, when he was come to the castle gates, he commanded Diabolus to
+appear, and to surrender himself into his hands. But, oh! how
+loath was the beast to appear! how he stuck at it! how he shrank!
+how he cringed! yet out he came to the Prince. Then Emmanuel
+commanded, and they took Diabolus and bound him fast in chains, the
+better to reserve him to the judgment that he had appointed for
+him. But Diabolus stood up to entreat for himself that Emmanuel
+would not send him into the deep, but suffer him to depart out of
+Mansoul in peace.
+
+When Emmanuel had taken him and bound him in chains, he led him
+into the marketplace, and there, before Mansoul, stripped him of
+his armour in which he boasted so much before. This now was one of
+the acts of triumph of Emmanuel over his enemy; and all the while
+that the giant was stripping, the trumpets of the golden Prince did
+sound amain; the captains also shouted, and the soldiers did sing
+for joy.
+
+Then was Mansoul called upon to behold the beginning of Emmanuel's
+triumph over him in whom they so much had trusted, and of whom they
+so much had boasted in the days when he flattered them.
+
+Thus having made Diabolus naked in the eyes of Mansoul, and before
+the commanders of the Prince, in the next place, he commands that
+Diabolus should be bound with chains to his chariot wheels. Then
+leaving some of his forces, to wit, Captain Boanerges and Captain
+Conviction, as a guard for the castle-gates, that resistance might
+be made on his behalf, (if any that heretofore followed Diabolus
+should make an attempt to possess it,) he did ride in triumph over
+him quite through the town of Mansoul, and so out at and before the
+gate called Eye-gate, to the plain where his camp did lie.
+
+But you cannot think, unless you had been there, as I was, what a
+shout there was in Emmanuel's camp when they saw the tyrant bound
+by the hand of their noble Prince, and tied to his chariot wheels!
+
+And they said, 'He hath led captivity captive, he hath spoiled
+principalities and powers. Diabolus is subjected to the power of
+his sword, and made the object of all derision.'
+
+Those also that rode reformades, and that came down to see the
+battle, they shouted with that greatness of voice, and sung with
+such melodious notes, that they caused them that dwell in the
+highest orbs to open their windows, put out their heads, and look
+to see the cause of that glory.
+
+The townsmen also, so many of them as saw this sight, were, as it
+were, while they looked, betwixt the earth and the heavens. True,
+they could not tell what would be the issue of things as to them;
+but all things were done in such excellent methods, and I cannot
+tell how, but things in the management of them seemed to cast a
+smile towards the town, so that their eyes, their heads, their
+hearts, and their minds, and all that they had, were taken and held
+while they observed Emmanuel's order.
+
+So, when the brave Prince had finished this part of his triumph
+over Diabolus his foe, he turned him up in the midst of his
+contempt and shame, having given him a charge no more to be a
+possessor of Mansoul. Then went he from Emmanuel, and out of the
+midst of his camp, to inherit the parched places in a salt land,
+seeking rest, but finding none.
+
+Now, Captain Boanerges and Captain Conviction were, both of them,
+men of very great majesty; their faces were like the faces of
+lions, and their words like the roaring of the sea; and they still
+quartered in Mr. Conscience's house, of whom mention was made
+before. When, therefore, the high and mighty Prince had thus far
+finished his triumph over Diabolus, the townsmen had more leisure
+to view and to behold the actions of these noble captains. But the
+captains carried it with that terror and dread in all that they
+did, (and you may be sure that they had private instructions so to
+do,) that they kept the town under continual heart-aching, and
+caused (in their apprehension) the well-being of Mansoul for the
+future to hang in doubt before them, so that for some considerable
+time they neither knew what rest, or ease, or peace, or hope meant.
+
+Nor did the Prince himself as yet abide in the town of Mansoul, but
+in his royal pavilion in the camp, and in the midst of his Father's
+forces. So, at a time convenient, he sent special orders to
+Captain Boanerges to summons Mansoul, the whole of the townsmen,
+into the castle-yard, and then and there, before their faces, to
+take my Lord Understanding, Mr. Conscience, and that notable one,
+the Lord Willbewill, and put them all three in ward, and that they
+should set a strong guard upon them there, until his pleasure
+concerning them was further known: the which orders, when the
+captains had put them in execution, made no small addition to the
+fears of the town of Mansoul; for now, to their thinking, were
+their former fears of the ruin of Mansoul confirmed. Now, what
+death they should die, and how long they should be in dying, was
+that which most perplexed their heads and hearts; yea, they were
+afraid that Emmanuel would command them all into the deep, the
+place that the prince Diabolus was afraid of, for they knew that
+they had deserved it. Also to die by the sword in the face of the
+town, and in the open way of disgrace, from the hand of so good and
+so holy a prince, that, too, troubled them sore. The town was also
+greatly troubled for the men that were committed to ward, for that
+they were their stay and their guide, and for that they believed
+that, if those men were cut off, their execution would be but the
+beginning of the ruin of the town of Mansoul. Wherefore, what do
+they, but, together with the men in prison, draw up a petition to
+the Prince, and sent it to Emmanuel by the hand of Mr. Would-live.
+So he went, and came to the Prince's quarters, and presented the
+petition, the sum of which was this:
+
+'Great and wonderful Potentate, victor over Diabolus, and conqueror
+of the town of Mansoul, We, the miserable inhabitants of that most
+woful corporation, do humbly beg that we may find favour in thy
+sight, and remember not against us former transgressions, nor yet
+the sins of the chief of our town: but spare us according to the
+greatness of thy mercy, and let us not die, but live in thy sight.
+So shall we be willing to be thy servants, and, if thou shalt think
+fit, to gather our meat under thy table. Amen.'
+
+So the petitioner went, as was said, with his petition to the
+Prince; and the Prince took it at his hand, but sent him away with
+silence. This still afflicted the town of Mansoul; but yet,
+considering that now they must either petition or die, for now they
+could not do anything else, therefore they consulted again, and
+sent another petition; and this petition was much after the form
+and method of the former.
+
+But when the petition was drawn up, By whom should they send it?
+was the next question; for they would not send this by him by whom
+they sent the first, for they thought that the Prince had taken
+some offence at the manner of his deportment before him: so they
+attempted to make Captain Conviction their messenger with it; but
+he said that he neither durst nor would petition Emmanuel for
+traitors, nor be to the Prince an advocate for rebels. 'Yet
+withal,' said he, 'our Prince is good, and you may adventure to
+send it by the hand of one of your town, provided he went with a
+rope about his head, and pleaded nothing but mercy.'
+
+Well, they made, through fear, their delays as long as they could,
+and longer than delays were good; but fearing at last the
+dangerousness of them, they thought, but with many a fainting in
+their minds, to send their petition by Mr. Desires-awake; so they
+sent for Mr. Desires-awake. Now he dwelt in a very mean cottage in
+Mansoul, and he came at his neighbour's request. So they told him
+what they had done, and what they would do, concerning petitioning,
+and that they did desire of him that he would go therewith to the
+Prince.
+
+Then said Mr. Desires-awake, 'Why should not I do the best I can to
+save so famous a town as Mansoul from deserved destruction?' They
+therefore delivered the petition to him, and told him how he must
+address himself to the Prince, and wished him ten thousand good
+speeds. So he comes to the Prince's pavilion, as the first, and
+asked to speak with his Majesty. So word was carried to Emmanuel,
+and the Prince came out to the man. When Mr. Desires-awake saw the
+Prince, he fell flat with his face to the ground, and cried out,
+'Oh that Mansoul might live before thee!' and with that he
+presented the petition; the which when the Prince had read, he
+turned away for a while and wept; but refraining himself, he turned
+again to the man, who all this while lay crying at his feet, as at
+the first, and said to him, 'Go thy way to thy place, and I will
+consider of thy requests.'
+
+Now, you may think that they of Mansoul that had sent him, what
+with guilt, and what with fear lest their petition should be
+rejected, could not but look with many a long look, and that, too,
+with strange workings of heart, to see what would become of their
+petition. At last they saw their messenger coming back. So, when
+he was come, they asked him how he fared, what Emmanuel said, and
+what was become of the petition. But he told them that he would be
+silent till he came to the prison to my Lord Mayor, my Lord
+Willbewill, and Mr. Recorder. So he went forwards towards the
+prison-house, where the men of Mansoul lay bound. But, oh! what a
+multitude flocked after, to hear what the messenger said. So, when
+he was come, and had shown himself at the gate of the prison, my
+Lord Mayor himself looked as white as a clout; the Recorder also
+did quake. But they asked and said, 'Come, good sir, what did the
+great Prince say to you?' Then said Mr. Desires-awake, 'When I
+came to my Lord's pavilion, I called, and he came forth. So I fell
+prostrate at his feet, and delivered to him my petition; for the
+greatness of his person, and the glory of his countenance, would
+not suffer me to stand upon my legs. Now, as he received the
+petition, I cried, "Oh that Mansoul might live before thee!" So,
+when for a while he had looked thereon, he turned him about, and
+said to his servant, "Go thy way to thy place again, and I will
+consider of thy requests."' The messenger added, moreover, and
+said, 'The Prince to whom you sent me is such a one for beauty and
+glory, that whoso sees him must both love and fear him. I, for my
+part, can do no less; but I know not what will be the end of these
+things.'
+
+At this answer they were all at a stand, both they in prison, and
+they that followed the messenger thither to hear the news; nor knew
+they what, or what manner of interpretation to put upon what the
+Prince had said. Now, when the prison was cleared of the throng,
+the prisoners among themselves began to comment upon Emmanuel's
+words. My Lord Mayor said, that the answer did not look with a
+rugged face; but Willbewill said that it betokened evil; and the
+Recorder, that it was a messenger of death. Now, they that were
+left, and that stood behind, and so could not so well hear what the
+prisoners said, some of them catched hold of one piece of a
+sentence, and some on a bit of another; some took hold of what the
+messenger said, and some of the prisoners' judgment thereon; so
+none had the right understanding of things. But you cannot imagine
+what work these people made, and what a confusion there was in
+Mansoul now.
+
+For presently they that had heard what was said flew about the
+town, one crying one thing, and another the quite contrary; and
+both were sure enough they told true; for they did hear, they said,
+with their ears what was said, and therefore could not be deceived.
+One would say, 'We must all be killed;' another would say, 'We must
+all be saved;' and a third would say that the Prince would not be
+concerned with Mansoul; and a fourth, that the prisoners must be
+suddenly put to death. And, as I said, every one stood to it that
+he told his tale the rightest, and that all others but he were out.
+Wherefore Mansoul had now molestation upon molestation, nor could
+any man know on what to rest the sole of his foot; for one would go
+by now, and as he went, if he heard his neighbour tell his tale, to
+be sure he would tell the quite contrary, and both would stand in
+it that he told the truth. Nay, some of them had got this story by
+the end, that the Prince did intend to put Mansoul to the sword.
+And now it began to be dark, wherefore poor Mansoul was in sad
+perplexity all that night until the morning.
+
+But, so far as I could gather by the best information that I could
+get, all this hubbub came through the words that the Recorder said
+when he told them that, in his judgment, the Prince's answer was a
+messenger of death. It was this that fired the town, and that
+began the fright in Mansoul; for Mansoul in former times did use to
+count that Mr. Recorder was a seer, and that his sentence was equal
+to the best of orators; and thus was Mansoul a terror to itself.
+
+And now did they begin to feel what were the effects of stubborn
+rebellion, and unlawful resistance against their Prince. I say,
+they now began to feel the effects thereof by guilt and fear, that
+now had swallowed them up; and who more involved in the one but
+they that were most in the other, to wit, the chief of the town of
+Mansoul?
+
+To be brief: when the fame of the fright was out of the town, and
+the prisoners had a little recovered themselves, they take to
+themselves some heart, and think to petition the Prince for life
+again. So they did draw up a third petition, the contents whereof
+were these:-
+
+'Prince Emmanuel the Great, Lord of all worlds, and Master of
+mercy, we, thy poor, wretched, miserable, dying town of Mansoul, do
+confess unto thy great and glorious Majesty that we have sinned
+against thy Father and thee, and are no more worthy to be called
+thy Mansoul, but rather to be cast into the pit. If thou wilt slay
+us, we have deserved it. If thou wilt condemn us to the deep, we
+cannot but say thou art righteous. We cannot complain whatever
+thou dost, or however thou carriest it towards us. But, oh! let
+mercy reign, and let it be extended to us! Oh! let mercy take hold
+upon us, and free us from our transgressions, and we will sing of
+thy mercy and of thy judgment. Amen.'
+
+This petition, when drawn up, was designed to be sent to the Prince
+as the first. But who should carry it?--that was the question.
+Some said, 'Let him do it that went with the first,' but others
+thought not good to do that, and that because he sped no better.
+Now, there was an old man in the town, and his name was Mr. Good-
+Deed; a man that bare only the name, but had nothing of the nature
+of the thing. Now, some were for sending him; but the Recorder was
+by no means for that. 'For,' said he, 'we now stand in need of,
+and are pleading for mercy: wherefore, to send our petition by a
+man of this name, will seem to cross the petition itself. Should
+we make Mr. Good-Deed our messenger, when our petition cries for
+mercy?
+
+'Besides,' quoth the old gentleman, 'should the Prince now, as he
+receives the petition, ask him, and say, "What is thy name?" as
+nobody knows but he will, and he should say, "Old Good-Deed," what,
+think you, would Emmanuel say but this? "Ay! is old Good-Deed yet
+alive in Mansoul? then let old Good-Deed save you from your
+distresses." And if he says so, I am sure we are lost; nor can a
+thousand of old Good-Deeds save Mansoul.'
+
+After the Recorder had given in his reasons why old Good-Deed
+should not go with this petition to Emmanuel, the rest of the
+prisoners and chief of Mansoul opposed it also, and so old Good-
+Deed was laid aside, and they agreed to send Mr. Desires-awake
+again. So they sent for him, and desired him that he would a
+second time go with their petition to the Prince, and he readily
+told them he would. But they bid him that in anywise he should
+take heed that in no word or carriage he gave offence to the
+Prince; 'For by doing so, for ought we can tell, you may bring
+Mansoul into utter destruction,' said they.
+
+Now Mr. Desires-awake, when he saw that he must go on this errand,
+besought that they would grant that Mr. Wet-Eyes might go with him.
+Now this Mr. Wet-Eyes was a near neighbour of Mr. Desires, a poor
+man, a man of a broken spirit, yet one that could speak well to a
+petition; so they granted that he should go with him. Wherefore,
+they address themselves to their business: Mr. Desires put a rope
+upon his head, and Mr. Wet-Eyes went with his hands wringing
+together. Thus they went to the Prince's pavilion.
+
+Now, when they went to petition this third time, they were not
+without thoughts that, by often coming, they might be a burden to
+the Prince. Wherefore, when they were come to the door of his
+pavilion, they first made their apology for themselves, and for
+their coming to trouble Emmanuel so often; and they said, that they
+came not hither to-day for that they delighted in being
+troublesome, or for that they delighted to hear themselves talk,
+but for that necessity caused them to come to his Majesty. They
+could, they said, have no rest day nor night because of their
+transgressions against Shaddai and against Emmanuel, his Son. They
+also thought that some misbehaviour of Mr. Desires-awake the last
+time might give distaste to his Highness, and so cause that he
+returned from so merciful a Prince empty, and without countenance.
+So, when they had made this apology, Mr. Desires-awake cast himself
+prostrate upon the ground, as at the first, at the feet of the
+mighty Prince, saying, 'Oh! that Mansoul might live before thee!'
+and so he delivered his petition. The Prince then, having read the
+petition, turned aside awhile as before, and coming again to the
+place where the petitioner lay on the ground, he demanded what his
+name was, and of what esteem in the account of Mansoul, for that
+he, above all the multitude in Mansoul, should be sent to him upon
+such an errand. Then said the man to the Prince, 'Oh let not my
+Lord be angry; and why inquirest thou after the name of such a dead
+do--as I am? Pass by, I pray thee, and take not notice of who I
+am, because there is, as thou very well knowest, so great a
+disproportion between me and thee. Why the townsmen chose to send
+me on this errand to my Lord is best known to themselves, but it
+could not be for that they thought that I had favour with my Lord.
+For my part, I am out of charity with myself; who, then, should be
+in love with me? Yet live I would, and so would I that my townsmen
+should; and because both they and myself are guilty of great
+transgressions, therefore they have sent me, and I am come in their
+names to beg of my Lord for mercy. Let it please thee, therefore,
+to incline to mercy; but ask not what thy servants are.'
+
+Then said the Prince, 'And what is he that is become thy companion
+in this so weighty a matter?' So Mr. Desires told Emmanuel that he
+was a poor neighbour of his, and one of his most intimate
+associates. 'And his name,' said he, 'may it please your most
+excellent Majesty, is Wet-Eyes, of the town of Mansoul, I know that
+there are many of that name that are naught; but I hope it will be
+no offence to my Lord that I have brought my poor neighbour with
+me.'
+
+Then Mr. Wet-Eyes fell on his face to the ground, and made this
+apology for his coming with his neighbour to his Lord:-
+
+'O, my Lord,' quoth he, 'what I am I know not myself, nor whether
+my name be feigned or true, especially when I begin to think what
+some have said, namely, That this name was given me because Mr.
+Repentance was my father. Good men have bad children, and the
+sincere do oftentimes beget hypocrites. My mother also called me
+by this name from the cradle; but whether because of the moistness
+of my brain, or because of the softness of my heart, I cannot tell.
+I see dirt in mine own tears, and filthiness in the bottom of my
+prayers. But I pray thee (and all this while the gentleman wept)
+that thou wouldest not remember against us our transgressions, nor
+take offence at the unqualifiedness of thy servants, but mercifully
+pass by the sin of Mansoul, and refrain from the glorifying of thy
+grace no longer.'
+
+So at his bidding they arose, and both stood trembling before him,
+and he spake to them to this purpose:-
+
+"The town of Mansoul hath grievously rebelled against my Father, in
+that they have rejected him from being their King, and did choose
+to themselves for their captain a liar, a murderer, and a runagate
+slave. For this Diabolus, your pretended prince, though once so
+highly accounted of by you, made rebellion against my Father and
+me, even in our palace and highest court there, thinking to become
+a prince and king. But being there timely discovered and
+apprehended, and for his wickedness bound in chains, and separated
+to the pit with those that were his companions, he offered himself
+to you, and you have received him.
+
+'Now this is, and for a long time hath been, a high affront to my
+Father; wherefore my Father sent to you a powerful army to reduce
+you to your obedience. But you know how these men, their captains
+and their counsels, were esteemed of you, and what they received at
+your hand. You rebelled against them, you shut your gates upon
+them, you bid them battle, you fought them, and fought for Diabolus
+against them. So they sent to my Father for more power, and I,
+with my men, are come to subdue you. But as you treated the
+servants, so you treated their Lord. You stood up in hostile
+manner against me, you shut up your gates against me, you turned
+the deaf ear to me, and resisted as long as you could; but now I
+have made a conquest of you. Did you cry me mercy so long as you
+had hopes that you might prevail against me? But now I have taken
+the town, you cry; but why did you not cry before, when the white
+flag of my mercy, the red flag of justice, and the black flag that
+threatened execution, were set up to cite you to it? Now I have
+conquered your Diabolus, you come to me for favour; but why did you
+not help me against the mighty? Yet I will consider your petition,
+and will answer it so as will be for my glory.
+
+'Go, bid Captain Boanerges and Captain Conviction bring the
+prisoners out to me into the camp to-morrow, and say you to Captain
+Judgment and Captain Execution, "Stay you in the castle, and take
+good heed to yourselves that you keep all quiet in Mansoul until
+you shall hear further from me."' And with that he turned himself
+from them, and went into his royal pavilion again.
+
+So the petitioners, having received this answer from the Prince,
+returned, as at the first, to go to their companions again. But
+they had not gone far, but thoughts began to work in their minds
+that no mercy as yet was intended by the Prince to Mansoul. So
+they went to the place where the prisoners lay bound; but these
+workings of mind about what would become of Mansoul had such strong
+power over them, that by that they were come unto them that sent
+them, they were scarce able to deliver their message.
+
+But they came at length to the gates of the town, (now the townsmen
+with earnestness were waiting for their return,) where many met
+them, to know what answer was made to the petition. Then they
+cried out to those that were sent, 'What news from the Prince? and
+what hath Emmanuel said?' But they said that they must, as afore,
+go up to the prison, and there deliver their message. So away they
+went to the prison, with a multitude at their heels. Now, when
+they were come to the gates of the prison, they told the first part
+of Emmanuel's speech to the prisoners, to wit, how he reflected
+upon their disloyalty to his Father and himself, and how they had
+chosen and closed with Diabolus, had fought for him, hearkened to
+him, and been ruled by him; but had despised him and his men. This
+made the prisoners look pale; but the messengers proceeded and
+said, 'He, the Prince, said, moreover, that yet he would consider
+your petition, and give such answer thereto as would stand with his
+glory.' And as these words were spoken, Mr. Wet-Eyes gave a great
+sigh. At this they were all of them struck into their dumps, and
+could not tell what to say: fear also possessed them in a
+marvellous manner, and death seemed to sit upon some of their
+eyebrows. Now, there was in the company a notable, sharp-witted
+fellow, a mean man of estate, and his name was old Inquisitive.
+This man asked the petitioners if they had told out every whit of
+what Emmanuel said, and they answered, 'Verily, no.' Then said
+Inquisitive, 'I thought so, indeed. Pray, what was it more that he
+said unto you?' Then they paused awhile; but at last they brought
+out all, saying, 'The Prince bade us bid Captain Boanerges and
+Captain Conviction bring the prisoners down to him to-morrow; and
+that Captain Judgment and Captain Execution should take charge of
+the castle and town till they should hear further from him. They
+said also that when the Prince had commanded them thus to do, he
+immediately turned his back upon them, and went into his royal
+pavilion.
+
+But, oh! how this return, and specially this last clause of it,
+that the prisoners must go out to the Prince into the camp, brake
+all their loins in pieces! Wherefore, with one voice they set up a
+cry that reached up to the heavens. This done, each of the three
+prepared himself to die; (and the Recorder said unto them, 'This
+was the thing that I feared;') for they concluded that to-morrow,
+by that the sun went down, they should be tumbled out of the world.
+The whole town also counted of no other, but that, in their time
+and order, they must all drink of the same cup. Wherefore the town
+of Mansoul spent that night in mourning, and sackcloth and ashes.
+The prisoners also, when the time was come for them to go down
+before the Prince, dressed themselves in mourning attire, with
+ropes upon their heads. The whole town of Mansoul also showed
+themselves upon the wall, all clad in mourning weeds, if, perhaps,
+the Prince with the sight thereof might be moved with compassion.
+But, oh! how the busy-bodies that were in the town of Mansoul did
+now concern themselves! They did run here and there through the
+streets of the town by companies, crying out as they ran in
+tumultuous wise, one after one manner, and another the quite
+contrary, to the almost utter distraction of Mansoul.
+
+Well, the time is come that the prisoners must go down to the camp,
+and appear before the Prince. And thus was the manner of their
+going down: Captain Boanerges went with a guard before them, and
+Captain Conviction came behind, and the prisoners went down, bound
+in chains, in the midst. So I say, the prisoners went in the
+midst, and the guard went with flying colours behind and before,
+but the prisoners went with drooping spirits.
+
+Or, more particularly, thus: The prisoners went down all in
+mourning: they put ropes upon themselves; they went on, smiting
+themselves on the breasts, but durst not lift up their eyes to
+heaven. Thus they went out at the gate of Mansoul, till they came
+into the midst of the Prince's army, the sight and glory of which
+did greatly heighten their affliction. Nor could they now longer
+forbear, but cry out aloud, 'O unhappy men! O wretched men of
+Mansoul!' Their chains, still mixing their dolorous notes with the
+cries of the prisoners, made the noise more lamentable.
+
+So, when they were come to the door of the Prince's pavilion, they
+cast themselves prostrate upon the place; then one went in and told
+his Lord that the prisoners were come down. The Prince then
+ascended a throne of state, and sent for the prisoners in; who,
+when they came, did tremble before him, also they covered their
+faces with shame. Now, as they drew near to the place where he
+sat, they threw themselves down before him. Then said the Prince
+to the Captain Boanerges, 'Bid the prisoners stand upon their
+feet.' Then they stood trembling before him, and he said, 'Are you
+the men that heretofore were the servants of Shaddai?' And they
+said, 'Yes, Lord, yes.' Then said the Prince again, 'Are you the
+men that did suffer yourselves to be corrupted and defiled by that
+abominable one, Diabolus?' And they said, 'We did more than suffer
+it, Lord; for we chose it of our own mind.' The Prince asked
+further, saying, 'Could you have been content that your slavery
+should have continued under his tyranny as long as you had lived?'
+Then said the prisoners, 'Yes, Lord, yes; for his ways were
+pleasing to our flesh, and we were grown aliens to a better
+state.'--'And did you,' said he, 'when I came up against this town
+of Mansoul, heartily wish that I might not have the victory over
+you?'--'Yes, Lord, yes,' said they. Then said the Prince, 'And
+what punishment is it, think you, that you deserve at my hand, for
+these and other your high and mighty sins?'--And they said, 'Both
+death and the deep, Lord; for we have deserved no less.' He asked
+again if they had aught to say for themselves why the sentence,
+that they confessed that they had deserved, should not be passed
+upon them? And they said, 'We can say nothing, Lord: thou art
+just, for we have sinned.' Then said the Prince, 'And for what are
+those ropes on your heads?' The prisoners answered, 'These ropes
+are to bind us withal to the place of execution, if mercy be not
+pleasing in thy sight.' So he further asked if all the men in the
+town of Mansoul were in this confession, as they? And they
+answered, 'All the natives, Lord; but for the Diabolonians that
+came into our town when the tyrant got possession of us, we can say
+nothing for them.'
+
+Then the Prince commanded that a herald should be called, and that
+he should, in the midst and throughout the camp of Emmanuel,
+proclaim, and that with sound of trumpet, that the Prince, the Son
+of Shaddai, had, in his Father's name, and for his Father's glory,
+gotten a perfect conquest and victory over Mansoul; and that the
+prisoners should follow him, and say Amen. So, this was done as he
+had commanded. And presently the music that was in the upper
+region sounded melodiously, the captains that were in the camp
+shouted, and the soldiers did sing songs of triumph to the Prince;
+the colours waved in the wind, and great joy was everywhere, only
+it was wanting as yet in the hearts of the men of Mansoul.
+
+Then the Prince called for the prisoners to come and to stand again
+before him, and they came and stood trembling. And he said unto
+them, 'The sins, trespasses, iniquities, that you, with the whole
+town of Mansoul, have from time to time committed against my Father
+and me, I have power and commandment from my Father to forgive to
+the town of Mansoul, and do forgive you accordingly.' And having
+so said, he gave them, written in parchment, and sealed with seven
+seals, a large and general pardon, commanding my Lord Mayor, my
+Lord Willbewill, and Mr. Recorder, to proclaim and cause it to be
+proclaimed to-morrow, by that the sun is up, throughout the whole
+town of Mansoul.
+
+Moreover, the Prince stripped the prisoners of their mourning
+weeds, and gave them beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for mourning,
+and the garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness.
+
+Then he gave to each of the three jewels of gold and precious
+stones, and took away their ropes, and put chains of gold about
+their necks, and ear-rings in their ears. Now, the prisoners, when
+they did hear the gracious words of Prince Emmanuel, and had beheld
+all that was done unto them, fainted almost quite away; for the
+grace, the benefit, the pardon, was sudden, glorious, and so big,
+that they were not able, without staggering, to stand up under it.
+Yea, my Lord Willbewill swooned outright; but the Prince stepped to
+him, put his everlasting arms under him, embraced him, kissed him,
+and bid him be of good cheer, for all should be performed according
+to his word. He also did kiss, and embrace, and smile upon the
+other two that were Willbewill's companions, saying, 'Take these as
+further tokens of my love, favour, and compassions to you; and I
+charge you that you, Mr. Recorder, tell in the town of Mansoul what
+you have heard and seen.'
+
+Then were their fetters broken to pieces before their faces, and
+cast into the air, and their steps were enlarged under them. Then
+they fell down at the feet of the Prince, and kissed his feet, and
+wetted them with tears: also they cried out with a mighty strong
+voice, saying, 'Blessed be the glory of the Lord from this place.'
+So they were bid rise up, and go to the town, and tell to Mansoul
+what the Prince had done. He commanded also that one with a pipe
+and tabor should go and play before them all the way into the town
+of Mansoul. Then was fulfilled what they never looked for, and
+they were made to possess that which they never dreamed of.
+
+The Prince also called for the noble Captain Credence, and
+commanded that he and some of his officers should march before the
+noble men of Mansoul with flying colours into the town. He gave
+also unto Captain Credence a charge, that about that time that the
+Recorder did read the general pardon in the town of Mansoul, that
+at that very time he should with flying colours march in at Eye-
+gate with his ten thousands at his feet and that he should so go
+until he came by the high street of the town, up to the castle
+gates, and that himself should take possession thereof against his
+Lord came thither. He commanded, moreover, that he should bid
+Captain Judgment and Captain Execution to leave the stronghold to
+him, and to withdraw from Mansoul, and to return into the camp with
+speed unto the Prince.
+
+And now was the town of Mansoul also delivered from the terror of
+the first four captains and their men.
+
+Well, I told you before how the prisoners were entertained by the
+noble Prince Emmanuel, and how they behaved themselves before him,
+and how he sent them away to their home with pipe and tabor going
+before them. And now you must think that those of the town that
+had all this while waited to hear of their death, could not but be
+exercised with sadness of mind, and with thoughts that pricked like
+thorns. Nor could their thoughts be kept to any one point; the
+wind blew with them all this while at great uncertainties; yea,
+their hearts were like a balance that had been disquieted with a
+shaking hand. But at last, as they with many a long look looked
+over the wall of Mansoul, they thought that they saw some returning
+to the town; and thought again, Who should they be, too? Who
+should they be? At last they discerned that they were the
+prisoners: but can you imagine how their hearts were surprised
+with wonder, specially when they perceived also in what equipage
+and with what honour they were sent home. They went down to the
+camp in black, but they came back to the town in white; they went
+down to the camp in ropes, they came back in chains of gold; they
+went down to the camp with their feet in fetters, but came back
+with their steps enlarged under them; they went also to the camp
+looking for death, but they came back from thence with assurance of
+life; they went down to the camp with heavy hearts, but came back
+again with pipe and tabor playing before them. So as soon as they
+were come to Eye-gate, the poor and tottering town of Mansoul
+adventured to give a shout; and they gave such a shout as made the
+captains in the Prince's army leap at the sound thereof. Alas! for
+them, poor hearts! who could blame them? since their dead friends
+were come to life again; for it was to them as life from the dead
+to see the ancients of the town of Mansoul shine in such splendour.
+They looked for nothing but the axe and the block; but, behold, joy
+and gladness, comfort and consolation, and such melodious notes
+attending them that was sufficient to make a sick man well.
+
+So, when they came up, they saluted each other with, 'Welcome,
+welcome! and blessed be he that has spared you!' They added also,
+'We see it is well with you; but how must it go with the town of
+Mansoul? And will it go well with the town of Mansoul?' said they.
+Then answered them the Recorder and my Lord Mayor, 'Oh! tidings!
+glad tidings! good tidings of good, and of great joy to poor
+Mansoul!' Then they gave another shout, that made the earth to
+ring again. After this, they inquired yet more particularly how
+things went in the camp, and what message they had from Emmanuel to
+the town. So they told them all passages that had happened to them
+at the camp, and everything that the Prince did to them. This made
+Mansoul wonder at the wisdom and grace of the Prince Emmanuel.
+Then they told them what they had received at his hands for the
+whole town of Mansoul, and the Recorder delivered it in these
+words: ' PARDON, PARDON, PARDON for Mansoul! and this shall
+Mansoul know to-morrow!' Then he commanded, and they went and
+summoned Mansoul to meet together in the market-place to-morrow,
+then to hear their general pardon read.
+
+But who can think what a turn, what a change, what an alteration
+this hint of things did make in the countenance of the town of
+Mansoul! No man of Mansoul could sleep that night for joy; in
+every house there was joy and music, singing and making merry:
+telling and hearing of Mansoul's happiness was then all that
+Mansoul had to do; and this was the burden of all their song: 'Oh!
+more of this at the rising of the sun! more of this to-morrow!'
+'Who thought yesterday,' would one say, 'that this day would have
+been such a day to us? And who thought, that saw our prisoners go
+down in irons, that they would have returned in chains of gold?
+Yea, they that judged themselves as they went to be judged of their
+judge, were by his mouth acquitted, not for that they were
+innocent, but of the Prince's mercy, and sent home with pipe and
+tabor. But is this the common custom of princes? Do they use to
+show such kind of favours to traitors? No; this is only peculiar
+to Shaddai, and unto Emmanuel, his Son!'
+
+Now morning drew on apace; wherefore the Lord Mayor, the Lord
+Willbewill, and Mr. Recorder came down to the market-place at the
+time that the Prince had appointed, where the townsfolk were
+waiting for them: and when they came, they came in that attire,
+and in that glory that the Prince had put them into the day before,
+and the street was lightened with their glory. So the Mayor,
+Recorder, and my Lord Willbewill drew down to Mouth-gate, which was
+at the lower end of the market-place, because that of old time was
+the place where they used to read public matters. Thither,
+therefore, they came in their robes, and their tabrets went before
+them. Now, the eagerness of the people to know the full of the
+matter was great.
+
+Then the Recorder stood up upon his feet, and, first beckoning with
+his hand for silence, he read out with a loud voice the pardon.
+But when he came to these words: 'The Lord, the Lord God, merciful
+and gracious, pardoning iniquity, transgressions, and sins, and to
+them all manner of sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven,' etc., they
+could not forbear leaping for joy. For this you must know, that
+there was conjoined herewith every man's name in Mansoul; also the
+seals of the pardon made a brave show.
+
+When the Recorder had made an end of reading the pardon, the
+townsmen ran up upon the walls of the town, and leaped and skipped
+thereon for joy, and bowed themselves seven times with their faces
+toward Emmanuel's pavilion, and shouted out aloud for joy, and
+said, 'Let Emmanuel live for ever!' Then order was given to the
+young men in Mansoul that they should ring the bells for joy. So
+the bells did ring, and the people sing, and the music go in every
+house in Mansoul.
+
+When the Prince had sent home the three prisoners of Mansoul with
+joy, and pipe and tabor, he commanded his captains, with all the
+field officers and soldiers throughout his army, to be ready in
+that morning, that the Recorder should read the pardon in Mansoul,
+to do his further pleasure. So the morning, as I have showed,
+being come, just as the Recorder had made an end of reading the
+pardon, Emmanuel commanded that all the trumpets in the camp should
+sound, that the colours should be displayed, half of them upon
+Mount Gracious, and half of them upon Mount Justice. He commanded
+also that all the captains should show themselves in all their
+harness, and that the soldiers should shout for joy. Nor was
+Captain Credence, though in the castle, silent in such a day; but
+he, from the top of the hold, showed himself with sound of trumpet
+to Mansoul and to the Prince's camp.
+
+Thus have I showed you the manner and way that Emmanuel took to
+recover the town of Mansoul from under the hand and power of the
+tyrant Diabolus.
+
+Now, when the Prince had completed these, the outward ceremonies of
+his joy, he again commanded that his captains and soldiers should
+show unto Mansoul some feats of war: so they presently addressed
+themselves to this work. But oh! with what agility, nimbleness,
+dexterity, and bravery did these military men discover their skill
+in feats of war to the now gazing town of Mansoul!
+
+They marched, they counter-marched; they opened to the right and
+left; they divided and subdivided; they closed, they wheeled, made
+good their front and rear with their right and left wings, and
+twenty things more, with that aptness, and then were all as the
+were again, that they took--yea, ravished, the hearts that were in
+Mansoul to behold it. But add to this, the handling of their arms,
+the managing of their weapons of war, were marvellously taking to
+Mansoul and me.
+
+When this action was over, the whole town of Mansoul came out as
+one man to the Prince in the camp to thank him, and praise him for
+his abundant favour, and to beg that it would please his grace to
+come unto Mansoul with his men, and there to take up their quarters
+for ever: and this they did in most humble manner, bowing
+themselves seven times to the ground before him. Then said he,
+'All peace be to you.' So the town came nigh, and touched with the
+hand the top of his golden sceptre; and they said, 'Oh! that the
+Prince Emmanuel, with his captains and men of war, would dwell in
+Mansoul for ever; and that his battering-rams and slings might be
+lodged in her for the use and service of the Prince, and for the
+help and strength of Mansoul. For,' said they, 'we have room for
+thee, we have room for thy men, we have also room for thy weapons
+of war, and a place to make a magazine for thy carriages. Do it,
+Emmanuel, and thou shalt be King and Captain in Mansoul for ever.
+Yea, govern thou also according to all the desire of thy soul, and
+make thou governors and princes under thee of thy captains and men
+of war, and we will become thy servants, and thy laws shall be our
+direction.'
+
+They added, moreover, and prayed his Majesty to consider thereof;
+'for,' said they, 'if now, after all this grace bestowed upon us,
+thy miserable town of Mansoul, thou shouldest withdraw, thou and
+thy captains, from us, the town of Mansoul will die. Yea,' said
+they, 'our blessed Emmanuel, if thou shouldest depart from us now,
+now thou hast done so much good for us, and showed so much mercy
+unto us, what will follow but that our joy will be as if it had not
+been, and our enemies will a second time come upon us with more
+rage than at the first? Wherefore, we beseech thee, O thou, the
+desire of our eyes, and the strength and life of our poor town,
+accept of this motion that now we have made unto our Lord, and come
+and dwell in the midst of us, and let us be thy people. Besides,
+Lord, we do not know but that to this day many Diabolonians may be
+yet lurking in the town of Mansoul, and they will betray us, when
+thou shalt leave us, into the hand of Diabolus again; and who knows
+what designs, plots, or contrivances have passed betwixt them about
+these things already? Loath we are to fall again into his horrible
+hands. Wherefore, let it please thee to accept of our palace for
+thy place of residence, and of the houses of the best men in our
+town for the reception of thy soldiers and their furniture.'
+
+Then said the Prince, 'If I come to your town, will you suffer me
+further to prosecute that which is in mine heart against mine
+enemies and yours?--yea, will you help me in such undertakings?'
+
+They answered, 'We know not what we shall do; we did not think once
+that we should have been such traitors to Shaddai as we have proved
+to be. What, then, shall we say to our Lord? Let him put no trust
+in his saints; let the Prince dwell in our castle, and make of our
+town a garrison; let him set his noble captains and his warlike
+soldiers over us; yea, let him conquer us with his love, and
+overcome us with his grace, and then surely shall he be but with
+us, and help us, as he was and did that morning that our pardon was
+read unto us. We shall comply with this our Lord, and with his
+ways, and fall in with his word against the mighty.
+
+'One word more, and thy servants have done, and in this will
+trouble our Lord no more. We know not the depth of the wisdom of
+thee, our Prince. Who could have thought, that had been ruled by
+his reason, that so much sweet as we do now enjoy should have come
+out of those bitter trials wherewith we were tried at the first!
+But, Lord, let light go before, and let love come after: yea, take
+us by the hand, and lead us by thy counsels, and let this always
+abide upon us, that all things shall be the best for thy servants,
+and come to our Mansoul, and do as it pleaseth thee. Or, Lord,
+come to our Mansoul, do what thou wilt, so thou keepest us from
+sinning, and makest us serviceable to thy Majesty.'
+
+Then said the Prince to the town of Mansoul again, 'Go, return to
+your houses in peace. I will willingly in this comply with your
+desires; I will remove my royal pavilion, I will draw up my forces
+before Eye-gate to-morrow, and so will march forwards into the town
+of Mansoul. I will possess myself of your castle of Mansoul, and
+will set my soldiers over you: yea, I will yet do things in
+Mansoul that cannot be paralleled in any nation, country, or
+kingdom under heaven.' Then did the men of Mansoul give a shout,
+and returned unto their houses in peace; they also told to their
+kindred and friends the good that Emmanuel had promised to Mansoul.
+'And to-morrow,' said they, 'he will march into our town, and take
+up his dwelling, he and his men, in Mansoul.'
+
+Then went out the inhabitants of the town of Mansoul with haste to
+the green trees and to the meadows, to gather boughs and flowers,
+therewith to strew the streets against their Prince, the Son of
+Shaddai, should come; they also made garlands and other fine works
+to betoken how joyful they were, and should be to receive their
+Emmanuel into Mansoul; yea, they strewed the street quite from Eye-
+gate to the castle-gate, the place where the Prince should be.
+They also prepared for his coming what music the town of Mansoul
+would afford, that they might play before him to the palace, his
+habitation.
+
+So, at the time appointed he makes his approach to Mansoul, and the
+gates were set open for him; there also the ancients and elders of
+Mansoul met him to salute him with a thousand welcomes. Then he
+arose and entered Mansoul, he and all his servants. The elders of
+Mansoul did also go dancing before him till he came to the castle
+gates. And this was the manner of his going up thither:- He was
+clad in his golden armour, he rode in his royal chariot, the
+trumpets sounded about him, the colours were displayed, his ten
+thousands went up at his feet, and the elders of Mansoul danced
+before him. And now were the walls of the famous town of Mansoul
+filled with the tramplings of the inhabitants thereof, who went up
+thither to view the approach of the blessed Prince and his royal
+army. Also the casements, windows, balconies, and tops of the
+houses, were all now filled with persons of all sorts, to behold
+how their town was to be filled with good.
+
+Now, when he was come so far into the town as to the Recorder's
+house, he commanded that one should go to Captain Credence, to know
+whether the castle of Mansoul was prepared to entertain his royal
+presence (for the preparation of that was left to that captain),
+and word was brought that it was. Then was Captain Credence
+commanded also to come forth with his power to meet the Prince, the
+which was, as he had commanded, done; and he conducted him into the
+castle. This done, the Prince that night did lodge in the castle
+with his mighty captains and men of war, to the joy of the town of
+Mansoul.
+
+Now, the next care of the townsfolk was, how the captains and
+soldiers of the Prince's army should be quartered among them; and
+the care was not how they should shut their hands of them, but how
+they should fill their houses with them; for every man in Mansoul
+now had that esteem of Emmanuel and his men that nothing grieved
+them more than because they were not enlarged enough, every one of
+them to receive the whole army of the Prince; yea, they counted it
+their glory to be waiting upon them, and would, in those days, run
+at their bidding like lackeys.
+
+At last they came to this result:-
+
+1. That Captain Innocency should quarter at Mr. Reason's.
+
+2. That Captain Patience should quarter at Mr. Mind's. This Mr.
+Mind was formerly the Lord Willbewill's clerk in time of the late
+rebellion.
+
+3. It was ordered that Captain Charity should quarter at Mr.
+Affection's house.
+
+4. That Captain Good-Hope should quarter at my Lord Mayor's. Now,
+for the house of the Recorder, himself desired, because his house
+was next to the castle, and because from him it was ordered by the
+Prince that, if need be, the alarm should be given to Mansoul,--it
+was, I say, desired by him that Captain Boanerges and Captain
+Conviction should take up their quarters with him, even they and
+all their men.
+
+5. As for Captain Judgment and Captain Execution, my Lord
+Willbewill took them and their men to him, because he was to rule
+under the Prince for the good of the town of Mansoul now, as he had
+before under the tyrant Diabolus for the hurt and damage thereof.
+
+6. And throughout the rest of the town were quartered Emmanuel's
+forces; but Captain Credence, with his men, abode still in the
+castle. So the Prince, his captains, and his soldiers, were lodged
+in the town of Mansoul.
+
+Now, the ancients and elders of the town of Mansoul thought that
+they never should have enough of the Prince Emmanuel; his person,
+his actions, his words, and behaviour, were so pleasing, so taking,
+so desirable to them. Wherefore they prayed him, that though the
+castle of Mansoul was his place of residence, (and they desired
+that he might dwell there for ever,) yet that he would often visit
+the streets, houses, and people of Mansoul. 'For,' said they,
+'dread Sovereign, thy presence, thy looks, thy smiles, thy words,
+are the life, and strength, and sinews of the town of Mansoul.'
+
+Besides this, they craved that they might have, without difficulty
+or interruption, continual access unto him, (so for that very
+purpose he commanded that the gates should stand open,) that they
+might there see the manner of his doings, the fortifications of the
+place, and the royal mansion-house of the Prince.
+
+When he spake, they all stopped their mouths and gave audience; and
+when he walked, it was their delight to imitate him in his goings.
+
+Now, upon a time, Emmanuel made a feast for the town of Mansoul;
+and upon the feasting-day the townsfolk were come to the castle to
+partake of his banquet; and he feasted them with all manner of
+outlandish food;--food that grew not in the fields of Mansoul; nor
+in all the whole Kingdom of Universe; it was food that came from
+his Father's court. And so there was dish after dish set before
+them, and they were commanded freely to eat. But still, when a
+fresh dish was set before them, they would whisperingly say to each
+other, 'What is it?' for they wist not what to call it. They drank
+also of the water that was made wine, and were very merry with him.
+There was music also all the while at the table; and man did eat
+angels' food, and had honey given him out of the rock. So Mansoul
+did eat the food that was peculiar to the court; yea, they had now
+thereof to the full.
+
+I must not forget to tell you, that as at this table there were
+musicians, so they were not those of the country, nor yet of the
+town of Mansoul; but they were the masters of the songs that were
+sung at the court of Shaddai.
+
+Now, after the feast was over, Emmanuel was for entertaining the
+town of Mansoul with some curious riddles of secrets drawn up by
+his Father's secretary, by the skill and wisdom of Shaddai; the
+like to these there is not in any kingdom. These riddles were made
+upon the King Shaddai himself, and upon Emmanuel his Son, and upon
+his wars and doings with Mansoul.
+
+Emmanuel also expounded unto them some of those riddles himself;
+but, oh! how they were lightened! They saw what they never saw;
+they could not have thought that such rarities could have been
+couched in so few and such ordinary words. I told you before, whom
+these riddles did concern; and as they were opened, the people did
+evidently see it was so. Yea, they did gather that the things
+themselves were a kind of a portraiture, and that of Emmanuel
+himself; for when they read in the scheme where the riddles were
+writ, and looked in the face of the Prince, things looked so like
+the one to the other, that Mansoul could not forbear but say, 'This
+is the lamb! this is the sacrifice! this is the rock! this is the
+red cow! this is the door! and this is the way!' with a great many
+other things more.
+
+And thus he dismissed the town of Mansoul. But can you imagine how
+the people of the corporation were taken with this entertainment!
+Oh! they were transported with joy, they were drowned with
+wonderment, while they saw and understood, and considered what
+their Emmanuel entertained them withal, and what mysteries he
+opened to them. And when they were at home in their houses, and in
+their most retired places, they could not but sing of him and of
+his actions. Yea, so taken were the townsmen now with their
+Prince, that they would sing of him in their sleep.
+
+Now, it was in the heart of the Prince Emmanuel to new-model the
+town of Mansoul, and to put it into such a condition as might be
+most pleasing to him, and that might best stand with the profit and
+security of the now flourishing town of Mansoul. He provided also
+against insurrections at home, and invasions from abroad, such love
+had he for the famous town of Mansoul.
+
+Wherefore he first of all commanded that the great slings that were
+brought from his Father's court, when he came to the war of
+Mansoul, should be mounted, some upon the battlements of the
+castle, some upon the towers; for there were towers in the town of
+Mansoul, towers, new-built by Emmanuel since he came hither. There
+was also an instrument, invented by Emmanuel, that was to throw
+stones from the castle of Mansoul, out at Mouth-gate; an instrument
+that could not be resisted, nor that would miss of execution.
+Wherefore, for the wonderful exploits that it did when used, it
+went without a name; and it was committed to the care of, and to be
+managed by the brave captain, the Captain Credence, in case of war.
+
+This done, Emmanuel called the Lord Willbewill to him, and gave him
+in commandment to take care of the gates, the wall, and towers in
+Mansoul; also the Prince gave him the militia into his hand, and a
+special charge to withstand all insurrections and tumults that
+might be made in Mansoul against the peace of our Lord the King,
+and the peace and tranquillity of the town of Mansoul. He also
+gave him in commission, that if he found any of the Diabolonians
+lurking in any corner of the famous town of Mansoul, he should
+forthwith apprehend them, and stay them, or commit them to safe
+custody, that they may be proceeded against according to law.
+
+Then he called unto him the Lord Understanding, who was the old
+Lord Mayor, he that was put out of place when Diabolus took the
+town, and put him into his former office again, and it became his
+place for his lifetime. He bid him also that he should build him a
+palace near Eye-gate; and that he should build it in fashion like a
+tower for defence. He bid him also that he should read in the
+Revelation of Mysteries all the days of his life, that he might
+know how to perform his office aright.
+
+He also made Mr. Knowledge the Recorder, not of contempt to old Mr.
+Conscience, who had been Recorder before, but for that it was in
+his princely mind to confer upon Mr. Conscience another employ, of
+which he told the old gentleman he should know more hereafter.
+
+Then he commanded that the image of Diabolus should be taken down
+from the place where it was set up, and that they should destroy it
+utterly, beating it into powder, and casting it into the wind
+without the town wall; and that the image of Shaddai, his Father,
+should be set up again, with his own, upon the castle gates; and
+that it should be more fairly drawn than ever, forasmuch as both
+his Father and himself were come to Mansoul in more grace and mercy
+than heretofore. He would also that his name should be fairly
+engraven upon the front of the town, and that it should be done in
+the best of gold, for the honour of the town of Mansoul.
+
+After this was done, Emmanuel gave out a commandment that those
+three great Diabolonians should be apprehended, namely, the two
+late Lord Mayors, to wit, Mr. Incredulity, Mr. Lustings, and Mr.
+Forget-Good, the Recorder. Besides these, there were some of them
+that Diabolus made burgesses and aldermen in Mansoul, that were
+committed to ward by the hand of the now valiant and now right
+noble, the brave Lord Willbewill.
+
+And these were their names: Alderman Atheism, Alderman Hard-Heart,
+and Alderman False-Peace. The burgesses were, Mr. No-Truth, Mr.
+Pitiless, Mr. Haughty, with the like. These were committed to
+close custody, and the gaoler's name was Mr. True-Man. This True-
+Man was one of those that Emmanuel brought with him from his
+Father's court when at the first he made a war upon Diabolus in the
+town or Mansoul.
+
+After this, the Prince gave a charge that the three strongholds
+that, at the command of Diabolus, the Diabolonians built in
+Mansoul, should be demolished and utterly pulled down; of which
+holds and their names, with their captains and governors, you read
+a little before. But this was long in doing, because of the
+largeness of the places, and because the stones, the timber, the
+iron, and all rubbish, was to be carried without the town.
+
+When this was done, the Prince gave order that the Lord Mayor and
+aldermen of Mansoul should call a court of judicature for the trial
+and execution of the Diabolonians in the corporation now under the
+charge of Mr. True-Man, the gaoler.
+
+Now, when the time was come, and the court set, commandment was
+sent to Mr. True-Man, the gaoler, to bring the prisoners down to
+the bar. Then were the prisoners brought down, pinioned and
+chained together, as the custom of the town of Mansoul was. So,
+when they were presented before the Lord Mayor, the Recorder, and
+the rest of the honourable bench, first, the jury was empannelled,
+and then the witnesses sworn. The names of the jury were these:
+Mr. Belief, Mr. True-Heart, Mr. Upright, Mr. Hate-Bad, Mr. Love-
+God, Mr. See-Truth, Mr. Heavenly-Mind, Mr. Moderate, Mr. Thankful,
+Mr. Good-Work, Mr. Zeal-for-God, and Mr. Humble.
+
+The names of the witnesses were--Mr. Know-All, Mr. Tell-True, Mr.
+Hate-Lies, with my Lord Willbewill and his man, if need were.
+
+So the prisoners were set to the bar. Then said Mr. Do-Right, (for
+he was the Town-Clerk,) 'Set Atheism to the bar, gaoler.' So he
+was set to the bar. Then said the Clerk, 'Atheism, hold up thy
+hand. Thou art here indicted by the name of Atheism, (an intruder
+upon the town of Mansoul,) for that thou hast perniciously and
+doltishly taught and maintained that there is no God, and so no
+heed to be taken to religion. This thou hast done against the
+being, honour, and glory of the King, and against the peace and
+safety of the town of Mansoul. What sayest thou? Art thou guilty
+of this indictment, or not?
+
+Atheism. Not guilty.
+
+Crier. Call Mr. Know-All, Mr. Tell-True, and Mr. Hate-Lies into
+the court.
+
+So they were called, and they appeared.
+
+Then said the Clerk, 'You, the witnesses for the King, look upon
+the prisoner at the bar; do you know him?'
+
+Then said Mr. Know-All, 'Yes, my lord, we know him; his name is
+Atheism; he has been a very pestilent fellow for many years in the
+miserable town of Mansoul.'
+
+Clerk. You are sure you know him?
+
+Know. Know him! Yes my lord; I have heretofore too often been in
+his company to be at this time ignorant of him. He is a
+Diabolonian, the son of a Diabolonian: I knew his grandfather and
+his father.
+
+Clerk. Well said. He standeth here indicted by the name of
+Atheism, etc., and is charged that he hath maintained and taught
+that there is no God, and so no heed need be taken to any religion.
+What say you, the King's witnesses, to this? Is he guilty or not?
+
+Know. My lord, I and he were once in Villain's Lane together, and
+he at that time did briskly talk of divers opinions; and then and
+there I heard him say, that, for his part, he did believe that
+there was no God. 'But,' said he, 'I can profess one, and be as
+religious too, if the company I am in, and the circumstances of
+other things,' said he, 'shall put me upon it.'
+
+Clerk. You are sure you heard him say thus?
+
+Know. Upon mine oath, I heard him say thus.
+
+Then said the Clerk, 'Mr. Tell-True, what say you to the King's
+judges touching the prisoner at the bar?'
+
+Tell. My lord, I formerly was a great companion of his, for the
+which I now repent me, and I have often heard him say, and that
+with very great stomachfulness, that he believed there was neither
+God, angel, nor spirit.
+
+Clerk. Where did you hear him say so?
+
+Tell. In Blackmouth Lane and in Blasphemer's Row, and in many
+other places besides.
+
+Clerk. Have you much knowledge of him?
+
+Tell. I know him to be a Diabolonian, the son of a Diabolonian,
+and a horrible man to deny a Deity. His father's name was Never-
+be-good, and he had more children than this Atheism. I have no
+more to say,
+
+Clerk. Mr. Hate-Lies, look upon the prisoner at the bar; do you
+know him?
+
+Hate. My lord, this Atheism is one of the vilest wretches that
+ever I came near, or had to do with in my life. I have heard him
+say that there is no God; I have heard him say that there is no
+world to come, no sin, nor punishment hereafter, and, moreover, I
+have heard him say that it was as good to go to a whore-house as to
+go to hear a sermon.
+
+Clerk. Where did you hear him say these things?
+
+Hate. In Drunkard's Row, just at Rascal-Lane's End, at a house in
+which Mr. Impiety lived.
+
+Clerk. Set him by, gaoler, and set Mr. Lustings to the bar. Mr.
+Lustings, thou art here indicted by the name of Lustings, (an
+intruder upon the town of Mansoul,) for that thou hast devilishly
+and traitorously taught, by practice and filthy words, that it is
+lawful and profitable to man to give way to his carnal desires; and
+that thou, for thy part, hast not, nor never wilt, deny thyself of
+any sinful delight as long as thy name is Lustings. How sayest
+thou? Art thou guilty of this indictment, or not?
+
+Then said Mr. Lustings, 'My lord, I am a man of high birth, and
+have been used to pleasures and pastimes of greatness. I have not
+been wont to be snubbed for my doings, but have been left to follow
+my will as if it were law. And it seems strange to me that I
+should this day be called into question for that, that not only I,
+but almost all men, do either secretly or openly countenance, love,
+and approve of.'
+
+Clerk. Sir, we concern not ourselves with your greatness; (though
+the higher, the better you should have been;) but we are concerned,
+and so are you now, about an indictment preferred against you. How
+say you? Are you guilty of it, or not?
+
+Lust. Not guilty.
+
+Clerk. Crier, call upon the witnesses to stand forth and give
+their evidence.
+
+Crier. Gentlemen, you, the witnesses for the King, come in and
+give in your evidence for our Lord the King against the prisoner at
+the bar.
+
+Clerk. Come, Mr. Know-All, look upon the prisoner at the bar; do
+you know him?
+
+Know. Yes, my lord, I know him.
+
+Clerk. What is his name?
+
+Know. His name is Lustings; he was the son of one Beastly, and his
+mother bare him in Flesh Street: she was one Evil-Concupiscence's
+daughter. I knew all the generation of them.
+
+Clerk. Well said. You have heard his indictment; what say you to
+it? Is he guilty of the things charged against him, or not?
+
+Know. My lord, he has, as he saith, been a great man indeed, and
+greater in wickedness than by pedigree more than a thousandfold.
+
+Clerk. But what do you know of his particular actions, and
+especially with reference to his indictment?
+
+Know. I know him to be a swearer, a liar, a Sabbath-breaker; I
+know him to be a fornicator and an unclean person; I know him to be
+guilty of abundance of evils. He has been, to my knowledge, a very
+filthy man.
+
+Clerk. But where did he use to commit his wickedness? in some
+private corners, or more open and shamelessly?
+
+Know. All the town over, my lord.
+
+Clerk. Come, Mr. Tell-True, what have you to say for our Lord the
+King against the prisoner at the bar?
+
+Tell. My lord, all that the first witness has said I know to be
+true, and a great deal more besides.
+
+Clerk. Mr. Lustings, do you hear what these gentlemen say?
+
+Lust. I was ever of opinion that the happiest life that a man
+could live on earth was to keep himself back from nothing that he
+desired in the world; nor have I been false at any time to this
+opinion of mine, but have lived in the love of my notions all my
+days. Nor was I ever so churlish, having found such sweetness in
+them myself, as to keep the commendations of them from others.
+
+Then said the Court, 'There hath proceeded enough from his own
+mouth to lay him open to condemnation; wherefore, set him by,
+gaoler, and set Mr. Incredulity to the bar.'
+
+Incredulity set to the bar.
+
+Clerk. Mr. Incredulity, thou art here indicted by the name of
+Incredulity, (an intruder upon the town of Mansoul,) for that thou
+hast feloniously and wickedly, and that when thou wert an officer
+in the town of Mansoul, made head against the captains of the great
+King Shaddai when they came and demanded possession of Mansoul;
+yea, thou didst bid defiance to the name, forces, and cause of the
+King, and didst also, as did Diabolus thy captain, stir up and
+encourage the town of Mansoul to make head against and resist the
+said force of the King. What sayest thou to this indictment? Art
+thou guilty of it, or not?
+
+Then said Incredulity, 'I know not Shaddai; I love my old prince; I
+thought it my duty to be true to my trust, and to do what I could
+to possess the minds of the men of Mansoul to do their utmost to
+resist strangers and foreigners, and with might to fight against
+them. Nor have I, nor shall I, change mine opinion for fear of
+trouble, though you at present are possessed of place and power.'
+
+Then said the Court, 'The man, as you see, is incorrigible; he is
+for maintaining his villainies by stoutness of words, and his
+rebellion with impudent confidence; and therefore set him by,
+gaoler, and set Mr. Forget-Good to the bar.
+
+Forget-Good set to the bar.
+
+Clerk. Mr. Forget-Good, thou art here indicted by the name of
+Forget-Good, (an intruder upon the town of Mansoul,) for that thou,
+when the whole affairs of the town of Mansoul were in thy hand,
+didst utterly forget to serve them in what was good, and didst fall
+in with the tyrant Diabolus against Shaddai the King, against his
+captains, and all his host, to the dishonour of Shaddai, the breach
+of his law, and the endangering of the destruction of the famous
+town of Mansoul. What sayest thou to this indictment? Art thou
+guilty or not guilty?
+
+Then said Forget-Good: 'Gentlemen, and at this time my judges, as
+to the indictment by which I stand of several crimes accused before
+you, pray attribute my forgetfulness to mine age, and not to my
+wilfulness; to the craziness of my brain, and not to the
+carelessness of my mind; and then I hope I may be by your charity
+excused from great punishment, though I be guilty.'
+
+Then said the Court, 'Forget-Good, Forget-Good, thy forgetfulness
+of good was not simply of frailty, but of purpose, and for that
+thou didst loathe to keep virtuous things in thy mind. What was
+bad thou couldst retain, but what was good thou couldst not abide
+to think of; thy age, therefore, and thy pretended craziness, thou
+makest use of to blind the court withal, and as a cloak to cover
+thy knavery. But let us hear what the witnesses have to say for
+the King against the prisoner at the bar. Is he guilty of this
+indictment, or not?'
+
+Hate. My lord, I have heard this Forget-Good say, that he could
+never abide to think of goodness, no, not for a quarter of an hour.
+
+Clerk. Where did you hear him say so?
+
+Hate. In All-base Lane, at a house next door to the sign of the
+Conscience seared with a hot iron.
+
+Clerk. Mr. Know-All, what can you say for our Lord the King
+against the prisoner at the bar?
+
+Know. My lord, I know this man well. He is a Diabolonian, the son
+of a Diabolonian: his father's name was Love-Naught; and for him,
+I have often heard him say, that he counted the very thoughts of
+goodness the most burdensome thing in the world.
+
+Clerk. Where have you heard him say these words?
+
+Know. In Flesh Lane, right opposite to the church.
+
+Then said the Clerk, 'Come, Mr. Tell-True, give in your evidence
+concerning the prisoner at the bar, about that for which he stands
+here, as you see, indicted by this honourable Court.'
+
+Tell. My lord, I have heard him often say he had rather think of
+the vilest thing than of what is contained in the Holy Scriptures.
+
+Clerk. Where did you hear him say such grievous words?
+
+Tell. Where?--in a great many places, particularly in Nauseous
+Street, in the house of one Shameless, and in Filth Lane, at the
+sign of the Reprobate, next door to the Descent into the Pit.
+
+Court. Gentlemen, you have heard the indictment, his plea, and the
+testimony of the witnesses. Gaoler, set Mr. Hard-Heart to the bar.
+
+He is set to the bar.
+
+Clerk. Mr. Hard-Heart, thou art here indicted by the name of Hard-
+Heart, (an intruder upon the town of Mansoul,) for that thou didst
+most desperately and wickedly possess the town of Mansoul with
+impenitency and obdurateness; and didst keep them from remorse and
+sorrow for their evils, all the time of their apostacy from and
+rebellion against the blessed King Shaddai. What sayest thou to
+this indictment? Art thou guilty, or not guilty?
+
+Hard. My lord, I never knew what remorse or sorrow meant in all my
+life. I am impenetrable. I care for no man; nor can I be pierced
+with men's griefs; their groans will not enter into my heart.
+Whomsoever I mischief, whomsoever I wrong, to me it is music, when
+to others mourning.
+
+Court. You see the man is a right Diabolonian, and has convicted
+himself. Set him by, gaoler, and set Mr. False-Peace to the bar.
+
+False-Peace set to the bar.
+
+"Mr. False-Peace, thou art here indicted by the name of False-
+Peace, (an intruder upon the town of Mansoul,) for that thou didst
+most wickedly and satanically bring, hold, and keep the town of
+Mansoul, both in her apostacy and in her hellish rebellion, in a
+false, groundless, and dangerous peace, and damnable security, to
+the dishonour of the King, the transgression of his law, and the
+great damage of the town of Mansoul. What sayest thou? Art thou
+guilty of this indictment, or not?
+
+Then said Mr. False-Peace: 'Gentlemen, and you now appointed to be
+my judges, I acknowledge that my name is Mr. Peace; but that my
+name is False-Peace I utterly deny. If your honours shall please
+to send for any that do intimately know me, or for the midwife that
+laid my mother of me, or for the gossips that were at my
+christening, they will, any or all of them, prove that my name is
+not False-Peace, but Peace. Wherefore I cannot plead to this
+indictment, forasmuch as my name is not inserted therein; and as is
+my true name, so are also my conditions. I was always a man that
+loved to live at quiet, and what I loved myself, that I thought
+others might love also. Wherefore, when I saw any of my neighbours
+to labour under a disquieted mind, I endeavoured to help them what
+I could; and instances of this good temper of mine many I could
+give; as,
+
+'1. When, at the beginning, our town of Mansoul did decline the
+ways of Shaddai, they, some of them, afterwards began to have
+disquieting reflections upon themselves for what they had done; but
+I, as one troubled to see them disquieted, presently sought out
+means to get them quiet again.
+
+'2. When the ways of the old world, and of Sodom, were in fashion,
+if anything happened to molest those that were for the customs of
+the present times, I laboured to make them quiet again, and to
+cause them to act without molestation.
+
+'3. To come nearer home: when the wars fell out between Shaddai
+and Diabolus, if at any time I saw any of the town of Mansoul
+afraid of destruction, I often used, by some way, device,
+invention, or other, to labour to bring them to peace again.
+Wherefore, since I have been always a man of so virtuous a temper
+as some say a peace-maker is, and if a peace-maker be so deserving
+a man as some have been bold to attest he is, then let me,
+gentlemen, be accounted by you, who have a great name for justice
+and equity in Mansoul, for a man that deserveth not this inhuman
+way of treatment, but liberty, and also a license to seek damage of
+those that have been my accusers.'
+
+Then said the clerk, 'Crier, make a proclamation.'
+
+Crier. Oyes! Forasmuch as the prisoner at the bar hath denied his
+name to be that which is mentioned in the indictment, the Court
+requireth that if there be any in this place that can give
+information to the Court of the original and right name of the
+prisoner, they would come forth and give in their evidence; for the
+prisoner stands upon his own innocency.
+
+Then came two into the court, and desired that they might have
+leave to speak what they knew concerning the prisoner at the bar:
+the name of the one was Search-Truth, and the name of the other
+Vouch-Truth. So the Court demanded of these men if they knew the
+prisoner, and what they could say concerning him, 'for he stands,'
+said they, 'upon his own vindication.'
+
+Then said Mr. Search-Truth, 'My Lord, I--'
+
+Court. Hold! give him his oath.
+
+Then they sware him. So he proceeded.
+
+Search. My lord, I know and have known this man from a child, and
+can attest that his name is False-Peace. I know his father; his
+name was Mr. Flatter: and his mother, before she was married, was
+called by the name of Mrs. Sooth-Up: and these two, when they came
+together, lived not long without this son; and when he was born,
+they called his name False-Peace. I was his play-fellow, only I
+was somewhat older than he; and when his mother did use to call him
+home from his play, she used to say, 'False-Peace, False-Peace,
+come home quick, or I'll fetch you.' Yea, I knew him when he
+sucked; and though I was then but little, yet I can remember that
+when his mother did use to sit at the door with him, or did play
+with him in her arms, she would call him, twenty times together,
+'My little False-Peace! my pretty False-Peace!' and, 'Oh! my sweet
+rogue, False-Peace!' and again, 'Oh! my little bird, False-Peace!'
+and 'How do I love my child!' The gossips also know it is thus,
+though he has had the face to deny it in open court.
+
+Then Mr. Vouch-Truth was called upon to speak what he knew of him.
+So they sware him.
+
+Then said Mr. Vouch-Truth, 'My lord, all that the former witness
+hath said is true. His name is False-Peace, the son of Mr.
+Flatter, and of Mrs. Sooth-Up, his mother: and I have in former
+times seen him angry with those that have called him anything else
+but False-Peace, for he would say that all such did mock and
+nickname him; but this was in the time when Mr. False-Peace was a
+great man, and when the Diabolonians were the brave men in Mansoul.
+
+Court. Gentlemen, you have heard what these two men have sworn
+against the prisoner at the bar. And now, Mr. False-Peace, to you:
+you have denied your name to be False-Peace, yet you see that these
+honest men have sworn that that is your name. As to your plea, in
+that you are quite besides the matter of your indictment, you are
+not by it charged for evil-doing because you are a man of peace, or
+a peace-maker among your neighbours; but for that you did wickedly
+and satanically bring, keep, and hold the town of Mansoul, both
+under its apostasy from, and in its rebellion against its King, in
+a false, lying, and damnable peace, contrary to the law of Shaddai,
+and to the hazard of the destruction of the then miserable town of
+Mansoul. All that you have pleaded for yourself is, that you have
+denied your name, etc.; but here, you see, we have witnesses to
+prove that you are the man. For the peace that you so much boast
+of making among your neighbours, know that peace that is not a
+companion of truth and holiness, but that which is without this
+foundation, is grounded upon a lie, and is both deceitful and
+damnable, as also the great Shaddai hath said. Thy plea,
+therefore, has not delivered thee from what by the indictment thou
+art charged with, but rather it doth fasten all upon thee. But
+thou shalt have very fair play. Let us call the witnesses that are
+to testify as to matter of fact, and see what they have to say for
+our Lord the King against the prisoner at the bar.
+
+Clerk. Mr. Know-All, what say you for our Lord the King against
+the prisoner at the bar?
+
+Know. My lord, this man hath of a long time made it, to my
+knowledge, his business to keep the town of Mansoul in a sinful
+quietness in the midst of all her lewdness, filthiness, and
+turmoils, and hath said, and that in my hearing, Come, come, let us
+fly from all trouble, on what ground soever it comes, and let us be
+for a quiet and peaceable life, though it wanteth a good
+foundation.
+
+Clerk. Come, Mr. Hate-Lies, what have you to say?
+
+Hate. My lord, I have heard him say, that peace, though in a way
+of unrighteousness, is better than trouble with truth.
+
+Clerk. Where did you hear him say this?
+
+Hate. I heard him say it in Folly-yard, at the house of one Mr.
+Simple, next door to the sign of the Self-deceiver. Yea, he hath
+said this to my knowledge twenty times in that place.
+
+Clerk. We may spare further witness; this evidence is plain and
+full. Set him by, gaoler, and set Mr. No-Truth to the bar. Mr.
+No-Truth, thou art here indicted by the name of No-Truth, (an
+intruder upon the town of Mansoul,) for that thou hast always, to
+the dishonour of Shaddai, and the endangering of the utter ruin of
+the famous town of Mansoul, set thyself to deface, and utterly to
+spoil, all the remainders of the law and image of Shaddai that have
+been found in Mansoul after her deep apostasy from her king to
+Diabolus, the envious tyrant. What sayest thou, art thou guilty of
+this indictment, or not?
+
+No. Not guilty, my lord.
+
+Then the witnesses were called, and Mr. Know-All did first give in
+his evidence against him.
+
+Know. My lord, this man was at the pulling down of the image of
+Shaddai; yea, this is he that did it with his own hands. I myself
+stood by and saw him do it, and he did it at the commandment of
+Diabolus. Yea, this Mr. No-Truth did more than this, he did also
+set up the horned image of the beast Diabolus in the same place.
+This also is he that, at the bidding of Diabolus, did rend and
+tear, and cause to be consumed, all that he could of the remainders
+of the law of the King, even whatever he could lay his hands on in
+Mansoul.
+
+Clerk. Who saw him do this besides yourself?
+
+Hate. I did, my lord, and so did many more besides; for this was
+not done by stealth, or in a corner, but in the open view of all;
+yea, he chose himself to do it publicly, for he delighted in the
+doing of it.
+
+Clerk. Mr. No-Truth, how could you have the face to plead not
+guilty, when you were so manifestly the doer of all this
+wickedness?
+
+No. Sir, I thought I must say something, and as my name is, so I
+speak. I have been advantaged thereby before now, and did not know
+but by speaking no truth, I might have reaped the same benefit now.
+
+Clerk. Set him by, gaoler, and set Mr. Pitiless to the bar. Mr.
+Pitiless, thou art here indicted by the name of Pitiless, (an
+intruder upon the town of Mansoul,) for that thou didst most
+traitorously and wickedly shut up all bowels of compassion, and
+wouldest not suffer poor Mansoul to condole her own misery when she
+had apostatised from her rightful King, but didst evade, and at all
+times turn her mind awry from those thoughts that had in them a
+tendency to lead her to repentance. What sayest thou to this
+indictment? Guilty or not guilty?
+
+'Not guilty of pitilessness: all I did was to cheer up, according
+to my name, for my name is not Pitiless, but Cheer-up; and I could
+not abide to see Mansoul inclined to melancholy.'
+
+Clerk. How! do you deny your name, and say it is not Pitiless, but
+Cheer-up? Call for the witnesses. What say you, the witnesses, to
+this plea?
+
+Know. My lord, his name is Pitiless; so he hath written himself in
+all papers of concern wherein he has had to do. But these
+Diabolonians love to counterfeit their names: Mr. Covetousness
+covers himself with the name of Good-Husbandry, or the like; Mr.
+Pride can, when need is, call himself Mr. Neat, Mr. Handsome, or
+the like; and so of all the rest of them.
+
+Clerk. Mr. Tell-True, what say you?
+
+Tell. His name is Pitiless, my lord. I have known him from a
+child, and he hath done all that wickedness whereof he stands
+charged in the indictment; but there is a company of them that are
+not acquainted with the danger of damning, therefore they call all
+those melancholy that have serious thoughts how that state should
+be shunned by them.
+
+Clerk. Set Mr. Haughty to the bar, gaoler. Mr. Haughty, thou art
+here indicted by the name of Haughty, (an intruder upon the town of
+Mansoul,) for that thou didst most traitorously and devilishly
+teach the town of Mansoul to carry it loftily and stoutly against
+the summons that was given them by the captains of the King
+Shaddai. Thou didst also teach the town of Mansoul to speak
+contemptuously and vilifyingly of their great King Shaddai; and
+didst moreover encourage, both by words and examples, Mansoul, to
+take up arms both against the King and his son Emmanuel. How
+sayest thou, art thou guilty of this indictment, or not?
+
+Haughty. Gentlemen, I have always been a man of courage and
+valour, and have not used, when under the greatest clouds, to sneak
+or hang down the head like a bulrush; nor did it at all at any time
+please me to see men veil their bonnets to those that have opposed
+them; yea, though their adversaries seemed to have ten times the
+advantage of them. I did not use to consider who was my foe, nor
+what the cause was in which I was engaged. It was enough to me if
+I carried it bravely, fought like a man, and came off a victor.
+
+Court. Mr. Haughty, you are not here indicted for that you have
+been a valiant man, nor for your courage and stoutness in times of
+distress, but for that you have made use of this your pretended
+valour to draw the town of Mansoul into acts of rebellion both
+against the great King, and Emmanuel his Son. This is the crime
+and the thing wherewith thou art charged in and by the indictment.
+
+But he made no answer to that.
+
+Now when the Court had thus far proceeded against the prisoners at
+the bar, then they put them over to the verdict of their jury, to
+whom they did apply themselves after this manner:
+
+'Gentlemen of the jury, you have been here, and have seen these
+men; you have heard their indictments, their pleas, and what the
+witnesses have testified against them: now what remains, is, that
+you do forthwith withdraw yourselves to some place, where without
+confusion you may consider of what verdict, in a way of truth and
+righteousness, you ought to bring in for the King against them, and
+so bring it in accordingly.'
+
+Then the jury, to wit, Mr. Belief, Mr. True-Heart, Mr. Upright, Mr.
+Hate-bad, Mr. Love-God, Mr. See-Truth, Mr. Heavenly-Mind, Mr.
+Moderate, Mr. Thankful, Mr. Humble, Mr. Good-Work, and Mr. Zeal-
+for-God, withdrew themselves in order to their work. Now when they
+were shut up by themselves, they fell to discourse among themselves
+in order to the drawing up of their verdict.
+
+And thus Mr. Belief (for he was the foreman) began: 'Gentlemen,'
+quoth he, 'for the men, the prisoners at the bar, for my part I
+believe that they all deserve death.' 'Very right,' said Mr. True-
+Heart; 'I am wholly of your opinion.' 'Oh what a mercy is it,'
+said Mr. Hate-Bad, 'that such villains as these are apprehended!'
+'Ay! ay!' said Mr. Love-God, 'this is one of the joyfullest days
+that ever I saw in my life.' Then said Mr. See-Truth, 'I know that
+if we judge them to death, our verdict shall stand before Shaddai
+himself' 'Nor do I at all question it,' said Mr. Heavenly-Mind; he
+said, moreover, 'When all such beasts as these are cast out of
+Mansoul, what a goodly town will it be then!' 'Then,' said Mr.
+Moderate, 'it is not my manner to pass my judgment with rashness;
+but for these their crimes are so notorious, and the witness so
+palpable, that that man must be wilfully blind who saith the
+prisoners ought not to die.' 'Blessed be God,' said Mr. Thankful,
+'that the traitors are in safe custody.' 'And I join with you in
+this upon my bare knees,' said Mr. Humble. 'I am glad also,' said
+Mr. Good-Work. Then said the warm man, and true-hearted Mr. Zeal-
+for-God, 'Cut them off; they have been the plague, and have sought
+the destruction of Mansoul.'
+
+Thus, therefore, being all agreed in their verdict, they come
+instantly into the Court.
+
+Clerk. Gentlemen of the jury, answer all to your names: Mr.
+Belief, one; Mr. True-Heart, two; Mr. Upright, three; Mr. Hate-Bad,
+four; Mr. Love-God, five; Mr. See-Truth, six; Mr. Heavenly-mind,
+seven; Mr. Moderate, eight; Mr. Thankful, nine; Mr. Humble, ten;
+Mr. Good-Work, eleven; and Mr. Zeal-for-God, twelve. Good men and
+true, stand together in your verdict: are you all agreed?
+
+Jury. Yes, my lord.
+
+Clerk. Who shall speak for you?
+
+Jury. Our foreman.
+
+Clerk. You, the gentlemen of the jury, being empannelled for our
+Lord the King, to serve here in a matter of life and death, have
+heard the trials of each of these men, the prisoners at the bar:
+what say you? are they guilty of that, and those crimes for which
+they stand here indicted, or are they not guilty?
+
+Foreman. Guilty, my lord.
+
+Clerk. Look to your prisoners, gaoler.
+
+This was done in the morning, and in the afternoon they received
+the sentence of death according to the law.
+
+The gaoler, therefore, having received such a charge, put them all
+in the inward prison, to preserve them there till the day of
+execution, which was to be the next day in the morning.
+
+But now to see how it happened, one of the prisoners, Incredulity
+by name, in the interim betwixt the sentence and the time of
+execution, brake prison and made his escape, and gets him away
+quite out of the town of Mansoul, and lay lurking in such places
+and holes as he might, until he should again have opportunity to do
+the town of Mansoul a mischief for their thus handling of him as
+they did.
+
+Now when Mr. Trueman, the gaoler, perceived that he had lost his
+prisoner, he was in a heavy taking, because that prisoner was, to
+speak on, the very worst of all the gang: wherefore first he goes
+and acquaints my Lord Mayor, Mr. Recorder, and my Lord Willbewill,
+with the matter, and to get of them an order to make search for him
+throughout the town of Mansoul. So an order he got, and search was
+made, but no such man could now be found in all the town of
+Mansoul.
+
+All that could be gathered was, that he had lurked a while about
+the outside of the town, and that here and there one or other had a
+glimpse of him as he did make his escape out of Mansoul; one or two
+also did affirm that they saw him without the town, going apace
+quite over the plain. Now when he was quite gone, it was affirmed
+by one Mr. Did-see, that he ranged all over dry places, till he met
+with Diabolus, his friend, and where should they meet one another
+but just upon Hell-gate hill.
+
+But oh! what a lamentable story did the old gentleman tell to
+Diabolus concerning what sad alteration Emmanuel had made in
+Mansoul!
+
+As, first, how Mansoul had, after some delays, received a general
+pardon at the hands of Emmanuel, and that they had invited him into
+the town, and that they had given him the castle for his
+possession. He said, moreover, that they had called his soldiers
+into the town, coveted who should quarter the most of them; they
+also entertained him with the timbrel, song, and dance. 'But
+that,' said Incredulity, 'which is the sorest vexation to me is,
+that he hath pulled down, O father, thy image, and set up his own;
+pulled down thy officers and set up his own. Yea, and Willbewill,
+that rebel, who, one would have thought, should never have turned
+from us, he is now in as great favour with Emmanuel as ever he was
+with thee. But, besides all this, this Willbewill has received a
+special commission from his master to search for, to apprehend, and
+to put to death all, and all manner of Diabolonians that he shall
+find in Mansoul: yea, and this Willbewill has taken and committed
+to prison already eight of my Lord's most trusty friends in
+Mansoul. Nay, further, my Lord, with grief I speak it, they have
+been all arraigned, condemned, and, I doubt, before this executed
+in Mansoul. I told my Lord of eight, and myself was the ninth, who
+should assuredly have drunk of the same cup, but that through
+craft, I, as thou seest, have made mine escape from them.'
+
+When Diabolus had heard this lamentable story, he yelled and
+snuffed up the wind like a dragon, and made the sky to look dark
+with his roaring; he also sware that he would try to be revenged on
+Mansoul for this. So they, both he and his old friend Incredulity,
+concluded to enter into great consultation, how they might get the
+town of Mansoul again.
+
+Now, before this time, the day was come in which the prisoners in
+Mansoul were to be executed. So they were brought to the cross,
+and that by Mansoul, in most solemn manner; for the Prince said
+that this should be done by the hand of the town of Mansoul, 'that
+I may see,' said he, 'the forwardness of my now redeemed Mansoul to
+keep my word, and to do my commandments; and that I may bless
+Mansoul in doing this deed. Proof of sincerity pleases me well;
+let Mansoul therefore first lay their hands upon these Diabolonians
+to destroy them.'
+
+So the town of Mansoul slew them, according to the word of their
+Prince; but when the prisoners were brought to the cross to die,
+you can hardly believe what troublesome work Mansoul had of it to
+put the Diabolonians to death; for the men, knowing that they must
+die, and every of them having implacable enmity in their hearts to
+Mansoul, what did they but took courage at the cross, and there
+resisted the men of the town of Mansoul? Wherefore the men of
+Mansoul were forced to cry out for help to the captains and men of
+war. Now the great Shaddai had a secretary in the town, and he was
+a great lover of the men of Mansoul, and he was at the place of
+execution also; so he, hearing the men of Mansoul cry out against
+the strugglings and unruliness of the prisoners, rose up from his
+place, and came and put his hands upon the hands of the men of
+Mansoul. So they crucified the Diabolonians that had been a
+plague, a grief, and an offence to the town of Mansoul.
+
+Now, when this good work was done, the Prince came down to see, to
+visit, and to speak comfortably to the men of Mansoul, and to
+strengthen their hands in such work. And he said to them that, by
+this act of theirs he had proved them, and found them to be lovers
+of his person, observers of his laws, and such as had also respect
+to his honour. He said, moreover, (to show them that they by this
+should not be losers, nor their town weakened by the loss of them,)
+that he would make them another captain, and that of one of
+themselves. And that this captain should be the ruler of a
+thousand, for the good and benefit of the now flourishing town of
+Mansoul.
+
+So he called one to him whose name was Waiting, and bid him, 'Go
+quickly up to the castle gate, and inquire there for one Mr.
+Experience, that waiteth upon that noble captain, the Captain
+Credence, and bid him come hither to me.' So the messenger that
+waited upon the good Prince Emmanuel went and said as he was
+commanded. Now the young gentleman was waiting to see the captain
+train and muster his men in the castle yard. Then said Mr. Waiting
+to him, 'Sir, the Prince would that you should come down to his
+highness forthwith.' So he brought him down to Emmanuel, and he
+came and made obeisance before him. Now the men of the town knew
+Mr. Experience well, for he was born and bred in Mansoul; they also
+knew him to be a man of conduct, of valour, and a person prudent in
+matters; he was also a comely person, well-spoken, and very
+successful in his undertakings.
+
+Wherefore the hearts of the townsmen were transported with joy when
+they saw that the Prince himself was so taken with Mr. Experience,
+that he would needs make him a captain over a band of men.
+
+So with one consent they bowed the knee before Emmanuel, and with a
+shout said, 'Let Emmanuel live for ever!' Then said the Prince to
+the young gentleman, whose name was Mr. Experience, 'I have thought
+good to confer upon thee a place of trust and honour in this my
+town of Mansoul.' Then the young man bowed his head and
+worshipped. 'It is,' said Emmanuel, 'that thou shouldest be a
+captain, a captain over a thousand men in my beloved town of
+Mansoul.' Then said the captain, 'Let the King live!' So the
+Prince gave out orders forthwith to the King's secretary, that he
+should draw up for Mr. Experience a commission to make him a
+captain over a thousand men. 'And let it be brought to me,' said
+he, 'that I may set to my seal.' So it was done as it was
+commanded. The commission was drawn up, brought to Emmanuel, and
+he set his seal thereto. Then, by the hand of Mr. Waiting, he sent
+it away to the captain.
+
+Now as soon as the captain had received his commission, he sounded
+his trumpet for volunteers, and young men came to him apace; yea,
+the greatest and chief men in the town sent their sons, to be
+listed under his command. Thus Captain Experience came under
+command to Emmanuel, for the good of the town of Mansoul. He had
+for his lieutenant one Mr. Skilful, and for his cornet one Mr.
+Memory. His under officers I need not name. His colours were the
+white colours for the town of Mansoul; and his scutcheon was the
+dead lion and dead bear. So the Prince returned to his royal
+palace again.
+
+Now when he was returned thither, the elders of the town of
+Mansoul, to wit, the Lord Mayor, the Recorder, and the Lord
+Willbewill, went to congratulate him, and in special way to thank
+him for his love, care, and the tender compassion which he showed
+to his ever-obliged town of Mansoul. So after a while, and some
+sweet communion between them, the townsmen having solemnly ended
+their ceremony, returned to their place again.
+
+Emmanuel also at this time appointed them a day wherein he would
+renew their charter, yea, wherein he would renew and enlarge it,
+mending several faults therein, that Mansoul's yoke might be yet
+more easy. And this he did without any desire of theirs, even of
+his own frankness and noble mind. So when he had sent for and seen
+their old one, he laid it by, and said, 'Now that which decayeth
+and waxeth old is ready to vanish away.' He said, moreover, 'The
+town of Mansoul shall have another, a better, a new one, more
+steady and firm by far.' An epitome hereof take as follows:-
+
+'Emmanuel, Prince of Peace, and a great lover of the town of
+Mansoul, I do in the name of my Father, and of mine own clemency,
+give, grant, and bequeath to my beloved town of Mansoul.
+
+'First. Free, full, and everlasting forgiveness of all wrongs,
+injuries, and offences done by them against my Father, me, their
+neighbour, or themselves.
+
+'Second. I do give them the holy law and my testament, with all
+that therein is contained, for their everlasting comfort and
+consolation.
+
+'Third. I do also give them a portion of the self-same grace and
+goodness that dwells in my Father's heart and mine.
+
+'Fourth. I do give, grant, and bestow upon them freely, the world
+and what is therein, for their good; and they shall have that power
+over them, as shall stand with the honour of my Father, my glory,
+and their comfort: yea, I grant them the benefits of life and
+death, and of things present, and things to come. This privilege
+no other city, town, or corporation, shall have, but my Mansoul
+only.
+
+'Fifth. I do give and grant them leave, and free access to me in
+my palace at all seasons--to my palace above or below--there to
+make known their wants to me, and I give them, moreover, a promise
+that I will hear and redress all their grievances.
+
+'Sixth. I do give, grant to, and invest the town of Mansoul with
+full power and authority to seek out, take, enslave, and destroy
+all, and all manner of Diabolonians that at any time, from
+whencesoever, shall be found straggling in or about the town of
+Mansoul.
+
+'Seventh. I do further grant to my beloved town of Mansoul, that
+they shall have authority not to suffer any foreigner, or stranger,
+or their seed, to be free in, and of the blessed town of Mansoul,
+nor to share in the excellent privileges thereof. But that all the
+grants, privileges, and immunities that I bestow upon the famous
+town of Mansoul, shall be for those the old natives, and true
+inhabitants thereof; to them, I say, and to their right seed after
+them.
+
+'But all Diabolonians, of what sort, birth, country, or kingdom
+soever, shall be debarred a share therein.'
+
+So when the town of Mansoul had received at the hand of Emmanuel
+their gracious charter, (which in itself is infinitely more large
+than by this lean epitome is set before you,) they carried it to
+audience, that is, to the market place, and there Mr. Recorder read
+it in the presence of all the people. This being done, it was had
+back to the castle gates, and there fairly engraven upon the doors
+thereof, and laid in letters of gold, to the end that the town of
+Mansoul, with all the people thereof, might have it always in their
+view, or might go where they might see what a blessed freedom their
+Prince had bestowed upon them, that their joy might be increased in
+themselves, and their love renewed to their great and good
+Emmanuel.
+
+But what joy, what comfort, what consolation, think you, did now
+possess the hearts of the men of Mansoul! The bells rung, the
+minstrels played, the people danced, the captains shouted, the
+colours waved in the wind, and the silver trumpets sounded; and the
+Diabolonians now were glad to hide their heads, for they looked
+like them that had been long dead.
+
+When this was over, the Prince sent again for the elders of the
+town of Mansoul, and communed with them about a ministry that he
+intended to establish among them; such a ministry that might open
+unto them, and that might instruct them in the things that did
+concern their present and future state.
+
+'For,' said he, 'you, of yourselves, unless you have teachers and
+guides, will not be able to know, and, if not to know, to be sure
+not to do the will of my Father.'
+
+At this news, when the elders of Mansoul brought it to the people,
+the whole town came running together, (for it pleased them well, as
+whatever the Prince now did pleased the people,) and all with one
+consent implored his Majesty that he would forthwith establish such
+a ministry among them as might teach them both law and judgment,
+statute and commandment; that they might be documented in all good
+and wholesome things. So he told them that he would grant them
+their requests, and would establish two among them; one that was of
+his Father's court, and one that was a native of Mansoul.
+
+'He that is from the court,' said he, 'is a person of no less
+quality and dignity than my Father and I; and he is the Lord Chief
+Secretary of my Father's house: for he is, and always has been,
+the chief dictator of all my Father's laws, a person altogether
+well skilled in all mysteries, and knowledge of mysteries, as is my
+Father, or as myself is. Indeed he is one with us in nature, and
+also as to loving of, and being faithful to, and in the eternal
+concerns of the town of Mansoul.
+
+'And this is he,' said the Prince, 'that must be your chief
+teacher; for it is he, and he only, that can teach you clearly in
+all high and supernatural things. He, and he only, it is that
+knows the ways and methods of my Father at court, nor can any like
+him show how the heart of my Father is at all times, in all things,
+upon all occasions, towards Mansoul; for as no man knows the things
+of a man but that spirit of a man which is in him, so the things of
+my Father knows no man but this his high and mighty Secretary. Nor
+can any, as he, tell Mansoul how and what they shall do to keep
+themselves in the love of my Father. He also it is that can bring
+lost things to your remembrance, and that can tell you things to
+come. This teacher, therefore, must of necessity have the pre-
+eminence, both in your affections and judgment, before your other
+teacher; his personal dignity, the excellency of his teaching, also
+the great dexterity that he hath to help you to make and draw up
+petitions to my Father for your help, and to his pleasing, must lay
+obligations upon you to love him, fear him, and to take heed that
+you grieve him not.
+
+'This person can put life and vigour into all he says; yea, and can
+also put it into your heart. This person can make seers of you,
+and can make you tell what shall be hereafter. By this person you
+must frame all your petitions to my Father and me; and without his
+advice and counsel first obtained, let nothing enter into the town
+or castle of Mansoul, for that may disgust and grieve this noble
+person.
+
+'Take heed, I say, that you do not grieve this minister; for if you
+do, he may fight against you; and should he once be moved by you to
+set himself against you in battle array, that will distress you
+more than if twelve legions should from my Father's court be sent
+to make war upon you.
+
+'But, as I said, if you shall hearken unto him, and shall love him;
+if you shall devote yourselves to his teaching, and shall seek to
+have converse, and to maintain communion with him, you shall find
+him ten times better than is the whole world to any; yea, he will
+shed abroad the love of my Father in your hearts, and Mansoul will
+be the wisest, and most blessed of all people.'
+
+Then did the Prince call unto him the old gentleman, who before had
+been the Recorder of Mansoul, Mr. Conscience by name, and told him,
+That, forasmuch as he was well skilled in the law and government of
+the town of Mansoul, and was also well-spoken, and could
+pertinently deliver to them his Master's will in all terrene and
+domestic matters, therefore he would also make him a minister for,
+in, and to the goodly town of Mansoul, in all the laws, statutes,
+and judgments of the famous town of Mansoul. 'And thou must,' said
+the Prince, 'confine thyself to the teaching of moral virtues, to
+civil and natural duties; but thou must not attempt to presume to
+be a revealer of those high and supernatural mysteries that are
+kept close in the bosom of Shaddai, my Father: for those things
+knows no man, nor can any reveal them but my Father's Secretary
+only.
+
+'Thou art a native of the town of Mansoul, but the Lord Secretary
+is a native with my Father; wherefore, as thou hast knowledge of
+the laws and customs of the corporation, so he of the things and
+will of my Father.
+
+'Wherefore, O Mr. Conscience, although I have made thee a minister
+and a preacher to the town of Mansoul, yet as to the things which
+the Lord Secretary knoweth, and shall teach to this people, there
+thou must be his scholar and a learner, even as the rest of Mansoul
+are.
+
+'Thou must therefore, in all high and supernatural things, go to
+him for information and knowledge; for though there be a spirit in
+man, this person's inspiration must give him understanding.
+Wherefore, O thou Mr. Recorder, keep low and be humble, and
+remember that the Diabolonians that kept not their first charge,
+but left their own standing, are now made prisoners in the pit. Be
+therefore content with thy station.
+
+'I have made thee my Father's vicegerent on earth, in such things
+of which I have made mention before: and thou, take thou power to
+teach them to Mansoul, yea, and to impose them with whips and
+chastisements, if they shall not willingly hearken to do thy
+commandments.
+
+'And, Mr. Recorder, because thou art old, and through many abuses
+made feeble; therefore I give thee leave and license to go when
+thou wilt to my fountain, my conduit, and there to drink freely of
+the blood of my grape, for my conduit doth always run wine. Thus
+doing, thou shalt drive from thine heart and stomach all foul,
+gross, and hurtful humours. It will also lighten thine eyes, and
+will strengthen thy memory for the reception and keeping of all
+that the King's most noble Secretary teacheth.'
+
+When the Prince had thus put Mr. Recorder (that once so was) into
+the place and office of a minister to Mansoul, and the man had
+thankfully accepted thereof, then did Emmanuel address himself in a
+particular speech to the townsmen themselves.
+
+'Behold,' said the Prince to Mansoul, 'my love and care towards
+you; I have added to all that is past, this mercy, to appoint you
+preachers; the most noble Secretary to teach you in all high and
+sublime mysteries; and this gentleman,' pointing to Mr. Conscience,
+'is to teach you in all things human and domestic, for therein
+lieth his work. He is not, by what I have said, debarred of
+telling to Mansoul anything that he hath heard and received at the
+mouth of the lord high Secretary; only he shall not attempt to
+presume to pretend to be a revealer of those high mysteries
+himself; for the breaking of them up, and the discovery of them to
+Mansoul lieth only in the power, authority, and skill of the lord
+high Secretary himself. Talk of them he may, and so may the rest
+of the town of Mansoul; yea, and may, as occasion gives them
+opportunity, press them upon each other for the benefit of the
+whole. These things, therefore, I would have you observe and do,
+for it is for your life, and the lengthening of your days.
+
+'And one thing more to my beloved Mr. Recorder, and to all the town
+of Mansoul: You must not dwell in, nor stay upon, anything of that
+which he hath in commission to teach you, as to your trust and
+expectation of the next world; (of the next world, I say, for I
+purpose to give another to Mansoul, when this with them is worn
+out;) but for that you must wholly and solely have recourse to, and
+make stay upon his doctrine that is your Teacher after the first
+order. Yea, Mr. Recorder himself must not look for life from that
+which he himself revealeth; his dependence for that must be founded
+in the doctrine of the other preacher. Let Mr. Recorder also take
+heed that he receive not any doctrine, or point of doctrine, that
+is not communicated to him by his Superior Teacher, nor yet within
+the precincts of his own formal knowledge.'
+
+Now, after the Prince had thus settled things in the famous town of
+Mansoul, he proceeded to give to the elders of the corporation a
+necessary caution, to wit, how they should carry it to the high and
+noble captains that he had, from his Father's court, sent or
+brought with him, to the famous town of Mansoul.
+
+'These captains,' said he, 'do love the town of Mansoul, and they
+are picked men, picked out of abundance, as men that best suit, and
+that will most faithfully serve in the wars of Shaddai against the
+Diabolonians, for the preservation of the town of Mansoul. 'I
+charge you therefore,' said he, 'O ye inhabitants of the now
+flourishing town of Mansoul, that you carry it not ruggedly or
+untowardly to my captains, or their men; since, as I said, they are
+picked and choice men--men chosen out of many for the good of the
+town of Mansoul. I say, I charge you, that you carry it not
+untowardly to them: for though they have the hearts and faces of
+lions, when at any time they shall be called forth to engage and
+fight with the King's foes, and the enemies of the town of Mansoul;
+yet a little discountenance cast upon them from the town of Mansoul
+will deject and cast down their faces, will weaken and take away
+their courage. Do not, therefore, O my beloved, carry it unkindly
+to my valiant captains and courageous men of war, but love them,
+nourish them, succour them, and lay them in your bosoms; and they
+will not only fight for you, but cause to fly from you all those
+the Diabolonians that seek, and will, if possible, be, your utter
+destruction.
+
+'If, therefore, any of them should at any time be sick or weak, and
+so not able to perform that office of love, which, with all their
+hearts, they are willing to do (and will do also when well and in
+health), slight them not, nor despise them, but rather strengthen
+them and encourage them, though weak and ready to die, for they are
+your fence, and your guard, your wall, your gates, your locks, and
+your bars. And although, when they are weak, they can do but
+little, but rather need to be helped by you, than that you should
+then expect great things from them, yet, when well, you know what
+exploits, what feats and warlike achievements they are able to do,
+and will perform for you.
+
+'Besides, if they be weak, the town of Mansoul cannot be strong; if
+they be strong, then Mansoul cannot be weak; your safety,
+therefore, doth lie in their health, and in your countenancing
+them. Remember, also, that if they be sick, they catch that
+disease of the town of Mansoul itself.
+
+'These things I have said unto you because I love your welfare and
+your honour: observe, therefore, O my Mansoul, to be punctual in
+all things that I have given in charge unto you, and that not only
+as a town corporate, and so to your officers and guard, and guides
+in chief, but to you as you are a people whose well-being, as
+single persons, depends on the observation of the orders and
+commandments of their Lord.
+
+'Next, O my Mansoul, I do warn you of that, of which,
+notwithstanding that reformation that at present is wrought among
+you, you have need to be warned about: wherefore hearken
+diligently unto me. I am now sure, and you will know hereafter,
+that there are yet of the Diabolonians remaining in the town of
+Mansoul, Diabolonians that are sturdy and implacable, and that do
+already while I am with you, and that will yet more when I am from
+you, study, plot, contrive, invent, and jointly attempt to bring
+you to desolation, and so to a state far worse than that of the
+Egyptian bondage; they are the avowed friends of Diabolus,
+therefore look about you. They used heretofore to lodge with their
+Prince in the Castle, when Incredulity was the Lord Mayor of this
+town; but since my coming hither, they lie more in the outsides and
+walls, and have made themselves dens, and caves, and holes, and
+strongholds therein. Wherefore, O Mansoul! thy work, as to this,
+will be so much the more difficult and hard; that is, to take,
+mortify, and put them to death according to the will of my Father.
+Nor can you utterly rid yourselves of them, unless you should pull
+down the walls of your town, the which I am by no means willing you
+should. Do you ask me, What shall we do then? Why, be you
+diligent, and quit you like men; observe their holes; find out
+their haunts; assault them, and make no peace with them. Wherever
+they haunt, lurk, or abide, and what terms of peace soever they
+offer you, abhor, and all shall be well betwixt you and me. And
+that you may the better know them from those that are the natives
+of Mansoul, I will give you this brief schedule of the names of the
+chief of them; and they are these that follow:- The Lord
+Fornication, the Lord Adultery, the Lord Murder, the Lord Anger,
+the Lord Lasciviousness, the Lord Deceit, the Lord Evil-Eye, Mr.
+Drunkenness, Mr. Revelling, Mr. Idolatry, Mr. Witch-craft, Mr.
+Variance, Mr. Emulation, Mr. Wrath, Mr. Strife, Mr. Sedition, and
+Mr. Heresy. These are some of the chief, O Mansoul! of those that
+will seek to overthrow thee for ever. These, I say, are the
+skulkers in Mansoul; but look thou well into the law of thy King,
+and there thou shalt find their physiognomy, and such other
+characteristical notes of them, by which they certainly may be
+known.
+
+'These, O my Mansoul, (and I would gladly that you should certainly
+know it,) if they be suffered to run and range about the town as
+they would, will quickly, like vipers, eat out your bowels; yea,
+poison your captains, cut the sinews of your soldiers, break the
+bars and bolts of your gates, and turn your now most flourishing
+Mansoul into a barren and desolate wilderness, and ruinous heap.
+Wherefore, that you may take courage to yourselves to apprehend
+these villains wherever you find them, I give to you, my Lord
+Mayor, my Lord Willbewill, and Mr. Recorder, with all the
+inhabitants of the town of Mansoul, full power and commission to
+seek out, to take, and to cause to be put to death by the cross,
+all, and all manner of Diabolonians, when and wherever you shall
+find them to lurk within, or to range without the walls of the town
+of Mansoul.
+
+'I told you before that I had placed a standing ministry among you;
+not that you have but these with you, for my first four captains
+who came against the master and lord of the Diabolonians that was
+in Mansoul, they can, and if need be, and if they be required, will
+not only privately inform, but publicly preach to the corporation
+both good and wholesome doctrine, and such as shall lead you in the
+way. Yea, they will set up a weekly, yea, if need be, a daily
+lecture in thee, O Mansoul! and will instruct thee in such
+profitable lessons, that, if heeded, will do thee good at the end.
+And take good heed that you spare not the men that you have a
+commission to take and crucify.
+
+'Now, as I have set before your eyes the vagrants and runagates by
+name, so I will tell you, that among yourselves, some of them shall
+creep in to beguile you, even such as would seem, and that in
+appearance are, very rife and hot for religion. And they, if you
+watch not, will do you a mischief, such an one as at present you
+cannot think of.
+
+'These, as I said, will show themselves to you in another hue than
+those under description before. Wherefore, Mansoul, watch and be
+sober, and suffer not thyself to be betrayed.'
+
+When the Prince had thus far new modelled the town of Mansoul, and
+had instructed them in such matters as were profitable for them to
+know, then he appointed another day in which he intended, when the
+townsfolk came together, to bestow a further badge of honour upon
+the town of Mansoul,--a badge that should distinguish them from all
+the people, kindreds, and tongues that dwell in the kingdom of
+Universe. Now it was not long before the day appointed was come,
+and the Prince and his people met in the King's palace, where first
+Emmanuel made a short speech unto them, and then did for them as he
+had said, and unto them as he had promised.
+
+'My Mansoul,' said he, 'that which I now am about to do, is to make
+you known to the world to be mine, and to distinguish you also in
+your own eyes, from all false traitors that may creep in among
+you.'
+
+Then he commanded that those that waited upon him should go and
+bring forth out of his treasury those white and glistening robes
+'that I,' said he, 'have provided and laid up in store for my
+Mansoul.' So the white garments were fetched out of his treasury,
+and laid forth to the eyes of the people. Moreover, it was granted
+to them that they should take them and put them on, 'according,'
+said he, 'to your size and stature.' So the people were put into
+white, into fine linen, white and clean.
+
+Then said the Prince unto them, 'This, O Mansoul, is my livery, and
+the badge by which mine are known from the servants of others.
+Yea, it is that which I grant to all that are mine, and without
+which no man is permitted to see my face. Wear them, therefore,
+for my sake, who gave them unto you; and also if you would be known
+by the world to be mine.'
+
+But now! can you think how Mansoul shone? It was fair as the sun,
+clear as the moon, and terrible as an army with banners.
+
+The Prince added further, and said, 'No prince, potentate, or
+mighty one of Universe, giveth this livery but myself: behold,
+therefore, as I said before, you shall be known by it to be mine.
+
+'And now,' said he, 'I have given you my livery, let me give you
+also in commandment concerning them; and be sure that you take good
+heed to my words.
+
+'First. Wear them daily, day by day, lest you should at sometimes
+appear to others as if you were none of mine.
+
+'Second. Keep them always white; for if they be soiled, it is
+dishonour to me.
+
+'Third. Wherefore gird them up from the ground, and let them not
+lag with dust and dirt.
+
+'Fourth. Take heed that you lose them not, lest you walk naked,
+and they see your shame.
+
+'Fifth. But if you should sully them, if you should defile them,
+the which I am greatly unwilling you should, and the prince
+Diabolus will be glad if you would, then speed you to do that which
+is written in my law, that yet you may stand, and befall before me,
+and before my throne. Also, this is the way to cause that I may
+not leave you, nor forsake you while here, but may dwell in this
+town of Mansoul for ever.'
+
+And now was Mansoul, and the inhabitants of it, as the signet upon
+Emmanuel's right hand. Where was there now a town, a city, a
+corporation, that could compare with Mansoul! a town redeemed from
+the hand, and from the power of Diabolus! a town that the King
+Shaddai loved, and that he sent Emmanuel to regain from the Prince
+of the infernal cave; yea, a town that Emmanuel loved to dwell in,
+and that he chose for his royal habitation; a town that he
+fortified for himself, and made strong by the force of his army.
+What shall I say, Mansoul has now a most excellent Prince, golden
+captains and men of war, weapons proved, and garments as white as
+snow. Nor are these benefits to be counted little, but great; can
+the town of Mansoul esteem them so, and improve them to that end
+and purpose for which they are bestowed upon them?
+
+When the Prince had thus completed the modelling of the town, to
+show that he had great delight in the work of his hands and took
+pleasure in the good that he had wrought for the famous and
+flourishing Mansoul, he commanded, and they set his standard upon
+the battlements of the castle. And then,
+
+First. He gave them frequent visits; not a day now but the elders
+of Mansoul must come to him, or he to them, into his palace. Now
+they must walk and talk together of all the great things that he
+had done, and yet further promised to do, for the town of Mansoul.
+Thus would he often do with the Lord Mayor, my Lord Willbewill, and
+the honest subordinate preacher Mr. Conscience, and Mr. Recorder.
+But oh, how graciously, how lovingly, how courteously, and tenderly
+did this blessed Prince now carry it towards the town of Mansoul!
+In all the streets, gardens, orchards, and other places where he
+came, to be sure the poor should have his blessing and benediction;
+yea, he would kiss them, and if they were ill he would lay hands on
+them, and make them well. The captains, also, he would daily, yea,
+sometimes hourly, encourage with his presence and goodly words.
+For you must know that a smile from him upon them would put more
+vigour, more life, and stoutness into them, than would anything
+else under heaven.
+
+The Prince would now also feast them, and be with them continually:
+hardly a week would pass but a banquet must be had betwixt him and
+them. You may remember that, some pages before, we make mention of
+one feast that they had together; but now to feast them was a thing
+more common: every day with Mansoul was a feast-day now. Nor did
+he, when they returned to their places, send them empty away,
+either they must have a ring, a gold chain, a bracelet, a white
+stone, or something; so dear was Mansoul to him now; so lovely was
+Mansoul in his eyes.
+
+Second. When the elders and townsmen did not come to him, he would
+send in much plenty of provision unto them; meat that came from
+court, wine and bread that were prepared for his Father's table;
+yea, such delicates would he send unto them, and therewith would so
+cover their table, that whoever saw it confessed that the like
+could not be seen in any kingdom.
+
+Third. If Mansoul did not frequently visit him as he desired they
+should, he would walk out to them, knock at their doors, and desire
+entrance, that amity might be maintained betwixt them and him; if
+they did hear and open to him, as commonly they would, if they were
+at home, then would he renew his former love, and confirm it too
+with some new tokens, and signs of continued favour.
+
+And was it not now amazing to behold, that in that very place where
+sometimes Diabolus had his abode, and entertained his Diabolonians
+to the almost utter destruction of Mansoul, the Prince of princes
+should sit eating and drinking with them, while all his mighty
+captains, men of war, trumpeters, with the singing-men and singing-
+women of his Father, stood round about to wait upon them! Now did
+Mansoul's cup run over, now did her conduits run sweet wine, now
+did she eat the finest of the wheat, and drink milk and honey out
+of the rock! Now, she said, How great is his goodness! for since I
+found favour in his eyes, how honourable have I been!
+
+The blessed Prince did also ordain a new officer in the town, and a
+goodly person he was; his name was Mr. God's-Peace: this man was
+set over my Lord Willbewill, my Lord Mayor, Mr. Recorder, the
+subordinate preacher, Mr. Mind, and over all the natives of the
+town of Mansoul. Himself was not a native of it, but came with the
+Prince Emmanuel from the court. He was a great acquaintance of
+Captain Credence and Captain Good-Hope; some say they were kin, and
+I am of that opinion too. This man, as I said, was made governor
+of the town in general, especially over the castle, and Captain
+Credence was to help him there. And I made great observation of
+it, that so long as all things went in Mansoul as this sweet-
+natured gentleman would, the town was in most happy condition. Now
+there were no jars, no chiding, no interferings, no unfaithful
+doings in all the town of Mansoul; every man in Mansoul kept close
+to his own employment. The gentry, the officers, the soldiers, and
+all in place observed their order. And as for the women and
+children of the town, they followed their business joyfully; they
+would work and sing, work and sing, from morning till night: so
+that quite through the town of Mansoul now nothing was to be found
+but harmony, quietness, joy, and health. And this lasted all that
+summer.
+
+But there was a man in the town of Mansoul, and his name was Mr.
+Carnal-Security; this man did, after all this mercy bestowed on
+this corporation, bring the town of Mansoul into great and grievous
+slavery and bondage. A brief account of him and of his doings take
+as followeth:-
+
+When Diabolus at first took possession of the town of Mansoul, he
+brought thither, with himself, a great number of Diabolonians, men
+of his own conditions. Now among these there was one whose name
+was Mr. Self-Conceit, and a notable brisk man he was, as any that
+in those days did possess the town of Mansoul. Diabolus, then,
+perceiving this man to be active and bold, sent him upon many
+desperate designs, the which he managed better, and more to the
+pleasing of his lord, than most that came with him from the dens
+could do. Wherefore, finding him so fit for his purpose, he
+preferred him, and made him next to the great Lord Willbewill, of
+whom we have written so much before. Now the Lord Willbewill being
+in those days very well pleased with him, and with his
+achievements, gave him his daughter, the Lady Fear-Nothing, to
+wife. Now, of my Lady Fear-nothing, did this Mr. Self-Conceit
+beget this gentleman, Mr. Carnal-Security. Wherefore, there being
+then in Mansoul those strange kinds of mixtures, it was hard for
+them, in some cases, to find out who were natives, who not, for Mr.
+Carnal-Security sprang from my Lord Willbewill by mother's side,
+though he had for his father a Diabolonian by nature.
+
+Well, this Carnal-Security took much after his father and mother;
+he was self-conceited, he feared nothing, he was also a very busy
+man: nothing of news, nothing of doctrine, nothing of alteration,
+or talk of alteration, could at any time be on foot in Mansoul, but
+be sure Mr. Carnal-Security would be at the head or tail of it:
+but, to be sure, he would decline those that he deemed the weakest,
+and stood always with them in his way of standing, that he supposed
+was the strongest side.
+
+Now, when Shaddai the mighty, and Emmanuel his Son, made war upon
+Mansoul, to take it, this Mr. Carnal-Security was then in town, and
+was a great doer among the people, encouraging them in their
+rebellion, putting them upon hardening themselves in their
+resisting the King's forces: but when he saw that the town of
+Mansoul was taken, and converted to the use of the glorious Prince
+Emmanuel; and when he also saw what was become of Diabolus, and how
+he was unroosted, and made to quit the castle in the greatest
+contempt and scorn; and that the town of Mansoul was well lined
+with captains, engines of war, and men, and also provision; what
+doth he but slyly wheel about also; and as he had served Diabolus
+against the good Prince, so he feigned that he would serve the
+Prince against his foes.
+
+And having got some little smattering of Emmanuel's things by the
+end, being bold, he ventures himself into the company of the
+townsmen, any attempts also to chat among them. Now he knew that
+the power and strength of the town of Mansoul was great, and that
+it could not but be pleasing to the people, if he cried up their
+might and their glory. Wherefore he beginneth his tale with the
+power and strength of Mansoul, and affirmed that it was
+impregnable; now magnifying their captains and their slings, and
+their rams; then crying up their fortifications and strongholds;
+and, lastly, the assurances that they had from their Prince, that
+Mansoul should be happy for ever. But when he saw that some of the
+men of the town were tickled and taken with his discourse, he makes
+it his business, and walking from street to street, house to house,
+and man to man, he at last brought Mansoul to dance after his pipe,
+and to grow almost as carnally secure as himself; so from talking
+they went to feasting, and from feasting to sporting; and so to
+some other matters. Now Emmanuel was yet in the town of Mansoul,
+and he wisely observed their doings. My Lord Mayor, my Lord
+Willbewill, and Mr. Recorder were also all taken with the words of
+this tattling Diabolonian gentleman, forgetting that their Prince
+had given them warning before to take heed that they were not
+beguiled with any Diabolonian sleight; he had further told them
+that the security of the now flourishing town of Mansoul did not so
+much lie in her present fortifications and force, as in her so
+using of what she had, as might oblige her Emmanuel to abide within
+her castle. For the right doctrine of Emmanuel was, that the town
+of Mansoul should take heed that they forgot not his Father's love
+and his; also, that they should so demean themselves as to continue
+to keep themselves therein. Now this was not the way to do it,
+namely, to fall in love with one of the Diabolonians, and with such
+an one too as Mr. Carnal-Security was, and to be led up and down by
+the nose by him; they should have heard their Prince, feared their
+Prince, loved their Prince, and have stoned this naughty pack to
+death, and took care to have walked in the ways of their Prince's
+prescribing: for then should their peace have been as a river,
+when their righteousness had been like the waves of the sea.
+
+Now when Emmanuel perceived that through the policy of Mr. Carnal-
+Security the hearts of the men of Mansoul were chilled and abated
+in their practical love to him,
+
+First. He bemoans them, and, condoles their state with the
+Secretary, saying, 'Oh that my people had hearkened unto me, and
+that Mansoul had walked in my ways! I would have fed them with the
+finest of the wheat; and with honey out of the rock would I have
+sustained them.' This done, he said in his heart, 'I will return
+to the court, and go to my place, till Mansoul shall consider and
+acknowledge their offence.' And he did so, and the cause and
+manner of his going away from them was, that Mansoul declined him,
+as is manifest in these particulars.
+
+'1. They left off their former way of visiting him, they came not
+to his royal palace as afore.
+
+'2. They did not regard, nor yet take notice, that he came or came
+not to visit them.
+
+'3. The love-feasts that had wont to be between their Prince and
+them, though he made them still, and called them to them, yet they
+neglected to come to them, or to be delighted with them.
+
+'4. They waited not for his counsels, but began to be headstrong
+and confident in themselves, concluding that now they were strong
+and invincible, and that Mansoul was secure, and beyond all reach
+of the foe, and that her state must needs be unalterable for ever.'
+
+Now, as was said, Emmanuel perceiving that by the craft of Mr.
+Carnal-Security, the town of Mansoul was taken off from their
+dependence upon him, and upon his Father by him, and set upon what
+by them was bestowed upon it; he first, as I said, bemoaned their
+state, then he used means to make them understand that the way that
+they went on in was dangerous: for he sent my Lord High Secretary
+to them, to forbid them such ways; but twice when he came to them,
+he found them at dinner in Mr. Carnal-Security's parlour; and
+perceiving also that they were not willing to reason about matters
+concerning their good, he took grief and went his way; the which
+when he had told to the Prince Emmanuel, he took offence, and was
+grieved also, and so made provision to return to his Father's
+court.
+
+Now, the methods of his withdrawing, as I was saying before, were
+thus:-
+
+'1. Even while he was yet with them in Mansoul, he kept himself
+close, and more retired than formerly.
+
+'2. His speech was not now, if he came in their company, so
+pleasant and familiar as formerly.
+
+'3. Nor did he, as in times past, send to Mansoul, from his table,
+those dainty bits which he was wont to do.
+
+'4. Nor when they came to visit him, as now and then they would,
+would he be so easily spoken with as they found him to be in times
+past. They might now knock once, yea, twice, but he would seem not
+at all to regard them; whereas formerly at the sound of their feet
+he would up and run, and meet them halfway, and take them too, and
+lay them in his bosom.'
+
+But thus Emmanuel carried it now, and by this his carriage he
+sought to make them bethink themselves, and return to him. But,
+alas! they did not consider, they did not know his ways, they
+regarded not, they were not touched with these, nor with the true
+remembrance of former favours. Wherefore what does he but in
+private manner withdraw himself, first from his palace, then to the
+gate of the town, and so away from Mansoul he goes, till they
+should acknowledge their offence, and more earnestly seek his face.
+Mr. God's-Peace also laid down his commission, and would for the
+present act no longer in the town of Mansoul.
+
+Thus they walked contrary to him, and he again, by way of
+retaliation, walked contrary to them. But, alas! by this time they
+were so hardened in their way, and had so drunk in the doctrine of
+Mr. Carnal-Security, that the departing of their Prince touched
+them not, nor was he remembered by them when gone; and so, of
+consequence, his absence not condoled by them.
+
+Now, there was a day wherein this old gentleman, Mr. Carnal-
+Security, did again make a feast for the town of Mansoul; and there
+was at that time in the town one Mr. Godly-Fear, one now but little
+set by, though formerly one of great request. This man, old
+Carnal-Security, had a mind, if possible, to gull, and debauch, and
+abuse, as he did the rest, and therefore he now bids him to the
+feast with his neighbours. So the day being come, they prepare,
+and he goes and appears with the rest of the guests; and being all
+set at the table, they did eat and drink, and were merry, even all
+but this one man: for Mr. Godly-Fear sat like a stranger, and did
+neither eat nor was merry. The which, when Mr. Carnal-Security
+perceived, he presently addressed himself in a speech thus to him:-
+
+'Mr. Godly-Fear, are you not well? You seem to be ill of body or
+mind, or both. I have a cordial of Mr. Forget-Good's making, the
+which, sir, if you will take a dram of, I hope it may make you
+bonny and blithe, and so make you more fit for us, feasting
+companions.'
+
+Unto whom the good old gentleman discreetly replied, 'Sir, I thank
+you for all things courteous and civil; but for your cordial I have
+no list thereto. But a word to the natives of Mansoul: You, the
+elders and chief of Mansoul, to me it is strange to see you so
+jocund and merry, when the town of Mansoul is in such woeful case.'
+
+Then said Mr. Carnal-Security, 'You want sleep, good air, I doubt.
+If you please, lie down, and take a nap, and we meanwhile will be
+merry.'
+
+Then said the good man as follows: 'Sir, if you were not destitute
+of an honest heart, you could not do as you have done and do.'
+
+Then said Mr. Carnal-Security, 'Why?'
+
+Godly. Nay, pray interrupt me not. It is true the town of Mansoul
+was strong, and, with a proviso, impregnable; but you, the
+townsmen, have weakened it, and it now lies obnoxious to its foes.
+Nor is it a time to flatter, or be silent; it is you, Mr. Carnal-
+Security, that have wilily stripped Mansoul, and driven her glory
+from her; you have pulled down her towers, you have broken down her
+gates, you have spoiled her locks and bars.
+
+And now, to explain myself: from that time that my lords of
+Mansoul, and you, sir, grew so great, from that time the Strength
+of Mansoul has been offended, and now he is arisen and is gone. If
+any shall question the truth of my words, I will answer him by
+this, and suchlike questions. 'Where is the Prince Emmanuel? When
+did a man or woman in Mansoul see him? When did you hear from him,
+or taste any of his dainty bits?' You are now a feasting with this
+Diabolonian monster, but he is not your Prince. I say, therefore,
+though enemies from without, had you taken heed, could not have
+made a prey of you, yet since you have sinned against your Prince,
+your enemies within have been too hard for you.
+
+Then said Mr. Carnal-Security, 'Fie! fie! Mr. Godly-Fear, fie!--
+will you never shake off your timorousness? Are you afraid of
+being sparrow-blasted? Who hath hurt you? Behold, I am on your
+side; only you are for doubting, and I am for being confident.
+Besides, is this a time to be sad in? A feast is made for mirth;
+why, then, do you now, to your shame, and our trouble, break out
+into such passionate melancholy language, when you should eat and
+drink, and be merry?'
+
+Then said Mr. Godly-Fear again, 'I may well be sad, for Emmanuel is
+gone from Mansoul. I say again, he is gone, and you, sir, are the
+man that has driven him away; yea, he is gone without so much as
+acquainting the nobles of Mansoul with his going; and if that is
+not a sign of his anger, I am not acquainted with the methods of
+godliness.
+
+'And now, my lords and gentlemen, for my speech is still to you,
+your gradual declining from him did provoke him gradually to depart
+from you, the which he did for some time, if perhaps you would have
+been made sensible thereby, and have been renewed by humbling
+yourselves; but when he saw that none would regard, nor lay these
+fearful beginnings of his anger and judgment to heart, he went away
+from this place; and this I saw with mine eye. Wherefore now,
+while you boast, your strength is gone; you are like the man that
+had lost his locks that before did wave about his shoulders. You
+may, with this lord of your feast, shake yourselves, and conclude
+to do as at other times; but since without him you can do nothing,
+and he is departed from you, turn your feast into a sigh, and your
+mirth into lamentation.'
+
+Then the subordinate preacher, old Mr. Conscience by name, he that
+of old was Recorder of Mansoul, being startled at what was said,
+began to second it thus:-
+
+'Indeed, my brethren,' quoth he, 'I fear that Mr. Godly-Fear tells
+us true: I, for my part, have not seen my Prince a long season. I
+cannot remember the day, for my part; nor can I answer Mr. Godly-
+Fear's question. I doubt, I am afraid that all is nought with
+Mansoul.'
+
+Godly. Nay, I know that you shall not find him in Mansoul, for he
+is departed and gone; yea, and gone for the faults of the elders,
+and for that they rewarded his grace with unsufferable unkindness.
+
+Then did the subordinate preacher look as if he would fall down
+dead at the table; also all there present, except the man of the
+house, began to look pale and wan. But having a little recovered
+themselves, and jointly agreeing to believe Mr. Godly-Fear and his
+sayings, they began to consult what was best to be done, (now Mr.
+Carnal-Security was gone into his withdrawing-room, for he liked
+not such dumpish doings,) both to the man of the house for drawing
+them into evil, and also to recover Emmanuel's love.
+
+And, with that, that saying of their Prince came very hot into
+their minds, which he had bidden them do to such as were false
+prophets that should arise to delude the town of Mansoul. So they
+took Mr. Carnal-Security (concluding that he must be he) and burned
+his house upon him with fire; for he also was a Diabolonian by
+nature.
+
+So when this was passed and over, they bespeed themselves to look
+for Emmanuel their Prince; and they sought him, but they found him
+not. Then were they more confirmed in the truth of Mr. Godly-
+Fear's sayings, and began also severely to reflect upon themselves
+for their so vile and ungodly doings; for they concluded now that
+it was through them that their Prince had left them.
+
+Then they agreed and went to my Lord Secretary, (him whom before
+they refused to hear--him whom they had grieved with their doings,)
+to know of him, for he was a seer, and could tell where Emmanuel
+was, and how they might direct a petition to him. But the Lord
+Secretary would not admit them to a conference about this matter,
+nor would admit them to his royal place of abode, nor come out to
+them to show them his face or intelligence.
+
+And now was it a day gloomy and dark, a day of clouds and of thick
+darkness with Mansoul. Now they saw that they had been foolish,
+and began to perceive what the company and prattle of Mr. Carnal-
+Security had done, and what desperate damage his swaggering words
+had brought poor Mansoul into. But what further it was likely to
+cost them they were ignorant of. Now Mr. Godly-Fear began again to
+be in repute with the men of the town; yea, they were ready to look
+upon him as a prophet.
+
+Well, when the Sabbath day was come, they went to hear their
+subordinate preacher; but oh, how he did thunder and lighten this
+day! His text was that in the prophet Jonah: 'They that observe
+lying vanities forsake their own mercy.' But there was then such
+power and authority in that sermon, and such a dejection seen in
+the countenances of the people that day, that the like hath seldom
+been heard or seen. The people, when sermon was done, were scarce
+able to go to their homes, or to betake themselves to their employs
+the week after; they were so sermon-smitten, and also so sermon-
+sick by being smitten, that they knew not what to do.
+
+He did not only show to Mansoul their sin, but did tremble before
+them, under the sense of his own, still crying out of himself, as
+he preached to them, 'Unhappy man that I am! that I should do so
+wicked a thing! That I, a preacher! whom the Prince did set up to
+teach to Mansoul his law, should myself live senseless and
+sottishly here, and be one of the first found in transgression!
+This transgression also fell within my precincts; I should have
+cried out against the wickedness; but I let Mansoul lie wallowing
+in it, until it had driven Emmanuel from its borders!' With these
+things he also charged all the lords and gentry of Mansoul, to the
+almost distracting of them.
+
+About this time, also, there was a great sickness in the town of
+Mansoul, and most of the inhabitants were greatly afflicted. Yea,
+the captains also, and men of war, were brought thereby to a
+languishing condition, and that for a long time together; so that
+in case of an invasion, nothing could to purpose now have been
+done, either by the townsmen or field officers. Oh, how many pale
+faces, weak hands, feeble knees, and staggering men were now seen
+to walk the streets of Mansoul! Here were groans, there pants, and
+yonder lay those that were ready to faint.
+
+The garments, too, which Emmanuel had given them were but in a
+sorry case; some were rent, some were torn, and all in a nasty
+condition; some also did hang so loosely upon them, that the next
+bush they came at was ready to pluck them off.
+
+After some time spent in this sad and desolate condition, the
+subordinate preacher called for a day of fasting, and to humble
+themselves for being so wicked against the great Shaddai and his
+Son. And he desired that Captain Boanerges would preach. So he
+consented to do it; and the day being come, and his text was this,
+'Cut it down, why cumbereth it the ground?' And a very smart
+sermon he made upon the place. First, he showed what was the
+occasion of the words, namely, because the fig-tree was barren;
+then he showed what was contained in the sentence, namely,
+repentance, or utter desolation. He then showed, also, by whose
+authority this sentence was pronounced, and that was by Shaddai
+himself. And, lastly, he showed the reasons of the point, and then
+concluded his sermon. But he was very pertinent in the
+application, insomuch that he made poor Mansoul tremble. For this
+sermon, as well as the former, wrought much upon the hearts of the
+men of Mansoul; yea, it greatly helped to keep awake those that
+were roused by the preaching that went before. So that now
+throughout the whole town, there was little or nothing to be heard
+or seen but sorrow, and mourning, and woe.
+
+Now, after sermon, they got together and consulted what was best to
+be done. 'But,' said the subordinate preacher, 'I will do nothing
+of mine own head, without advising with my neighbour Mr. Godly-
+Fear. For if he had aforehand understood more of the mind of our
+Prince than we, I do not know but he also may have it now, even now
+we are turning again to virtue.'
+
+So they called and sent for Mr. Godly-Fear, and he forthwith
+appeared. Then they desired that he would further show his opinion
+about what they had best to do. Then said the old gentleman as
+followeth: 'It is my opinion that this town of Mansoul should, in
+this day of her distress, draw up and send an humble petition to
+their offended Prince Emmanuel, that he, in his favour and grace,
+will turn again unto you, and not keep anger for ever.'
+
+When the townsmen had heard this speech, they did, with one
+consent, agree to his advice; so they did presently draw up their
+request, and the next was, But who shall carry it? At last they
+did all agree to send it by my Lord Mayor. So he accepted of the
+service, and addressed himself to his journey; and went and came to
+the court of Shaddai, whither Emmanuel the Prince of Mansoul was
+gone. But the gate was shut, and a strict watch kept thereat; so
+that the petitioner was forced to stand without for a great while
+together. Then he desired that some would go into the Prince and
+tell him who stood at the gate, and what his business was. So one
+went and told to Shaddai, and to Emmanuel his Son, that the Lord
+Mayor of the town of Mansoul stood without at the gate of the
+King's court, desiring to be admitted into the presence of the
+Prince, the King's Son. He also told what was the Lord Mayor's
+errand, both to the King and his Son Emmanuel. But the Prince
+would not come down, nor admit that the gate should be opened to
+him, but sent him an answer to this effect: 'They have turned
+their back unto me, and not their face; but now in the time of
+their trouble they say to me, Arise, and save us. But can they not
+now go to Mr. Carnal-Security, to whom they went when they turned
+from me, and make him their leader, their lord, and their
+protection now in their trouble; why now in their trouble do they
+visit me, since in their prosperity they went astray?'
+
+The answer made my Lord Mayor look black in the face; it troubled,
+it perplexed, it rent him sore. And now he began again to see what
+it was to be familiar with Diabolonians, such as Mr. Carnal-
+Security was. When he saw that at court, as yet, there was little
+help to be expected, either for himself or friends in Mansoul, he
+smote upon his breast, and returned weeping, and all the way
+bewailing the lamentable state of Mansoul.
+
+Well, when he was come within sight of the town, the elders and
+chief of the people of Mansoul went out at the gate to meet him,
+and to salute him, and to know how he sped at court. But he told
+them his tale in so doleful a manner, that they all cried out, and
+mourned, and wept. Wherefore they threw ashes and dust upon their
+heads, and put sackcloth upon their loins, and went crying out
+through the town of Mansoul; the which, when the rest of the
+townsfolk saw, they all mourned and wept. This, therefore, was a
+day of rebuke and trouble, and of anguish to the town of Mansoul,
+and also of great distress.
+
+After some time, when they had somewhat refrained themselves, they
+came together to consult again what by them was yet to be done; and
+they asked advice, as they did before, of that reverend Mr. Godly-
+Fear, who told them that there was no way better than to do as they
+had done, nor would he that they should be discouraged at all with
+that they had met with at court; yea, though several of their
+petitions should be answered with nought but silence or rebuke:
+'For,' said he, 'it is the way of the wise Shaddai to make men wait
+and to exercise patience, and it should be the way of them in want,
+to be willing to stay his leisure.
+
+Then they took courage, and sent again and again, and again, and
+again; for there was not now one day, nor an hour that went over
+Mansoul's head, wherein a man might not have met upon the road one
+or other riding post, sounding the horn from Mansoul to the court
+of the King Shaddai; and all with letters petitionary in behalf of,
+and for the Prince's return to Mansoul. The road, I say, was now
+full of messengers, going and returning, and meeting one another;
+some from the court, and some from Mansoul; and this was the work
+of the miserable town of Mansoul, all that long, that sharp, that
+cold and tedious winter.
+
+Now if you have not forgot, you may yet remember that I told you
+before, that after Emmanuel had taken Mansoul, yea, and after that
+he had new modelled the town, there remained in several lurking
+places of the corporation many of the old Diabolonians, that either
+came with the tyrant when he invaded and took the town, or that had
+there, by reason of unlawful mixtures, their birth and breeding,
+and bringing up. And their holes, dens, and lurking places were
+in, under, or about the wall of the town. Some of their names are
+the Lord Fornication, the Lord Adultery, the Lord Murder, the Lord
+Anger, the Lord Lasciviousness, the Lord Deceit, the Lord Evil-eye,
+the Lord Blasphemy, and that horrible villain, the old and
+dangerous Lord Covetousness. These, as I told you, with many more,
+had yet their abode in the town of Mansoul, and that after that
+Emmanuel had driven their prince Diabolus out of the castle.
+
+Against these the good Prince did grant a commission to the Lord
+Willbewill and others, yea, to the whole town of Mansoul, to seek,
+take, secure, and destroy any or all that they could lay hands of,
+for that they were Diabolonians by nature, enemies to the Prince,
+and those that sought to ruin the blessed town of Mansoul. But the
+town of Mansoul did not pursue this warrant, but neglected to look
+after, to apprehend, to secure, and to destroy these Diabolonians.
+Wherefore what do these villains but by degrees take courage to put
+forth their heads, and to show themselves to the inhabitants of the
+town. Yea, and as I was told, some of the men of Mansoul grew too
+familiar with some of them, to the sorrow of the corporation, as
+you yet will hear more of in time and place.
+
+Well, when the Diabolonian lords that were left perceived that
+Mansoul had, through sinning, offended Emmanuel their Prince, and
+that he had withdrawn himself and was gone, what do they but plot
+the ruin of the town of Mansoul. So upon a time they met together
+at the hold of one Mr. Mischief, who was also a Diabolonian, and
+there consulted how they might deliver up Mansoul into the hands of
+Diabolus again. Now some advised one way, and some another, every
+man according to his own liking. At last my Lord Lasciviousness
+propounded, whether it might not be best, in the first place, for
+some of those that were Diabolonians in Mansoul, to adventure to
+offer themselves for servants to some of the natives of the town;
+'for,' said he, 'if they so do, and Mansoul shall accept of them,
+they may for us, and for Diabolus our Lord, make the taking of the
+town of Mansoul more easy than otherwise it will be.' But then
+stood up the Lord Murder, and said, 'This may not be done at this
+time; for Mansoul is now in a kind of a rage, because by our
+friend, Mr. Carnal-Security, she hath been once ensnared already,
+and made to offend against her Prince; and how shall she reconcile
+herself unto her lord again, but by the heads of these men?
+Besides, we know that they have in commission to take and slay us
+wherever they shall find us; let us, therefore, be wise as foxes:
+when we are dead, we can do them no hurt; but while we live, we
+may.' Thus, when they had tossed the matter to and fro, they
+jointly agreed that a letter should forthwith be sent away to
+Diabolus in their name, by which the state of the town of Mansoul
+should be showed him, and how much it is under the frowns of their
+Prince. 'We may also,' said some, 'let him know our intentions,
+and ask of him his advice in the case.'
+
+So a letter was presently framed, the contents of which were
+these:-
+
+'To our great lord, the Prince Diabolus, dwelling below in the
+infernal cave:
+
+'O great father, and mighty Prince Diabolus, we, the true
+Diabolonians yet remaining in the rebellious town of Mansoul,
+having received our beings from thee, and our nourishment at thy
+hands, cannot with content and quiet endure to behold, as we do
+this day, how thou art dispraised, disgraced, and reproached among
+the inhabitants of this town; nor is thy long absence at all
+delightful to us, because greatly to our detriment.
+
+'The reason of this our writing unto our lord, is for that we are
+not altogether without hope that this town may become thy
+habitation again; for it is greatly declined from its Prince
+Emmanuel; and he is uprisen, and is departed from them: yea, and
+though they send, and send, and send, and send after him to return
+to them, yet can they not prevail, nor get good words from him.
+
+'There has been also of late, and is yet remaining, a very great
+sickness and fainting among them; and that not only upon the poorer
+sort of the town, but upon the lords, captains, and chief gentry of
+the place, (we only who are of the Diabolonians by nature remain
+well, lively, and strong,) so that through their great
+transgression on the one hand, and their dangerous sickness on the
+other, we judge they lie open to thy hand and power. If,
+therefore, it shall stand with thy horrible cunning, and with the
+cunning of the rest of the princes with thee, to come and make an
+attempt to take Mansoul again, send us word, and we shall to our
+utmost power be ready to deliver it into thy hand. Or if what we
+have said shall not by thy fatherhood be thought best and most meet
+to be done, send us thy mind in a few words, and we are all ready
+to follow thy counsel to the hazarding of our lives, and what else
+we have.
+
+'Given under our hands the day and date above-written, after a
+close consultation at the house of Mr. Mischief, who yet is alive
+and hath his place in our desirable town of Mansoul.'
+
+When Mr. Profane (for he was the carrier) was come with his letter
+to Hell-Gate Hill, he knocked at the brazen gates for entrance.
+Then did Cerberus, the porter, for he is the keeper of that gate,
+open to Mr. Profane, to whom he delivered his letter, which he had
+brought from the Diabolonians in Mansoul. So he carried it in, and
+presented it to Diabolus his lord, and said, 'Tidings, my lord,
+from Mansoul, from our trusty friends in Mansoul.'
+
+Then came together from all places of the den Beelzebub, Lucifer,
+Apollyon, with the rest of the rabblement there, to hear what news
+from Mansoul. So the letter was broken up and read, and Cerberus
+he stood by. When the letter was openly read, and the contents
+thereof spread into all the corners of the den, command was given
+that, without let or stop, dead-man's bell should be rung for joy.
+So the bell was rung, and the princes rejoiced that Mansoul was
+likely to come to ruin. Now, the clapper of the bell went, 'The
+town of Mansoul is coming to dwell with us: make room for the town
+of Mansoul.' This bell therefore they did ring, because they did
+hope that they should have Mansoul again.
+
+Now, when they had performed this their horrible ceremony, they got
+together again to consult what answer to send to their friends in
+Mansoul; and some advised one thing, and some another: but at
+length, because the business required haste, they left the whole
+business to the prince Diabolus, judging him the most proper lord
+of the place. So he drew up a letter as he thought fit, in answer
+to what Mr. Profane had brought, and sent it to the Diabolonians
+that did dwell in Mansoul, by the same hand that had brought theirs
+to him; and these were the contents thereof:-
+
+'To our offspring, the high and mighty Diabolonians that yet dwell
+in the town of Mansoul, Diabolus, the great prince of Mansoul,
+wisheth a prosperous issue and conclusion of those many brave
+enterprises, conspiracies, and designs, that you, of your love and
+respect to our honour, have in your hearts to attempt to do against
+Mansoul. Beloved children and disciples, my Lord Fornication,
+Adultery, and the rest, we have here, in our desolate den,
+received, to our highest joy and content, your welcome letter, by
+the hand of our trusty Mr. Profane; and to show how acceptable your
+tidings were, we rang out our bell for gladness; for we rejoiced as
+much as we could, when we perceived that yet we had friends in
+Mansoul, and such as sought our honour and revenge in the ruin of
+the town of Mansoul. We also rejoiced to hear that they are in a
+degenerated condition, and that they have offended their Prince,
+and that he is gone. Their sickness also pleaseth us, as does also
+your health, might, and strength. Glad also would we be, right
+horribly beloved, could we get this town into our clutches again.
+Nor will we be sparing of spending our wit, our cunning, our craft,
+and hellish inventions to bring to a wished conclusion this your
+brave beginning in order thereto.
+
+'And take this for your comfort, (our birth, and our offspring,)
+that shall we again surprise it and take it, we will attempt to put
+all your foes to the sword, and will make you the great lords and
+captains of the place. Nor need you fear, if ever we get it again,
+that we after that shall be cast out any more; for we will come
+with more strength, and so lay far more fast hold than at the first
+we did. Besides, it is the law of that Prince that now they own,
+that if we get them a second time, they shall be ours for ever.
+
+'Do you, therefore, our trusty Diabolonians, yet more pry into, and
+endeavour to spy out the weakness of the town of Mansoul. We also
+would that you yourselves do attempt to weaken them more and more.
+Send us word also by what means you think we had best to attempt
+the regaining thereof: namely, whether by persuasion to a vain and
+loose life; or, whether by tempting them to doubt and despair; or,
+whether by blowing up of the town by the gunpowder of pride, and
+self-conceit. Do you also, O ye brave Diabolonians, and true sons
+of the pit, be always in a readiness to make a most hideous assault
+within, when we shall be ready to storm it without. Now speed you
+in your project, and we in our desires, to the utmost power of our
+gates, which is the wish of your great Diabolus, Mansoul's enemy,
+and him that trembles when he thinks of judgment to come. All the
+blessings of the pit be upon you, and so we close up our letter.
+
+'Given at the pit's mouth, by the joint consent of all the princes
+of darkness, to be sent, to the force and power that we have yet
+remaining in Mansoul, by the hand of Mr. Profane, by me, Diabolus.'
+
+This letter, as was said, was sent to Mansoul, to the Diabolonians
+that yet remained there, and that yet inhabited the wall, from the
+dark dungeon of Diabolus, by the hand of Mr. Profane, by whom they
+also in Mansoul sent theirs to the pit. Now, when this Mr. Profane
+had made his return, and was come to Mansoul again, he went and
+came as he was wont to the house of Mr. Mischief, for there was the
+conclave, and the place where the contrivers were met. Now, when
+they saw that their messenger was returned safe and sound, they
+were greatly gladded thereat. Then he presented them with his
+letter which he had brought from Diabolus for them; the which, when
+they had read and considered, did much augment their gladness.
+They asked him after the welfare of their friends, as how their
+Lord Diabolus, Lucifer, and Beelzebub did, with the rest of those
+of the den. To which this Profane made answer, 'Well, well, my
+lords; they are well, even as well as can be in their place. They
+also,' said he, 'did ring for joy at the reading of your letter, as
+you well perceived by this when you read it.'
+
+Now, as was said, when they had read their letter, and perceived
+that it encouraged them in their work, they fell to their way of
+contriving again, namely, how they might complete their Diabolonian
+design upon Mansoul. And the first thing that they agreed upon was
+to keep all things from Mansoul as close as they could. 'Let it
+not be known, let not Mansoul be acquainted with what we design
+against it.' The next thing was, how, or by what means, they
+should try to bring to pass the ruin and overthrow of Mansoul; and
+one said after this manner, and another said after that. Then
+stood up Mr. Deceit, and said, 'My right Diabolonian friends, our
+lords, and the high ones of the deep dungeon, do propound unto us
+these three ways.
+
+'1. Whether we had best to seek its ruin by making Mansoul loose
+and vain.
+
+'2. Or whether by driving them to doubt and despair.
+
+'3. Or whether by endeavouring to blow them up by the gunpowder of
+pride and self-conceit.
+
+'Now, I think, if we shall tempt them to pride, that may do
+something; and if we tempt them to wantonness, that may help. But,
+in my mind, if we could drive them into desperation, that would
+knock the nail on the head; for then we should have them, in the
+first place, question the truth of the love of the heart of their
+Prince towards them, and that will disgust him much. This, if it
+works well, will make them leave off quickly their way of sending
+petitions to him; then farewell earnest solicitations for help and
+supply; for then this conclusion lies naturally before them, "As
+good do nothing, as do to no purpose."' So to Mr. Deceit they
+unanimously did consent.
+
+Then the next question was, But how shall we do to bring this our
+project to pass? and it was answered by the same gentleman--that
+this might be the best way to do it: 'Even let,' quoth he, 'so
+many of our friends as are willing to venture themselves for the
+promoting of their prince's cause, disguise themselves with
+apparel, change their names, and go into the market like far
+country-men, and proffer to let themselves for servants to the
+famous town of Mansoul, and let them pretend to do for their
+masters as beneficially as may be; for by so doing they may, if
+Mansoul shall hire them, in little time so corrupt and defile the
+corporation, that her now Prince shall be not only further offended
+with them, but in conclusion shall spue them out of his mouth. And
+when this is done, our prince Diabolus shall prey upon them with
+ease: yea, of themselves they shall fall into the mouth of the
+cater.'
+
+This project was no sooner propounded, but was as highly accepted,
+and forward were all Diabolonians now to engage in so delicate an
+enterprise: but it was not thought fit that all should do thus;
+wherefore they pitched upon two or three, namely, the Lord
+Covetousness, the Lord Lasciviousness, and the Lord Anger. The
+Lord Covetousness called himself by the name of Prudent-Thrifty;
+the Lord Lasciviousness called himself by the name of Harmless-
+Mirth; and the Lord Anger called himself by the name of Good-Zeal.
+
+So upon a market-day they came into the market-place, three lusty
+fellows they were to look on, and they were clothed in sheep's
+russet, which was also now in a manner as white as were the white
+robes of the men of Mansoul. Now the men could speak the language
+of Mansoul well. So when they were come into the market-place, and
+had offered to let themselves to the townsmen, they were presently
+taken up; for they asked but little wages, and promised to do their
+masters great service.
+
+Mr. Mind hired Prudent-Thrifty, and Mr. Godly-Fear hired Good-Zeal.
+True, this fellow Harmless-Mirth did hang a little in hand, and
+could not so soon get him a master as the others did, because the
+town of Mansoul was now in Lent, but after a while, because Lent
+was almost out, the Lord Willbewill hired Harmless-Mirth to be both
+his waiting man and his lackey: and thus they got them masters.
+
+ These villains now being got thus far into the houses of the men
+of Mansoul, quickly began to do great mischief therein; for, being
+filthy, arch, and sly, they quickly corrupted the families where
+they were; yea, they tainted their masters much, especially this
+Prudent-Thrifty, and him they call Harmless-Mirth. True, he that
+went under the visor of Good-Zeal, was not so well liked of his
+master; for he quickly found that he was but a counterfeit rascal;
+the which when the fellow perceived, with speed he made his escape
+from the house, or I doubt not but his master had hanged him.
+
+Well, when these vagabonds had thus far carried on their design,
+and had corrupted the town as much as they could, in the next place
+they considered with themselves at what time their prince Diabolus
+without, and themselves within the town, should make an attempt to
+seize upon Mansoul; and they all agreed upon this, that a market-
+day would be best for that work; for why? Then will the townsfolk
+be busy in their ways: and always take this for a rule, when
+people are most busy in the world, they least fear a surprise. 'We
+also then,' said they, 'shall be able with less suspicion to gather
+ourselves together for the work of our friends and lords; yea, and
+in such a day, if we shall attempt our work, and miss it, we may,
+when they shall give us the rout, the better hide ourselves in the
+crowd, and escape.'
+
+These things being thus far agreed upon by them, they wrote another
+letter to Diabolus, and sent it by the hand to Mr. Profane, the
+contents of which were these:-
+
+'The lords of Looseness send to the great and high Diabolus from
+our dens, caves, holes, and strongholds, in and about the wall of
+the town of Mansoul, greeting:
+
+'Our great lord, and the nourisher of our lives, Diabolus--how glad
+we were when we heard of your fatherhood's readiness to comply with
+us, and help forward our design in our attempts to ruin Mansoul,
+none can tell but those who, as we do, set themselves against all
+appearance of good, when and wheresoever we find it.
+
+'Touching the encouragement that your greatness is pleased to give
+us to continue to devise, contrive, and study the utter desolation
+of Mansoul, that we are not solicitous about: for we know right
+well that it cannot but be pleasing and profitable to us to see our
+enemies, and them that seek our lives, die at our feet, or fly
+before us. We therefore are still contriving, and that to the best
+of our cunning, to make this work most facile and easy to your
+lordships, and to us.
+
+'First, we considered of that most hellishly cunning, compacted,
+threefold project, that by you was propounded to us in your last;
+and have concluded, that though to blow them up with the gunpowder
+of pride would do well, and to do it by tempting them to be loose
+and vain will help on, yet to contrive to bring them into the gulf
+of desperation, we think will do best of all. Now we, who are at
+your beck, have thought or two ways to do this: first we, for our
+parts, will make them as vile as we can, and then you with us, at a
+time appointed, shall be ready to fall upon them with the utmost
+force. And of all the nations that are at your whistle, we think
+that an army of doubters may be the most likely to attack and
+overcome the town of Mansoul. Thus shall we overcome these
+enemies, else the pit shall open her mouth upon them, and
+desperation shall thrust them down into it. We have also, to
+effect this so much by us desired design, sent already three of our
+trusty Diabolonians among them; they are disguised in garb, they
+have changed their names, and are now accepted of them; namely,
+Covetousness, Lasciviousness, and Anger. The name of Covetousness
+is changed to Prudent-Thrifty, and him Mr. Mind has hired, and is
+almost become as bad as our friend. Lasciviousness has changed his
+name to Harmless-Mirth, and he is got to be the Lord Willbewill's
+lackey; but he has made his master very wanton. Anger changed his
+name into Good-Zeal, and was entertained by Mr. Godly-Fear; but the
+peevish old gentleman took pepper in the nose, and turned our
+companion out of his house. Nay, he has informed us since that he
+ran away from him, or else his old master had hanged him up for his
+labour.
+
+'Now these have much helped forward our work and design upon
+Mansoul; for notwithstanding the spite and quarrelsome temper of
+the old gentleman last mentioned, the other two ply their business
+well, and are likely to ripen the work apace.
+
+'Our next project is, that it be concluded that you come upon the
+town upon a market-day, and that when they are upon the heat of
+their business; for then, to be sure, they will be most secure, and
+least think that an assault will be made upon them. They will also
+at such a time be less able to defend themselves, and to offend you
+in the prosecution of our design. And we your trusty (and we are
+sure your beloved) ones shall, when you shall make your furious
+assault without, be ready to second the business within. So shall
+we, in all likelihood, be able to put Mansoul to utter confusion,
+and to swallow them up before they can come to themselves. If your
+serpentine heads, most subtile dragons, and our highly esteemed
+lords can find out a better way than this, let us quickly know your
+minds.
+
+'To the monsters of the infernal cave, from the house of Mr.
+Mischief in Mansoul, by the hand of Mr. Profane.'
+
+Now all the while that the raging runagates and hellish
+Diabolonians were thus contriving the ruin of the town of Mansoul,
+they (namely, the poor town itself) was in a sad and woeful case;
+partly because they had so grievously offended Shaddai and his Son,
+and partly because that the enemies thereby got strength within
+them afresh; and also because, though they had by many petitions
+made suit to the Prince Emmanuel, and to his Father Shaddai by him,
+for their pardon and favour, yet hitherto obtained they not one
+smile; but contrariwise, through the craft and subtilty of the
+domestic Diabolonians, their cloud was made to grow blacker and
+blacker, and their Emmanuel to stand at further distance.
+
+The sickness also did still greatly rage in Mansoul, both among the
+captains and the inhabitants of the town; and their enemies only
+were now lively and strong, and likely to become the head, whilst
+Mansoul was made the tail.
+
+By this time the letter last mentioned, that was written by the
+Diabolonians that yet lurked in the town of Mansoul, was conveyed
+to Diabolus in the black den, by the hand of Mr. Profane. He
+carried the letter by Hell-Gate Hill as afore, and conveyed it by
+Cerberus to his lord.
+
+But when Cerberus and Mr. Profane did meet, they were presently as
+great as beggars, and thus they fell into discourse about Mansoul,
+and about the project against her.
+
+'Ah! old friend,' quoth Cerberus, 'art thou come to Hell-Gate Hill
+again? By St. Mary, I am glad to see thee!'
+
+Prof. Yes, my lord, I am come again about the concerns of the town
+of Mansoul.
+
+Cerb. Prithee, tell me what condition is that town of Mansoul in
+at present?
+
+Prof. In a brave condition, my lord, for us, and for my lords, the
+lords of this place, I trow for they are greatly decayed as to
+godliness, and that is as well as our heart can wish; their Lord is
+greatly out with them, and that doth also please us well. We have
+already also a foot in their dish, for our Diabolonian friends are
+laid in their bosoms, and what do we lack but to be masters of the
+place! Besides, our trusty friends in Mansoul are daily plotting
+to betray it to the lords of this town; also the sickness rages
+bitterly among them; and that which makes up all, we hope at last
+to prevail.'
+
+Then said the dog of Hell-Gate, 'No time like this to assault them.
+I wish that the enterprise be followed close, and that the success
+desired may be soon effected: yea, I wish it for the poor
+Diabolonians' sakes, that live in the continual fear of their lives
+in that traitorous town of Mansoul.'
+
+Prof. The contrivance is almost finished, the lords in Mansoul
+that are Diabolonians are at it day and night, and the other are
+like silly doves; they want heart to be concerned with their state
+and to consider that ruin is at hand. Besides you may, yea, must
+think, when you put all things together, that there are many
+reasons that prevail with Diabolus to make what haste he can.
+
+Cerb. Thou hast said as it is; I am glad things are at this pass.
+Go in, my brave Profane, to my lords, they will give thee for thy
+welcome as good a coranto as the whole of this kingdom will afford.
+I have sent thy letter in already.
+
+Then Mr. Profane went into the den, and his lord Diabolus met him,
+and saluted him with, 'Welcome, my trusty servant: I have been
+made glad with thy letter.' The rest of the lords of the pit gave
+him also their salutations. Then Profane, after obeisance made to
+them all, said, 'Let Mansoul be given to my lord Diabolus, and let
+him be her king for ever.' And with that, the hollow belly and
+yawning gorge of hell gave so loud and hideous a groan, (for that
+is the music of that place,) that it made the mountains about it
+totter, as if they would fall in pieces.
+
+Now, after they had read and considered the letter, they consulted
+what answer to return; and the first that did speak to it was
+Lucifer.
+
+Then said he, 'The first project of the Diabolonians in Mansoul is
+likely to be lucky, and to take; namely, that they will, by all the
+ways and means they can, make Mansoul yet more vile and filthy: no
+way to destroy a soul like this. Our old friend Balaam went this
+way and prospered many years ago; let this therefore stand with us
+for a maxim, and be to Diabolonians for a general rule in all ages;
+for nothing can make this to fail but grace, in which I would hope
+that this town has no share. But whether to fall upon them on a
+market-day, because of their cumber in business, that I would
+should be under debate. And there is more reason why this head
+should be debated, than why some other should; because upon this
+will turn the whole of what we shall attempt. If we time not our
+business well, our whole project may fail. Our friends, the
+Diabolonians, say that a market-day is best; for then will Mansoul
+be most busy, and have fewest thoughts of a surprise. But what if
+also they should double their guards on those days? (and methinks
+nature and reason should teach them to do it;) and what if they
+should keep such a watch on those days as the necessity of their
+present case doth require? yea, what if their men should be always
+in arms on those days? then you may, my lords, be disappointed in
+your attempts, and may bring our friends in the town to utter
+danger of unavoidable ruin.'
+
+Then said the great Beelzebub, 'There is something in what my lord
+hath said; but his conjecture may, or may not fall out. Nor hath
+my lord laid it down as that which must not be receded from; for I
+know that he said it only to provoke to a warm debate thereabout.
+Therefore we must understand, if we can, whether the town of
+Mansoul has such sense and knowledge of her decayed state, and of
+the design that we have on foot against her, as doth provoke her to
+set watch and ward at her gates, and to double them on market-days.
+But if, after inquiry made, it shall be found that they are asleep,
+then any day will do, but a market-day is best; and this is my
+judgment in this case.'
+
+Then quoth Diabolus, 'How should we know this?' and it was
+answered, 'Inquire about it at the mouth of Mr. Profane.' So
+Profane was called in, and asked the question, and he made his
+answer as follows:-
+
+Prof. My lords, so far as I can gather, this is at present the
+condition of the town of Mansoul: they are decayed in their faith
+and love; Emmanuel, their Prince, has given them the back; they
+send often by petition to fetch him again, but he maketh not haste
+to answer their request, nor is there much reformation among them.
+
+Diab. I am glad that they are backward in a reformation, but yet I
+am afraid of their petitioning. However, their looseness of life
+is a sign that there is not much heart in what they do, and without
+the heart things are little worth. But go on, my masters; I will
+divert you, my lords, no longer.
+
+Beel. If the case be so with Mansoul, as Mr. Profane has described
+it to be, it will be no great matter what day we assault it; not
+their prayers, nor their power will do them much service.
+
+When Beelzebub had ended his oration, then Apollyon did begin. 'My
+opinion,' said he, 'concerning this matter, is, that we go on fair
+and softly, not doing things in a hurry. Let our friends in
+Mansoul go on still to pollute and defile it, by seeking to draw it
+yet more into sin (for there is nothing like sin to devour
+Mansoul). If this be done, and it takes effect, Mansoul, of
+itself, will leave off to watch, to petition, or anything else that
+should tend to her security and safety; for she will forget her
+Emmanuel, she will not desire his company, and can she be gotten
+thus to live, her Prince will not come to her in haste. Our trusty
+friend, Mr. Carnal-Security, with one of his tricks did drive him
+out of the town; and why may not my Lord Covetousness, and my Lord
+Lasciviousness, by what they may do, keep him out of the town? And
+this I will tell you, (not because you know it not,) that two or
+three Diabolonians, if entertained and countenanced by the town of
+Mansoul, will do more to the keeping of Emmanuel from them, and
+towards making the town of Mansoul your own, than can an army of a
+legion that should be sent out from us to withstand him. Let,
+therefore, this first project that our friends in Mansoul have set
+on foot, be strongly and diligently carried on, with all cunning
+and craft imaginable; and let them send continually, under one
+guise or another, more and other of their men to play with the
+people of Mansoul; and then, perhaps, we shall not need to be at
+the charge of making a war upon them; or if that must of necessity
+be done, yet the more sinful they are, the more unable, to be sure,
+they will be to resist us, and then the more easily we shall
+overcome them. And besides, suppose (and that is the worst that
+can be supposed) that Emmanuel should come to them again, why may
+not the same means, or the like, drive him from them once more?
+Yea, why may he not, by their lapse into that sin again, be driven
+from them for ever, for the sake of which he was at the first
+driven from them for a season? And if this should happen, then
+away go with him his rams, his slings, his captains, his soldiers,
+and he leaveth Mansoul naked and bare. Yea, will not this town,
+when she sees herself utterly forsaken of her Prince, of her own
+accord open her gates again unto you, and make of you as in the
+days of old? But this must be done by time, a few days will not
+effect so great a work as this.'
+
+So soon as Apollyon had made an end of speaking, Diabolus began to
+blow out his own malice, and to plead his own cause; and he said,
+'My lords, and powers of the cave, my true and trusty friends, I
+have with much impatience, as becomes me, given ear to your long
+and tedious orations. But my furious gorge, and empty paunch, so
+lusteth after a repossession of my famous town of Mansoul, that
+whatever comes out, I can wait no longer to see the events of
+lingering projects. I must, and that without further delay, seek,
+by all means I can, to fill my insatiable gulf with the soul and
+body of the town of Mansoul. Therefore lend me your heads, your
+hearts, and your help, now I am going to recover my town of
+Mansoul.'
+
+When the lords and princes of the pit saw the flaming desire that
+was in Diabolus to devour the miserable town of Mansoul, they left
+off to raise any more objections, but consented to lend him what
+strength they could, though had Apollyon's advice been taken, they
+had far more fearfully distressed the town of Mansoul. But, I say,
+they were willing to lend him what strength they could, not knowing
+what need they might have of him, when they should engage for
+themselves, as he. Wherefore they fell to advising about the next
+thing propounded, namely, what soldiers they were, and also how
+many, with whom Diabolus should go against the town of Mansoul to
+take it; and after some debate, it was concluded, according as in
+the letter the Diabolonians had suggested, that none were more fit
+for that expedition than an army of terrible doubters. They
+therefore concluded to send against Mansoul an army of sturdy
+doubters. The number thought fit to be employed in that service
+was between twenty and thirty thousand. So then the result of that
+great council of those high and mighty lords was--That Diabolus
+should even now, out of hand, beat up his drum for men in the land
+of Doubting, which land lieth upon the confines of the place called
+Hell-Gate Hill, for men that might be employed by him against the
+miserable town of Mansoul. It was also concluded, that these lords
+themselves should help him in the war, and that they would to that
+end head and manage his men. So they drew up a letter, and sent
+back to the Diabolonians that lurked in Mansoul, and that waited
+for the back-coming of Mr. Profane, to signify to them into what
+method and forwardness they at present had put their design. The
+contents whereof now follow:-
+
+'From the dark and horrible dungeon of hell, Diabolus with all the
+society of the princes of darkness, sends to our trusty ones, in
+and about the walls of the town of Mansoul, now impatiently waiting
+for our most devilish answer to their venomous and most poisonous
+design against the town of Mansoul.
+
+'Our native ones, in whom from day to day we boast, and in whose
+actions all the year long we do greatly delight ourselves, we
+received your welcome, because highly esteemed letter, at the hand
+of our trusty and greatly beloved, the old gentleman, Mr. Profane.
+And do give you to understand, that when we had broken it up, and
+had read the contents thereof, to your amazing memory be it spoken,
+our yawning hollow-bellied place, where we are, made so hideous and
+yelling a noise for joy, that the mountains that stand round about
+Hell-Gate Hill, had like to have been shaken to pieces at the sound
+thereof.
+
+'We could also do no less than admire your faithfulness to us, with
+the greatness of that subtilty that now hath showed itself to be in
+your heads to serve us against the town of Mansoul. For you have
+invented for us so excellent a method for our proceeding against
+that rebellious people, a more effectual cannot be thought of by
+all the wits of hell. The proposals, therefore, which now, at
+last, you have sent us, since we saw them, we have done little else
+but highly approved and admired them.
+
+'Nay, we shall, to encourage you in the profundity of your craft,
+let you know, that, at a full assembly and conclave of our princes
+and principalities of this place, your project was discoursed and
+tossed from one side of our cave to the other by their
+mightinesses; but a better, and as was by themselves judged, a more
+fit and proper way by all their wits, could not be invented, to
+surprise, take, and make our own, the rebellious town of Mansoul.
+
+'Wherefore, in fine, all that was said that varied from what you
+had in your letter propounded, fell of itself to the ground, and
+yours only was stuck to by Diabolus, the prince; yea, his gaping
+gorge and yawning paunch was on fire to put your invention into
+execution.
+
+'We therefore give you to understand that our stout, furious, and
+unmerciful Diabolus is raising, for your relief, and the ruin of
+the rebellious town of Mansoul, more than twenty thousand doubters
+to come against that people. They are all stout and sturdy men,
+and men that of old have been accustomed to war, and that can
+therefore well endure the drum. I say, he is doing this work of
+his with all the possible speed he can; for his heart and spirit is
+engaged in it. We desire, therefore, that, as you have hitherto
+stuck to us, and given us both advice and encouragement thus far,
+you still will prosecute our design; nor shall you lose, but be
+gainers thereby; yea, we intend to make you the lords of Mansoul.
+
+'One thing may not by any means be omitted, that is, those with us
+do desire that every one of you that are in Mansoul would still use
+all your power, cunning, and skill, with delusive persuasions, yet
+to draw the town of Mansoul into more sin and wickedness, even that
+sin may be finished and bring forth death.
+
+'For thus it is concluded with us, that the more vile, sinful, and
+debauched the town of Mansoul is, more backward will be their
+Emmanuel to come to their help, either by presence or other relief;
+yea, the more sinful, the more weak, and so the more unable will
+they be to make resistance when we shall make our assault upon them
+to swallow them up. Yea, that may cause that their mighty Shaddai
+himself may cast them out of his protection; yea, and send for his
+captains and soldiers home, with his slings and rams, and leave
+them naked and bare; and then the town of Mansoul will of itself
+open to us, and fall as the fig into the mouth of the eater. Yea,
+to be sure. that we then with a great deal of ease shall come upon
+her and overcome her.
+
+'As to the time of our coming upon Mansoul, we, as yet, have not
+fully resolved upon that, though at present some of us think as
+you, that a market-day, or a market-day at night, will certainly be
+the best. However, do you be ready, and when you shall hear our
+roaring drum without, do you be as busy to make the most horrible
+confusion within. So shall Mansoul certainly be distressed before
+and behind, and shall not know which way to betake herself for
+help. My Lord Lucifer, my Lord Beelzebub, my Lord Apollyon, my
+Lord Legion, with the rest, salute you, as does also my Lord
+Diabolus; and we wish both you, with all that you do, or shall
+possess, the very self-same fruit and success for their doing as we
+ourselves at present enjoy for ours.
+
+'From our dreadful confines in the most fearful pit, we salute you,
+and so do those many legions here with us, wishing you may be as
+hellishly prosperous as we desire to be ourselves. By the letter-
+carrier, Mr. Profane.'
+
+Then Mr. Profane addressed himself for his return to Mansoul, with
+his errand from the horrible pit to the Diabolonians that dwelt in
+that town. So he came up the stairs from the deep to the mouth of
+the cave where Cerberus was. Now when Cerberus saw him, he asked
+how did matters go below, about and against the town of Mansoul.
+
+Prof. Things go as well as we can expect. The letter that I
+carried thither was highly approved, and well liked by all my
+lords, and I am returning to tell our Diabolonians so. I have an
+answer to it here in my bosom, that I am sure will make our masters
+that sent me glad; for the contents thereof are to encourage them
+to pursue their design to the utmost, and to be ready also to fall
+on within, when they shall see my Lord Diabolus beleaguering the
+town of Mansoul.
+
+Cerb. But does he intend to go against them himself?
+
+Prof. Does he! Ay! and he will take along with him more than
+twenty thousand, all sturdy Doubters, and men of war, picked men
+from the land of Doubting, to serve him in the expedition.
+
+Then was Cerberus glad, and said, 'And is there such brave
+preparations a-making to go against the miserable town of Mansoul?
+And would I might be put at the head of a thousand of them, that I
+might also show my valour against the famous town of Mansoul.'
+
+Prof. Your wish may come to pass; you look like one that has
+mettle enough, and my lord will have with him those that are
+valiant and stout. But my business requires haste.
+
+Cerb. Ay, so it does. Speed thee to the town of Mansoul, with all
+the deepest mischiefs that this place can afford thee. And when
+thou shalt come to the house of Mr. Mischief, the place where the
+Diabolonians meet to plot, tell them that Cerberus doth wish them
+his service, and that if he may, he will with the army come up
+against the famous town of Mansoul.
+
+Prof. That I will. And I know that my lords that are there will
+be glad to hear it, and to see you also.
+
+So after a few more such kind of compliments, Mr. Profane took his
+leave of his friend Cerberus; and Cerberus again, with a thousand
+of their pit-wishes, bid him haste, with all speed, to his masters.
+The which when he had heard, he made obeisance, and began to gather
+up his heels to run.
+
+Thus, therefore, he returned, and went and came to Mansoul; and
+going, as afore, to the house of Mr. Mischief, there he found the
+Diabolonians assembled, and waiting for his return. Now when he
+was come, and had presented himself, he also delivered to them his
+letter, and adjoined this compliment to them therewith: 'My lords,
+from the confines of the pit, the high and mighty principalities
+and powers of the den salute you here, the true Diabolonians of the
+town of Mansoul. Wishing you always the most proper of their
+benedictions, for the great service, high attempts, and brave
+achievements that you have put yourselves upon, for the restoring
+to our prince Diabolus the famous town of Mansoul.'
+
+This was therefore the present state of the miserable town of
+Mansoul: she had offended her Prince, and he was gone; she had
+encouraged the powers of hell, by her foolishness, to come against
+her to seek her utter destruction.
+
+True, the town of Mansoul was somewhat made sensible of her sin,
+but the Diabolonians were gotten into her bowels; she cried, but
+Emmanuel was gone, and her cries did not fetch him as yet again.
+Besides, she knew not now whether, ever or never, he would return
+and come to his Mansoul again; nor did they know the power and
+industry of the enemy, nor how forward they were to put in
+execution that plot of hell that they had devised against her.
+
+They did, indeed, still send petition after petition to the Prince,
+but he answered all with silence. They did neglect reformation,
+and that was as Diabolus would have it; for he knew, if they
+regarded iniquity in their heart, their King would not hear their
+prayer; they therefore did still grow weaker and weaker, and were
+as a rolling thing before the whirlwind. They cried to their King
+for help, and laid Diabolonians in their bosoms: what therefore
+should a King do to them? Yea, there seemed now to be a mixture in
+Mansoul; the Diabolonians and the Mansoulians would walk the
+streets together. Yea, they began to seek their peace; for they
+thought that, since the sickness had been so mortal in Mansoul, it
+was in vain to go to handygripes with them. Besides, the weakness
+of Mansoul was the strength of their enemies; and the sins of
+Mansoul, the advantage of the Diabolonians. The foes of Mansoul
+did also now begin to promise themselves the town for a possession:
+there was no great difference now betwixt Mansoulians and
+Diabolonians: both seemed to be masters of Mansoul. Yea, the
+Diabolonians increased and grew, but the town of Mansoul diminished
+greatly. There were more than eleven thousand men, women, and
+children that died by the sickness in Mansoul.
+
+But now, as Shaddai would have it, there was one whose name was Mr.
+Prywell, a great lover of the people of Mansoul. And he, as his
+manner was, did go listening up and down in Mansoul to see, and to
+hear, if at any time he might, whether there was any design against
+it or no. For he was always a jealous man, and feared some
+mischief sometime would befal it, either from the Diabolonians
+within, or from some power without. Now upon a time it so
+happened, as Mr. Prywell went listening here and there, that he
+lighted upon a place called Vilehill, in Mansoul, where
+Diabolonians used to meet; so hearing a muttering, (you must know
+that it was in the night,) he softly drew near to hear; nor had he
+stood long under the house-end, (for there stood a house there,)
+but he heard one confidently affirm, that it was not, or would not
+be long before Diabolus should possess himself again of Mansoul;
+and that then the Diabolonians did intend to put all Mansoulians to
+the sword, and would kill and destroy the King's captains, and
+drive all his soldiers out of the town. He said, moreover, that he
+knew there were above twenty thousand fighting men prepared by
+Diabolus for the accomplishing of this design, and that it would
+not be months before they all should see it.
+
+When Mr. Prywell had heard this story, he did quickly believe it
+was true: wherefore he went forthwith to my Lord Mayor's house,
+and acquainted him therewith; who, sending for the subordinate
+preacher, brake the business to him; and he as soon gave the alarm
+to the town; for he was now the chief preacher in Mansoul, because,
+as yet, my Lord Secretary was ill at ease. And this was the way
+that the subordinate preacher did take to alarm the town therewith.
+The same hour he caused the lecture bell to be rung; so the people
+came together: he gave them then a short exhortation to
+watchfulness, and made Mr. Prywell's news the argument thereof.
+'For,' said he, 'an horrible plot is contrived against Mansoul,
+even to massacre us all in a day, nor is this story to be slighted;
+for Mr. Prywell is the author thereof. Mr. Prywell was always a
+lover of Mansoul, a sober and judicious man, a man that is no
+tattler, nor raiser of false reports, but one that loves to look
+into the very bottom of matters, and talks nothing of news, but by
+very solid arguments.
+
+'I will call him, and you shall hear him your own selves;' so he
+called him, and he came and told his tale so punctually, and
+affirmed its truth with such ample grounds, that Mansoul fell
+presently under a conviction of the truth of what he said. The
+preacher did also back him, saying, 'Sirs, it is not irrational for
+us to believe it, for we have provoked Shaddai to anger, and have
+sinned Emmanuel out of the town; we have had too much
+correspondence with Diabolonians, and have forsaken our former
+mercies: no marvel then, if the enemy both within and without
+should design and plot our ruin; and what time like this to do it?
+The sickness is now in the town, and we have been made weak
+thereby. Many a good meaning man is dead, and the Diabolonians of
+late grow stronger and stronger.
+
+'Besides,' quoth the subordinate preacher, 'I have received from
+this good truth-teller this one inkling further, that he understood
+by those that he overheard, that several letters have lately passed
+between the furies and the Diabolonians in order to our
+destruction.' When Mansoul heard all this, and not being able to
+gainsay it, they lift up their voice and wept. Mr. Prywell did
+also, in the presence of the townsmen, confirm all that their
+subordinate preacher had said. Wherefore they now set afresh to
+bewail their folly, and to a doubling of petitions to Shaddai and
+his Son. They also brake the business to the captains, high
+commanders, and men of war in the town of Mansoul, entreating them
+to use the means to be strong, and to take good courage; and that
+they would look after their harness, and make themselves ready to
+give Diabolus battle by night and by day, shall he come, as they
+are informed he will, to beleaguer the town of Mansoul.
+
+When the captains heard this, they being always true lovers of the
+town of Mansoul, what do they but like so many Samsons they shake
+themselves, and come together to consult and contrive how to defeat
+those bold and hellish contrivances that were upon the wheel by the
+means of Diabolus and his friends against the now sickly, weakly,
+and much impoverished town of Mansoul; and they agreed upon these
+following particulars:-
+
+1. That the gates of Mansoul should be kept shut, and made fast
+with bars and locks, and that all persons that went out, or came
+in, should be very strictly examined by the captains of the guards,
+'to the end,' said they, 'that those that are managers of the plot
+amongst us, may, either coming or going, be taken; and that we may
+also find out who are the great contrivers, amongst us, of our
+ruin.'
+
+2. The next thing was, that a strict search should be made for all
+kind of Diabolonians throughout the whole town of Mansoul; and that
+every man's house from top to bottom should be looked into, and
+that, too, house by house, that if possible a further discovery
+might be made of all such among them as had a hand in these
+designs.
+
+3. It was further concluded upon, that wheresoever or with
+whomsoever any of the Diabolonians were found, that even those of
+the town of Mansoul that had given them house and harbour, should
+to their shame, and the warning of others, take penance in the open
+place.
+
+4. It was, moreover, resolved by the famous town of Mansoul, that a
+public fast, and a day of humiliation, should be kept throughout
+the whole corporation, to the justifying of their Prince, the
+abasing of themselves before him for their transgressions against
+him, and against Shaddai, his Father. It was further resolved,
+that all such in Mansoul as did not on that day endeavour to keep
+that fast, and to humble themselves for their faults, but that
+should mind their worldly employs, or be found wandering up and
+down the streets, should be taken for Diabolonians, and should
+suffer as Diabolonians for such their wicked doings.
+
+5. It was further concluded then, that with what speed, and with
+what warmth of mind they could, they would renew their humiliation
+for sin, and their petitions to Shaddai for help; they also
+resolved, to send tidings to the court of all that Mr. Prywell had
+told them.
+
+6. It was also determined, that thanks should be given by the town
+of Mansoul to Mr. Prywell, for his diligent seeking of the welfare
+of their town: and further, that forasmuch as he was so naturally
+inclined to seek their good, and also to undermine their foes, they
+gave him a commission of scout-master-general, for the good of the
+town of Mansoul.
+
+When the corporation, with their captains, had thus concluded, they
+did as they had said; they shut up their gates, they made for
+Diabolonians strict search, they made those with whom any were
+found to take penance in the open place: they kept their fast, and
+renewed their petitions to their Prince, and Mr. Prywell managed
+his charge and the trust that Mansoul had put in his hands, with
+great conscience and good fidelity; for he gave himself wholly up
+to his employ, and that not only within the town, but he went out
+to pry, to see, and to hear.
+
+And not many days after he provided for his journey, and went
+towards Hell-Gate Hill, into the country where the Doubters were,
+where he heard of all that had been talked of in Mansoul, and he
+perceived also that Diabolus was almost ready for his march, etc.
+So he came back with speed, and, calling the captains and elders of
+Mansoul together, he told them where he had been, what he had
+heard, and what he had seen. Particularly, he told them that
+Diabolus was almost ready for his march, and that he had made old
+Mr. Incredulity, that once brake prison in Mansoul, the, general of
+his army; that his army consisted all of Doubters, and that their
+number was above twenty thousand. He told, moreover, that Diabolus
+did intend to bring with him the chief princes of the infernal pit,
+and that he would make them chief captains over his Doubters. He
+told them, moreover, that it was certainly true that several of the
+black den would, with Diabolus, ride reformades to reduce the town
+of Mansoul to the obedience of Diabolus, their prince.
+
+He said, moreover, that he understood by the Doubters, among whom
+he had been, that the reason why old Incredulity was made general
+of the whole army, was because none truer than he to the tyrant;
+and because he had an implacable spite against the welfare of the
+town of Mansoul. Besides, said he, he remembers the affronts that
+Mansoul has given him, and he is resolved to be revenged of them.
+
+But the black princes shall be made high commanders, only
+Incredulity shall be over them all; because, which I had almost
+forgot, he can more easily, and more dexterously, beleaguer the
+town of Mansoul, than can any of the princes besides.
+
+Now, when the captains of Mansoul, with the elders of the town, had
+heard the tidings that Mr. Prywell did bring, they thought it
+expedient, without further delay, to put into execution the laws
+that against the Diabolonians their Prince had made for them, and
+given them in commandment to manage against them. Wherefore,
+forthwith a diligent and impartial search was made in all houses in
+Mansoul, for all and all manner of Diabolonians. Now, in the house
+of Mr. Mind, and in the house of the great Lord Willbewill, were
+two Diabolonians found. In Mr. Mind's house was one Lord
+Covetousness found; but he had changed his name to Prudent-Thrifty.
+In my Lord Willbewill's house, one Lasciviousness was found; but he
+had changed his name to Harmless-Mirth. These two the captains and
+elders of the town of Mansoul took, and committed them to custody
+under the hand of Mr. Trueman, the gaoler; and this man handled
+them so severely, and loaded them so well with irons, that in time
+they both fell into a very deep consumption, and died in the
+prison-house; their masters also, according to the agreement of the
+captains and elders, were brought to take penance in the open place
+to their shame, and for a warning to the rest of the town of
+Mansoul.
+
+Now, this was the manner of penance in those days: the persons
+offending being made sensible of the evil of their doings, were
+enjoined open confession of their faults, and a strict amendment of
+their lives.
+
+After this, the captains and elders of Mansoul sought yet to find
+out more Diabolonians, wherever they lurked, whether in dens,
+caves, holes, vaults, or where else they could, in or about the
+wall or town of Mansoul. But though they could plainly see their
+footing, and so follow them by their track and smell to their
+holds, even to the mouths of their caves and dens, yet take them,
+hold them, and do justice upon them, they could not; their ways
+were so crooked, their holds so strong, and they so quick to take
+sanctuary there.
+
+But Mansoul did now with so stiff an hand rule over the
+Diabolonians that were left, that they were glad to shrink into
+corners: time was when they durst walk openly, and in the day; but
+now they were forced to embrace privacy and the night: time was
+when a Mansoulian was their companion; but now they counted them
+deadly enemies. This good change did Mr. Prywell's intelligence
+make in the famous town of Mansoul.
+
+By this time, Diabolus had finished his army which he intended to
+bring with him for the ruin of Mansoul; and had set over them
+captains, and other field officers, such as liked his furious
+stomach best: himself was lord paramount, Incredulity was general
+of his army, their highest captains shall be named afterwards; but
+now for their officers, colours, and scutcheons.
+
+1. Their first captain was Captain Rage: he was captain over the
+election doubters, his were the red colours; his standard-bearer
+was Mr. Destructive, and the great red dragon he had for his
+scutcheon.
+
+2. The second captain was Captain Fury: he was captain over the
+vocation doubters; his standard-bearer was Mr. Darkness, his
+colours were those that were pale, and he had for his scutcheon the
+fiery flying serpent.
+
+3. The third captain was Captain Damnation: he was captain over
+the grace doubters; his were the red colours, Mr. No-Life bare
+them, and he had for his scutcheon the black den.
+
+4. The fourth captain was Captain Insatiable; he was captain over
+the faith doubters: his were the red colours, Mr. Devourer bare
+them, and he had for a scutcheon the yawning jaws.
+
+5. The fifth captain was Captain Brimstone: he was captain over
+the perseverance doubters; his also were the red colours, Mr.
+Burning bare them, and his scutcheon was the blue and stinking
+flame.
+
+6. The sixth captain was Captain Torment: he was captain over the
+resurrection doubters; his colours were those that were pale; Mr.
+Gnaw was his standard-bearer, and he had the black worm for his
+scutcheon.
+
+7. The seventh captain was Captain No-Ease; he was captain over the
+salvation doubters; his were the red colours, Mr. Restless bare
+them, and his scutcheon was the ghastly picture of death.
+
+8. The eighth captain was the Captain Sepulchre: he was captain
+over the glory doubters; his also were the pale colours, Mr.
+Corruption was his standard-bearer, and he had for his scutcheon a
+skull, and dead men's bones.
+
+9. The ninth captain was Captain Past-Hope; he was captain of those
+that are called the felicity doubters; his standard-bearer was Mr.
+Despair; his also were the red colours, and his scutcheon was a hot
+iron and the hard heart.
+
+These were his captains, and these were their forces, these were
+their standards, these were their colours, and these were their
+scutcheons. Now, over these did the great Diabolus make superior
+captains, and they were in number seven: as, namely, the Lord
+Beelzebub, the Lord Lucifer, the Lord Legion, the Lord Apollyon,
+the Lord Python, the Lord Cerberus, and the Lord Belial; these
+seven he set over the captains, and Incredulity was lord-general,
+and, Diabolus was king. The reformades also, such as were like
+themselves, were made some of them captains of hundreds, and some
+of them captains of more. And thus was the army of Incredulity
+completed.
+
+So they set out at Hell-Gate Hill, for there they had their
+rendezvous, from whence they came with a straight course upon their
+march toward the town of Mansoul. Now, as was hinted before, the
+town had, as Shaddai would have it, received from the mouth of Mr.
+Prywell the alarm of their coming before. Wherefore they set a
+strong watch at the gates, and had also doubled their guards: they
+also mounted their slings in good places, where they might
+conveniently cast out their great stones to the annoyance of their
+furious enemy.
+
+Nor could those Diabolonians that were in the town do that hurt as
+was designed they should; for Mansoul was now awake. But alas!
+poor people, they were sorely affrighted at the first appearance of
+their foes, and at their sitting down before the town, especially
+when they heard the roaring of their drum. This, to speak truth,
+was amazingly hideous to hear; it frighted all men seven miles
+round, if they were but awake and heard it. The streaming of their
+colours was also terrible and dejecting to behold.
+
+When Diabolus was come up against the town, first he made his
+approach to Ear-gate, and gave it a furious assault, supposing, as
+it seems, that his friends in Mansoul had been ready to do the work
+within; but care was taken of that before, by the vigilance of the
+captains. Wherefore, missing of the help that he expected from
+them, and finding his army warmly attended with the stones that the
+slingers did sling, (for that I will say for the captains, that
+considering the weakness that yet was upon them by reason of the
+long sickness that had annoyed the town of Mansoul, they did
+gallantly behave themselves,) he was forced to make some retreat
+from Mansoul, and to entrench himself and his men in the field
+without the reach of the slings of the town.
+
+Now having entrenched himself, he did cast up four mounts against
+the town: the first he called Mount Diabolus, putting his own name
+thereon, the more to affright the town of Mansoul; the other three
+he called thus--Mount Alecto, Mount Megara, and Mount Tisiphone;
+for these are the names of the dreadful furies of hell. Thus he
+began to play his game with Mansoul, and to serve it as doth the
+lion his prey, even to make it fall before his terror. But, as I
+said, the captains and soldiers resisted so stoutly, and did do
+such execution with their stones, that they made him, though
+against stomach, to retreat, wherefore Mansoul began to take
+courage.
+
+Now upon Mount Diabolus, which was raised on the north side of the
+town, there did the tyrant set up his standard, and a fearful thing
+it was to behold; for he had wrought in it by devilish art, after
+the manner of a scutcheon, a flaming flame fearful to behold, and
+the picture of Mansoul burning in it.
+
+When Diabolus had thus done, he commanded that his drummer should
+every night approach the walls of the town of Mansoul, and so to
+beat a parley; the command was to do it at nights, for in the
+daytime they annoyed him with their slings; for the tyrant said,
+that he had a mind to parley with the now trembling town of
+Mansoul, and he commanded that the drums should beat every night,
+that through weariness they might at last, if possible, (at the
+first they were unwilling yet,) be forced to do it.
+
+So this drummer did as commanded: he arose, and did beat his drum.
+But when his drum did go, if one looked toward the town of Mansoul,
+'Behold darkness and sorrow, and the light was darkened in the
+heaven thereof.' No noise was ever heard upon earth more terrible,
+except the voice of Shaddai when he speaketh. But how did Mansoul
+tremble! it now looked for nothing but forthwith to be swallowed
+up.
+
+When this drummer had beaten for a parley, he made this speech to
+Mansoul: 'My master has bid me tell you, that if you will
+willingly submit, you shall have the good of the earth; but if you
+shall be stubborn, he is resolved to take you by force.' But by
+that the fugitive had done beating his drum, the people of Mansoul
+had betaken themselves to the captains that were in the castle, so
+that there was none to regard, nor to give this drummer an answer;
+so he proceeded no further that night, but returned again to his
+master to the camp.
+
+When Diabolus saw that by drumming he could not work out Mansoul to
+his will, the next night he sendeth his drummer without his drum,
+still to let the townsmen know that he had a mind to parley with
+them. But when all came to all, his parley was turned into a
+summons to the town to deliver up themselves: but they gave him
+neither heed nor hearing: for they remembered what at first it
+cost them to hear him a few words.
+
+The next night he sends again, and then who should be his messenger
+to Mansoul but the terrible Captain Sepulchre; so Captain Sepulchre
+came up to the walls of Mansoul, and made this oration to the
+town:-
+
+'O ye inhabitants of the rebellious town of Mansoul! I summon you
+in the name of the Prince Diabolus, that, without any more ado, you
+set open the gates of your town, and admit the great lord to come
+in. But if you shall still rebel, when we have taken to us the
+town by force, we will swallow you up as the grave; wherefore if
+you will hearken to my summons, say so, and if not then let me
+know.
+
+'The reason of this my summons,' quoth he, 'is, for that my lord is
+your undoubted prince and lord, as you yourselves have formerly
+owned. Nor shall that assault that was given to my lord, when
+Emmanuel dealt so dishonourably by him, prevail with him to lose
+his right, and to forbear to attempt to recover his own. Consider,
+then, O Mansoul, with thyself, wilt thou show thyself peaceable, or
+no? If thou shalt quietly yield up thyself, then our old
+friendship shall be renewed; but if thou shalt yet refuse and
+rebel, then expect nothing but fire and sword.'
+
+When the languishing town of Mansoul had heard this summoner and
+his summons, they were yet more put to their dumps, but made to the
+captain no answer at all; so away he went as he came.
+
+But, after some consultation among themselves, as also with some of
+their captains, they applied themselves afresh to the Lord
+Secretary for counsel and advice from him; for this Lord Secretary
+was their chief preacher, (as also is mentioned some pages before,)
+only now he was ill at ease; and of him they begged favour in these
+two or three things -
+
+1. That he would look comfortably upon them, and not keep himself
+so much retired from them as formerly. Also, that he would be
+prevailed with to give them a hearing, while they should make known
+their miserable condition to him. But to this he told them as
+before, that 'as yet he was but ill at ease, and therefore could
+not do as he had formerly done.'
+
+2. The second thing that they desired was, that he would be pleased
+to give them his advice about their now so important affairs, for
+that Diabolus was come and set down before the town with no less
+than twenty thousand doubters. They said, moreover, that both he
+and his captains were cruel men, and that they were afraid of them.
+But to this he said, 'You must look to the law of the Prince, and
+there see what is laid upon you to do.'
+
+3. Then they desired that his highness would help them to frame a
+petition to Shaddai, and unto Emmanuel his Son, and that he would
+set his own hand thereto as a token that he was one with them in
+it: 'For,' said they, 'my Lord, many a one have we sent, but can
+get no answer of peace; but now, surely, one with thy hand unto it
+may obtain good for Mansoul.'
+
+But all the answer that he gave to this was, 'that they had
+offended their Emmanuel, and had also grieved himself, and that
+therefore they must as yet partake of their own devices.'
+
+This answer of the Lord Secretary fell like a millstone upon them;
+yea, it crushed them so that they could not tell what to do; yet
+they durst not comply with the demands of Diabolus, nor with the
+demands of his captain. So then here were the straits that the
+town of Mansoul was betwixt, when the enemy came upon her: her
+foes were ready to swallow her up, and her friends did forbear to
+help her.
+
+Then stood up my Lord Mayor, whose name was my Lord Understanding,
+and he began to pick and pick, until he had picked comfort out of
+that seemingly bitter saying of the Lord Secretary; for thus he
+descanted upon it: 'First,' said he, 'this unavoidably follows
+upon the saying of my Lord, "that we must yet suffer for our sins."
+Secondly, But,' quoth he, 'the words yet sound as if at last we
+should be saved from our enemies, and that after a few more
+sorrows, Emmanuel will come and be our help.' Now the Lord Mayor
+was the more critical in his dealing with the Secretary's words,
+because my lord was more than a prophet, and because none of his
+words were such, but that at all times they were most exactly
+significant; and the townsmen were allowed to pry into them, and to
+expound them to their best advantage.
+
+So they took their leaves of my lord, and returned, and went, and
+came to the captains, to whom they did tell what my Lord High
+Secretary had said; who, when they had heard it, were all of the
+same opinion as was my Lord Mayor himself. The captains,
+therefore, began to take some courage unto them, and to prepare to
+make some brave attempt upon the camp of the enemy, and to destroy
+all that were Diabolonians, with the roving doubters that the
+tyrant had brought with him to destroy the poor town of Mansoul.
+
+So all betook themselves forthwith to their places--the Captains to
+theirs, the Lord Mayor to his, the subordinate preacher to his, and
+my Lord Willbewill to his. The captains longed to be at some work
+for their prince; for they delighted in warlike achievements. The
+next day, therefore, they came together and consulted; and after
+consultation had, they resolved to give an answer to the captain of
+Diabolus with slings; and so they did at the rising of the sun on
+the morrow; for Diabolus had adventured to come nearer again, but
+the sling-stones were to him and his like hornets. For as there is
+nothing to the town of Mansoul so terrible as the roaring of
+Diabolus's drum, so there is nothing to Diabolus so terrible as the
+well playing of Emmanuel's slings. Wherefore Diabolus was forced
+to make another retreat, yet further off from the famous town of
+Mansoul. Then did the Lord Mayor of Mansoul cause the bells to be
+rung, 'and that thanks should be sent to the Lord High Secretary by
+the mouth of the subordinate preacher; for that by his words the
+captains and elders of Mansoul had been strengthened against
+Diabolus.'
+
+When Diabolus saw that his captains and soldiers, high lords and
+renowned, were frightened, and beaten down by the stones that came
+from the golden slings of the Prince of the town of Mansoul, he
+bethought himself, and said, 'I will try to catch them by fawning,
+I will try to flatter them into my net.'
+
+Wherefore, after a while, he came down again to the wall, not now
+with his drum, nor with Captain Sepulchre; but having all besugared
+his lips, he seemed to be a very sweet-mouthed, peaceable prince,
+designing nothing for humour's sake, nor to be revenged on Mansoul
+for injuries by them done to him; but the welfare, and good, and
+advantage of the town and people therein was now, as he said, his
+only design. Wherefore, after he had called for audience, and
+desired that the townsfolk would give it to him, he proceeded in
+his oration, and said:-
+
+'Oh, the desire of my heart, the famous town of Mansoul! how many
+nights have I watched, and how many weary steps have I taken, if
+perhaps I might do thee good! Far be it, far be it from me to
+desire to make a war upon you; if ye will but willingly and quietly
+deliver up yourselves unto me. You know that you were mine of old.
+Remember also, that so long as you enjoyed me for your lord, and
+that I enjoyed you for my subjects, you wanted for nothing of all
+the delights of the earth, that I, your lord and prince, could get
+for you, or that I could invent to make you bonny and blithe
+withal. Consider, you never had so many hard, dark, troublesome,
+and heart-afflicting hours, while you were mine, as you have had
+since you revolted from me; nor shall you ever have peace again,
+until you and I become one as before. But, be but prevailed with
+to embrace me again, and I will grant, yea, enlarge your old
+charter with abundance of privileges; so that your license and
+liberty shall be to take, hold, enjoy, and make your own all that
+is pleasant from the east to the west. Nor shall any of those
+incivilities, wherewith you have offended me, be ever charged upon
+you by me, so long as the sun and moon endure. Nor shall any of
+those dear friends of mine that now, for the fear of you, lie
+lurking in dens, and holes, and caves in Mansoul, be hurtful to you
+any more; yea, they shall be your servants, and shall minister unto
+you of their substance, and of whatever shall come to hand. I need
+speak no more; you know them, and have sometime since been much
+delighted in their company. Why, then, should we abide at such
+odds? Let us renew our old acquaintance and friendship again.
+
+'Bear with your friend; I take the liberty at this time to speak
+thus freely unto you. The love that I have to you presses me to do
+it, as also does the zeal of my heart for my friends with you: put
+me not therefore to further trouble, nor yourselves to further
+fears and frights. Have you I will, in a way of peace or war; nor
+do you flatter yourselves with the power and force of your
+captains, or that your Emmanuel will shortly come in to your help;
+for such strength will do you no pleasure.
+
+'I am come against you with a stout and valiant army, and all the
+chief princes of the den are even at the head of it. Besides, my
+captains are swifter than eagles, stronger than lions, and more
+greedy of prey than are the evening wolves. What is Og of Bashan!
+what is Goliath of Gath! and what are an hundred more of them, to
+one of the least of my captains! How, then, shall Mansoul think to
+escape my hand and force?'
+
+Diabolus having thus handed his flattering, fawning, deceitful, and
+lying speech to the famous town of Mansoul, the Lord Mayor replied
+to him as follows: 'O Diabolus, prince of darkness, and master of
+all deceit; thy lying flatteries we have had and made sufficient
+probation of, and have tasted too deeply of that destructive cup
+already. Should we therefore again hearken unto thee, and so break
+the commandments of our great Shaddai, to join in affinity with
+thee, would not our Prince reject us, and cast us off for ever?
+And, being cast off by him, can the place that he has prepared for
+thee be a place of rest for us? Besides, O thou that art empty and
+void of all truth, we are rather ready to die by thy hand, than to
+fall in with thy flattering and lying deceits.'
+
+When the tyrant saw that there was little to be got by parleying
+with my Lord Mayor, he fell into an hellish rage, and resolved that
+again, with his army of doubters, he would another time assault the
+town of Mansoul.
+
+So he called for his drummer, who beat up for his men (and while he
+did beat, Mansoul did shake) to be in a readiness to give battle to
+the corporation: then Diabolus drew near with his army, and thus
+disposed of his men. Captain Cruel and Captain Torment, these he
+drew up and placed against Feel-gate, and commanded them to sit
+down there for the war. And he also appointed that, if need were,
+Captain No-Ease should come in to their relief. At Nose-gate he
+placed the Captain Brimstone and Captain Sepulchre, and bid them
+look well to their ward, on that side of the town of Mansoul. But
+at Eye-gate he placed that grim-faced one, the Captain Past-Hope,
+and there also now he did set up his terrible standard.
+
+Now Captain Insatiable, he was to look to the carriages of
+Diabolus, and was also appointed to take into custody that, or
+those persons and things, that should at any time as prey be taken
+from the enemy.
+
+Now Mouth-gate the inhabitants of Mansoul kept for a sally-port;
+wherefore that they kept strong; for that it was it by and out at
+which the townsfolk did send their petitions to Emmanuel their
+Prince. That also was the gate from the top of which the captains
+did play their slings at the enemies; for that gate stood somewhat
+ascending, so that the placing of them there, and the letting of
+them fly from that place, did much execution against the tyrant's
+army. Wherefore, for these causes, with others, Diabolus sought,
+if possible, to land up Mouth-gate with dirt.
+
+Now, as Diabolus was busy and industrious in preparing to make his
+assault upon the town of Mansoul, without, so the captains and
+soldiers in the corporation were as busy in preparing within; they
+mounted their slings, they set up their banners, they sounded their
+trumpets, and put themselves in such order as was judged most for
+the annoyance of the enemy, and for the advantage of Mansoul, and
+gave to their soldiers orders to be ready at the sound of the
+trumpet for war. The Lord Willbewill also, he took the charge of
+watching against the rebels within, and to do what he could to take
+them while without, or to stifle them within their caves, dens, and
+holes in the town-wall of Mansoul. And, to speak the truth of him,
+ever since he took penance for his fault, he has showed as much
+honesty and bravery of spirit as any he in Mansoul; for he took one
+Jolly, and his brother Griggish, the two sons of his servant
+Harmless-Mirth, (for to that day, though the father was committed
+to ward, the sons had a dwelling in the house of my lord,)--I say,
+he took them, and with his own hands put them to the cross. And
+this was the reason why he hanged them up: after their father was
+put into the hands of Mr. True-Man the gaoler, they, his sons,
+began to play his pranks, and to be ticking and toying with the
+daughters of their lord; nay, it was jealoused that they were too
+familiar with them, the which was brought to his lordship's ear.
+Now his lordship being unwilling unadvisedly to put any man to
+death, did not suddenly fall upon them, but set watch and spies to
+see if the thing was true; of the which he was soon informed, for
+his two servants, whose names were Find-Out and Tell-All, catched
+them together in uncivil manner more than once or twice, and went
+and told their lord. So when my Lord Willbewill had sufficient
+ground to believe the thing was true, he takes the two young
+Diabolonians, (for such they were, for their father was a
+Diabolonian born,) and has them to Eye-gate, where he raised a very
+high cross, just in the face of Diabolus, and of his army, and
+there he hanged the young villains, in defiance to Captain Past-
+Hope, and of the horrible standard of the tyrant.
+
+Now this Christian act of the brave Lord Willbewill did greatly
+abash Captain Past-Hope, discouraged the army of Diabolus, put fear
+into the Diabolonian runagates in Mansoul, and put strength and
+courage into the captains that belonged to Emmanuel, the Prince;
+for they without did gather, and that by this very act of my Lord,
+that Mansoul was resolved to fight, and that the Diabolonians
+within the town could not do such things as Diabolus had hopes they
+would. Nor was this the only proof of the brave Lord Willbewill's
+honesty to the town, nor of his loyalty to his Prince, as will
+afterwards appear.
+
+Now, when the children of Prudent-Thrifty, who dwelt with Mr. Mind,
+(for Thrift left children with Mr. Mind, when he was also committed
+to prison, and their names were Gripe and Rake-All; these he begat
+of Mr. Mind's bastard daughter, whose name was Mrs. Hold-fast-
+Bad;)--I say, when his children perceived how the Lord Willbewill
+had served them that dwelt with him, what do they but, lest they
+should drink of the same cup, endeavour to make their escape. But
+Mr. Mind, being wary of it, took them and put them in hold in his
+house till morning; (for this was done over night;) and remembering
+that by the law of Mansoul all Diabolonians were to die, (and to be
+sure they were at least by father's side such, and some say by
+mother's side too,) what does he but takes them and puts them in
+chains, and carries them to the selfsame place where my lord hanged
+his two before, and there he hanged them.
+
+The townsmen also took great encouragement at this act of Mr. Mind,
+and did what they could to have taken some more of these
+Diabolonian troublers of Mansoul; but at that time the rest lay so
+squat and close, that they could not be apprehended; so they set
+against them a diligent watch, and went every man to his place.
+
+I told you a little before, that Diabolus and his army were
+somewhat abashed and discouraged at the sight of what my Lord
+Willbewill did, when he hanged up those two young Diabolonians; but
+his discouragement quickly turned itself into furious madness and
+rage against the town of Mansoul, and fight it he would. Also the
+townsmen and captains within, they had their hopes and their
+expectations heightened, believing at last the day would be theirs;
+so they feared them the less. Their subordinate preacher, too,
+made a sermon about it; and he took that theme for his text, 'Gad,
+a troop shall overcome him: but he shall overcome at the last.'
+Whence he showed, that though Mansoul should be sorely put to it at
+the first, yet the victory should most certainly be Mansoul's at
+the last.
+
+So Diabolus commanded that his drummer should beat a charge against
+the town; and the captains also that were in the town sounded a
+charge against them, but they had no drum: they were trumpets of
+silver with which they sounded against them. Then they which were
+of the camp of Diabolus came down to the town to take it, and the
+captains in the castle, with the slingers at Mouth-gate, played
+upon them amain. And now there was nothing heard in the camp of
+Diabolus but horrible rage and blasphemy; but in the town good
+words, prayer, and singing of psalms. The enemy replied with
+horrible objections, and the terribleness of their drum; but the
+town made answer with the slapping of their slings, and the
+melodious noise of their trumpets. And thus the fight lasted for
+several days together, only now and then they had some small
+intermission, in the which the townsmen refreshed themselves, and
+the captains made ready for another assault.
+
+The captains of Emmanuel were clad in silver armour, and the
+soldiers in that which was of proof; the soldiers of Diabolus were
+clad in iron which was made to give place to Emmanuel's engine-
+shot. In the town, some were hurt, and some were greatly wounded.
+Now, the worst of it was, a chirurgeon was scarce in Mansoul, for
+that Emmanuel at present was absent. Howbeit, with the leaves of a
+tree the wounded were kept from dying; yet their wounds did greatly
+putrefy, and some did grievously stink. Of the townsmen, these
+were wounded, namely, my Lord Reason; he was wounded in the head.
+Another that was wounded was the brave Lord Mayor; he was wounded
+in the eye. Another that was wounded was Mr. Mind; he received his
+wound about the stomach. The honest subordinate preacher also, he
+received a shot not far off the heart but none of these were
+mortal.
+
+Many also of the inferior sort were not only wounded but slain
+outright.
+
+Now, in the camp of Diabolus were wounded and slain a considerable
+number; for instance, Captain Rage, he was wounded, and so was
+Captain Cruel. Captain Damnation was made to retreat, and to
+intrench himself further off of Mansoul. The standard also of
+Diabolus was beaten down, and his standard-bearer, Captain Much-
+Hurt, had his brains beat out with a sling-stone, to the no little
+grief and shame of his prince Diabolus.
+
+Many also of the doubters were slain outright, though enough of
+them were left alive to make Mansoul shake and totter. Now the
+victory that day being turned to Mansoul, did put great valour into
+the townsmen and captains, and did cover Diabolus's camp with a
+cloud, but withal it made them far more furious. So the next day
+Mansoul rested, and commanded that the bells should be rung; the
+trumpets also joyfully sounded, and the captains shouted round the
+town.
+
+My Lord Willbewill also was not idle, but did notable service
+within against the domestics, or the Diabolonians that were in the
+town, not only by keeping them in awe, for he lighted on one at
+last whose name was Mr. Anything, a fellow of whom mention was made
+before; for it was he, if you remember, that brought the three
+fellows to Diabolus, whom the Diabolonians took out of Captain
+Boanerges's companies, and that persuaded them to list themselves
+under the tyrant, to fight against the army of Shaddai. My Lord
+Willbewill did also take a notable Diabolonian, whose name was
+Loose-Foot: this Loose-Foot was a scout to the vagabonds in
+Mansoul, and that did use to carry tidings out of Mansoul to the
+camp, and out of the camp to those of the enemies in Mansoul. Both
+these my lord sent away safe to Mr. True-Man, the gaoler, with a
+commandment to keep them in irons; for he intended then to have
+them out to be crucified, when it would be for the best to the
+corporation, and most for the discouragement of the camp of the
+enemies.
+
+My Lord Mayor also, though he could not stir about so much as
+formerly, because of the wound that he lately received, yet gave he
+out orders to all that were the natives of Mansoul, to look to
+their watch, and stand upon their guard, and, as occasion should
+offer, to prove themselves men.
+
+Mr. Conscience, the preacher, he also did his utmost to keep all
+his good documents alive upon the hearts of the people of Mansoul.
+
+Well, awhile after, the captains and stout ones of the town of
+Mansoul agreed and resolved upon a time to make a sally out upon
+the camp of Diabolus, and this must be done in the night; and there
+was the folly of Mansoul, (for the night is always the best for the
+enemy, but the worst for Mansoul to fight in,) but yet they would
+do it, their courage was so high; their last victory also still
+stuck in their memories.
+
+So the night appointed being come, the Prince's brave captains cast
+lots who should lead the van in this new and desperate expedition
+against Diabolus, and against his Diabolonian army; and the lot
+fell to Captain Credence, to Captain Experience, and to Captain
+Good-Hope, to lead the forlorn hope. (This Captain Experience the
+Prince created such when himself did reside in the town of
+Mansoul.) So, as I said, they made their sally out upon the army
+that lay in the siege against them; and their hap was to fall in
+with the main body of their enemies. Now Diabolus and his men
+being expertly accustomed to night-work, took the alarm presently,
+and were as ready to give them battle, as if they had sent them
+word of their coming. Wherefore to it they went amain, and blows
+were hard on every side; the hell drum also was beat most
+furiously, while the trumpets of the Prince most sweetly sounded.
+And thus the battle was joined; and Captain Insatiable looked to
+the enemy's carriages, and waited when he should receive some prey.
+
+The Prince's captains fought it stoutly, beyond what indeed could
+be expected they should; they wounded many; they made the whole
+army of Diabolus to make a retreat. But I cannot tell how, but the
+brave Captain Credence, Captain Good-Hope, and Captain Experience,
+as they were upon the pursuit, cutting down, and following hard
+after the enemy in the rear, Captain Credence stumbled and fell, by
+which fall he caught so great a hurt, that he could not rise till
+Captain Experience did help him up, at which their men were put in
+disorder. The captain also was so full of pain, that he could not
+forbear but aloud to cry out: at this, the other two captains
+fainted, supposing that Captain Credence had received his mortal
+wound; their men also were more disordered, and had no list to
+fight. Now Diabolus being very observing, though at this time as
+yet he was put to the worst, perceiving that a halt was made among
+the men that were the pursuers, what does he but, taking it for
+granted that the captains were either wounded or dead, he therefore
+makes at first a stand, then faces about, and so comes up upon the
+Prince's army with as much of his fury as hell could help him to;
+and his hap was to fall in just among the three captains, Captain
+Credence, Captain Good-Hope, and Captain Experience, and did cut,
+wound, and pierce them so dreadfully, that what through
+discouragement, what through disorder, and what through the wounds
+that they had received, and also the loss of much blood, they
+scarce were able, though they had for their power the three best
+hands in Mansoul, to get safe into the hold again.
+
+Now, when the body of the Prince's army saw how these three
+captains were put to the worst, they thought it their wisdom to
+make as safe and good a retreat as they could, and so returned by
+the sally-port again; and so there was an end of this present
+action. But Diabolus was so flushed with this night's work, that
+he promised himself, in few days, an easy and complete conquest
+over the town of Mansoul; wherefore, on the day following, he comes
+up to the sides thereof with great boldness, and demands entrance,
+and that forthwith they deliver themselves up to his government.
+The Diabolonians, too, that were within, they began to be somewhat
+brisk, as we shall show afterward.
+
+But the valiant Lord Mayor replied, that what he got he must get by
+force; for as long as Emmanuel, their Prince, was alive, (though he
+at present was not so with them as they wished,) they should never
+consent to yield Mansoul up to another.
+
+And with that the Lord Willbewill stood up, and said, 'Diabolus,
+thou master of the den, and enemy to all that is good, we poor
+inhabitants of the town of Mansoul are too well acquainted with thy
+rule and government, and with the end of those things that for
+certain will follow submitting to thee, to do it. Wherefore though
+while we were without knowledge we suffered thee to take us, (as
+the bird that saw not the snare fell into the hands of the fowler,)
+yet since we have been turned from darkness to light, we have also
+been turned from the power of Satan to God. And though through thy
+subtlety, and also the subtlety of the Diabolonians within, we have
+sustained much loss, and also plunged ourselves into much
+perplexity, yet give up ourselves, lay down our arms, and yield to
+so horrid a tyrant as thou, we shall not; die upon the place we
+choose rather to do. Besides, we have hopes that in time
+deliverance will come from court unto us, and therefore we yet will
+maintain a war against thee.'
+
+This brave speech of the Lord Willbewill, with that also of the
+Lord Mayor, did somewhat abate the boldness of Diabolus, though it
+kindled the fury of his rage. It also succoured the townsmen and
+captains; yea, it was as a plaster to the brave Captain Credence's
+wound; for you must know that a brave speech now (when the captains
+of the town with their men of war came home routed, and when the
+enemy took courage and boldness at the success that he had obtained
+to draw up to the walls, and demand entrance, as he did) was in
+season, and also advantageous.
+
+The Lord Willbewill also did play the man within; for while the
+captains and soldiers were in the field, he was in arms in the
+town, and wherever by him there was a Diabolonian found, they were
+forced to feel the weight of his heavy hand, and also the edge of
+his penetrating sword: many therefore of the Diabolonians he
+wounded, as the Lord Cavil, the Lord Brisk, the Lord Pragmatic, and
+the Lord Murmur; several also of the meaner sort he did sorely
+maim; though there cannot at this time an account be given you of
+any that he slew outright. The cause, or rather the advantage that
+my Lord Willbewill had at this time to do thus, was for that the
+captains were gone out to fight the enemy in the field. 'For now,'
+thought the Diabolonians within, 'is our time to stir and make an
+uproar in the town.' What do they therefore but quickly get
+themselves into a body, and fall forthwith to hurricaning in
+Mansoul, as if now nothing but whirlwind and tempest should be
+there. Wherefore, as I said, he takes this opportunity to fall in
+among them with his men, cutting and slashing with courage that was
+undaunted; at which the Diabolonians with all haste dispersed
+themselves to their holds, and my lord to his place as before.
+
+This brave act of my lord did somewhat revenge the wrong done by
+Diabolus to the captains, and also did let them know that Mansoul
+was not to be parted with for the loss of a victory or two;
+wherefore the wing of the tyrant was clipped again, as to
+boasting,--I mean in comparison of what he would have done, if the
+Diabolonians had put the town to the same plight to which he had
+put the captains.
+
+Well, Diabolus yet resolves to have the other bout with Mansoul.
+'For,' thought he, 'since I beat them once, I may beat them twice.'
+Wherefore he commanded his men to be ready at such an hour of the
+night, to make a fresh assault upon the town; and he gave it out in
+special that they should bend all their force against Feel-gate,
+and attempt to break into the town through that. The word that
+then he did give to his officers and soldiers was Hell-fire.
+'And,' said he, 'if we break in upon them, as I wish we do, either
+with some, or with all our force, let them that break in look to
+it, that they forget not the word. And let nothing be heard in the
+town of Mansoul but, "Hell-fire! Hell-fire! Hell-fire!"' The
+drummer was also to beat without ceasing, and the standard-bearers
+were to display their colours; the soldiers, too, were to put on
+what courage they could, and to see that they played manfully their
+parts against the town.
+
+So when night was come, and all things by the tyrant made ready for
+the work, he suddenly makes his assault upon Feel-gate, and after
+he had awhile struggled there, he throws the gate wide open: for
+the truth is, those gates were but weak, and so most easily made to
+yield. When Diabolus had thus far made his attempt, he placed his
+captains (namely, Torment and No-Ease) there; so he attempted to
+press forward, but the Prince's captains came down upon him, and
+made his entrance more difficult than he desired. And, to speak
+truth, they made what resistance they could; but the three of their
+best and most valiant captains being wounded, and by their wounds
+made much incapable of doing the town that service they would, (and
+all the rest having more than their hands full of the doubters, and
+their captains that did follow Diabolus,) they were overpowered
+with force, nor could they keep them out of the town. Wherefore
+the Prince's men and their captains betook themselves to the
+castle, as to the stronghold of the town: and this they did partly
+for their own security, partly for the security of the town, and
+partly, or rather chiefly, to preserve to Emmanuel the prerogative-
+royal of Mansoul; for so was the castle of Mansoul.
+
+The captains therefore being fled into the castle, the enemy,
+without much resistance, possess themselves of the rest of the
+town, and spreading themselves as they went into every corner, they
+cried out as they marched, according to the command of the tyrant,
+'Hell-fire! Hell-fire! Hell-fire!' so that nothing for a while
+throughout the town of Mansoul could be heard but the direful noise
+of 'Hell-fire!' together with the roaring of Diabolus's drum. And
+now did the clouds hang black over Mansoul, nor to reason did
+anything but ruin seem to attend it. Diabolus also quartered his
+soldiers in the houses of the inhabitants of the town of Mansoul.
+Yea, the subordinate preacher's house was as full of these
+outlandish doubters as ever it could hold, and so was my Lord
+Mayor's, and my Lord Willbewill's also. Yea, where was there a
+corner, a cottage, a barn, or a hogstye, that now was not full of
+these vermin? Yea, they turned the men of the town out of their
+houses, and would lie in their beds, and sit at their tables
+themselves. Ah, poor Mansoul! now thou feelest the fruits of sin,
+yea, what venom was in the flattering words of Mr. Carnal-Security!
+They made great havoc of whatever they laid their hands on; yea,
+they fired the town in several places; many young children also
+were by them dashed in pieces; and those that were yet unborn they
+destroyed in their mothers' wombs: for you must needs think that
+it could not now be otherwise; for what conscience, what pity, what
+bowels of compassion can any expect at the hands of outlandish
+doubters? Many in Mansoul that were women, both young and old,
+they forced, ravished, and beastlike abused, so that they swooned,
+miscarried, and many of them died, and so lay at the top of every
+street, and in all by-places of the town.
+
+And now did Mansoul seem to be nothing but a den of dragons, an
+emblem of hell, and a place of total darkness. Now did Mansoul lie
+almost like the barren wilderness; nothing but nettles, briars,
+thorns, weeds, and stinking things seemed now to cover the face of
+Mansoul. I told you before, how that these Diabolonian doubters
+turned the men of Mansoul out of their beds, and now I will add,
+they wounded them, they mauled them, yea, and almost brained many
+of them. Many did I say, yea most, if not all of them. Mr.
+Conscience they so wounded, yea, and his wounds so festered, that
+he could have no ease day nor night, but lay as if continually upon
+a rack; but that Shaddai rules all, certainly they had slain him
+outright. Mr. Lord Mayor they so abused that they almost put out
+his eyes; and had not my Lord Willbewill got into the castle, they
+intended to have chopped him all to pieces; for they did look upon
+him, as his heart now stood, to be one of the very worst that was
+in Mansoul against Diabolus and his crew. And indeed he hath shown
+himself a man, and more of his exploits you will hear of
+afterwards.
+
+Now, a man might have walked for days together in Mansoul, and
+scarcely have seen one in the town that looked like a religious
+man. Oh, the fearful state of Mansoul now! now every corner
+swarmed with outlandish doubters; red-coats and black-coats walked
+the town by clusters, and filled up all the houses with hideous
+noises, vain songs, lying stories, and blasphemous language against
+Shaddai and his Son. Now also those Diabolonians that lurked in
+the walls and dens and holes that were in the town of Mansoul, came
+forth and showed themselves; yea, walked with open face in company
+with the doubters that were in Mansoul. Yea, they had more
+boldness now to walk the streets, to haunt the houses, and to show
+themselves abroad, than had any of the honest inhabitants of the
+now woful town of Mansoul.
+
+But Diabolus and his outlandish men were not at peace in Mansoul;
+for they were not there entertained as were the captains and forces
+of Emmanuel: the townsmen did browbeat them what they could; nor
+did they partake or make stroy of any of the necessaries of
+Mansoul, but that which they seized on against the townsmen's will:
+what they could, they hid from them, and what they could not, they
+had with an ill-will. They, poor hearts! had rather have had their
+room than their company; but they were at present their captives,
+and their captives for the present they were forced to be. But, I
+say, they discountenanced them as much as they were able, and
+showed them all the dislike that they could.
+
+The captains also from the castle did hold them in continual play
+with their slings, to the chafing and fretting of the minds of the
+enemies. True, Diabolus made a great many attempts to have broken
+open the gates of the castle, but Mr. Godly-Fear was made the
+keeper of that; and he was a man of that courage, conduct, and
+valour, that it was in vain, as long as life lasted within him, to
+think to do that work, though mostly desired; wherefore all the
+attempts that Diabolus made against him were fruitless. I have
+wished sometimes that that man had had the whole rule of the town
+of Mansoul.
+
+Well, this was the condition of the town of Mansoul for about two
+years and a half: the body of the town was the seat of war, the
+people of the town were driven into holes, and the glory of Mansoul
+was laid in the dust. What rest, then, could be to the
+inhabitants, what peace could Mansoul have, and what sun could
+shine upon it? Had the enemy lain so long without in the plain
+against the town, it had been enough to have famished them: but
+now, when they shall be within, when the town shall be their tent,
+their trench and fort against the castle that was in the town; when
+the town shall be against the town, and shall serve to be a defence
+to the enemies of her strength and life: I say, when they shall
+make use of the forts and town-holds to secure themselves in, even
+till they shall take, spoil, and demolish the castle,--this was
+terrible! and yet this was now the state of the town of Mansoul.
+
+After the town of Mansoul had been in this sad and lamentable
+condition, for so long a time as I have told you, and no petitions
+that they presented their Prince with, all this while, could
+prevail, the inhabitants of the town, namely, the elders and chief
+of Mansoul, gathered together, and, after some time spent in
+condoling their miserable state and this miserable judgment coming
+upon them, they agreed together to draw up yet another petition,
+and to send it away to Emmanuel for relief. But Mr. Godly-Fear
+stood up and answered, that he knew that his Lord the Prince never
+did nor ever would receive a petition for these matters, from the
+hand of any whoever, unless the Lord Secretary's hand was to it;
+'and this,' quoth he, 'is the reason that you prevailed not all
+this while.' Then they said they would draw up one, and get the
+Lord Secretary's hand unto it. But Mr. Godly-Fear answered again,
+that he knew also that the Lord Secretary would not set his hand to
+any petition that himself had not an hand in composing and drawing
+up. 'And besides,' said he, 'the Prince doth know my Lord
+Secretary's hand from all the hands in the world; wherefore he
+cannot be deceived by any pretence whatever. Wherefore my advice
+is that you go to my Lord, and implore him to lend you his aid.'
+(Now he did yet abide in the castle, where all the captains and
+men-at-arms were.)
+
+So they heartily thanked Mr. Godly-Fear, took his counsel, and did
+as he had bidden them. So they went and came to my Lord, and made
+known the cause of their coming to him; namely, that since Mansoul
+was in so deplorable a condition, his Highness would be pleased to
+undertake to draw up a petition for them to Emmanuel, the Son of
+the mighty Shaddai, and to their King and his Father by him.
+
+Then said the Secretary to them, 'What petition is it that you
+would have me draw up for you?' But they said, 'Our Lord knows
+best the state and condition of the town of Mansoul; and how we are
+backslidden and degenerated from the Prince: thou also knowest who
+is come up to war against us, and how Mansoul is now the seat of
+war. My Lord knows, moreover, what barbarous usages our men,
+women, and children have suffered at their hands; and how our
+homebred Diabolonians do walk now with more boldness than dare the
+townsmen in the streets of Mansoul. Let our Lord therefore,
+according to the wisdom of God that is in him, draw up a petition
+for his poor servants to our Prince Emmanuel.' 'Well,' said the
+Lord Secretary, 'I will draw up a petition for you, and will also
+set my hand thereto.' Then said they, 'But when shall we call for
+it at the hands of our Lord?' But he answered, 'Yourselves must be
+present at the doing of it; yea, you must put your desires to it.
+True, the hand and pen shall be mine, but the ink and paper must be
+yours; else how can you say it is your petition? Nor have I need
+to petition for myself, because I have not offended.' He also added
+as followeth: 'No petition goes from me in my name to the Prince,
+and so to his Father by him, but when the people that are chiefly
+concerned therein do join in heart and soul in the matter, for that
+must be inserted therein.'
+
+So they did heartily agree with the sentence of the Lord, and a
+petition was forthwith drawn up for them. But now, who should
+carry it? that was next. But the Secretary advised that Captain
+Credence should carry it; for he was a well-spoken man. They
+therefore called for him, and propounded to him the business.
+'Well,' said the captain, 'I gladly accept of the motion; and
+though I am lame, I will do this business for you with as much
+speed, and as well as I can.'
+
+The contents of the petition were to this purpose
+
+'O our Lord, and Sovereign Prince Emmanuel, the potent, the long-
+suffering Prince! grace is poured into thy lips, and to thee belong
+mercy and forgiveness, though we have rebelled against thee. We,
+who are no more worthy to be called thy Mansoul, nor yet fit to
+partake of common benefits, do beseech thee, and thy Father by
+thee, to do away our transgressions. We confess that thou mightest
+cast us away for them; but do it not for thy name's sake: let the
+Lord rather take an opportunity, at our miserable condition, to let
+out his bowels and compassions to us. We are compassed on every
+side, Lord; our own backslidings reprove us; our Diabolonians
+within our town fright us; and the army of the angel of the
+bottomless pit distresses us. Thy grace can be our salvation, and
+whither to go but to thee we know not.
+
+'Furthermore, O gracious Prince, we have weakened our captains, and
+they are discouraged, sick, and, of late, some of them grievously
+worsted and beaten out of the field by the power and force of the
+tyrant. Yea, even those of our captains, in whose valour we did
+formerly use to put most of our confidence, they are as wounded
+men. Besides, Lord, our enemies are lively, and they are strong;
+they vaunt and boast themselves, and do threaten to part us among
+themselves for a booty. They are fallen also upon us, Lord, with
+many thousand doubters, such as with whom we cannot tell what to
+do; they are all grim-looked and unmerciful ones, and they bid
+defiance to us and thee.
+
+'Our wisdom is gone, our power is gone, because thou art departed
+from us; nor have we what we may call ours but sin, shame, and
+confusion of face for sin. Take pity upon us, O Lord, take pity
+upon us, thy miserable town of Mansoul, and save us out of the
+hands of our enemies. Amen.'
+
+This petition, as was touched afore, was handed by the Lord
+Secretary, and carried to the court by the brave and most stout
+Captain Credence. Now he carried it out at Mouth-gate, (for that,
+as I said, was the sally-port of the town,) and he went and came to
+Emmanuel with it. Now how it came out, I do not know; but for
+certain it did, and that so far as to reach the ears of Diabolus.
+Thus I conclude, because that the tyrant had it presently by the
+end, and charged the town of Mansoul with it, saying, 'Thou
+rebellious and stubborn-hearted Mansoul, I will make thee to leave
+off petitioning. Art thou yet for petitioning? I will make thee
+to leave.' Yea, he also knew who the messenger was that carried
+the petition to the Prince, and it made him both to fear and rage.
+
+Wherefore he commanded that his drum should be beat again, a thing
+that Mansoul could not abide to hear: but when Diabolus will have
+his drum beat, Mansoul must abide the noise. Well, the drum was
+beat, and the Diabolonians were gathered together.
+
+Then said Diabolus, 'O ye stout Diabolonians, be it known unto you,
+that there is treachery hatched against us in the rebellious town
+of Mansoul; for albeit the town is in our possession, as you see,
+yet these miserable Mansoulians have attempted to dare, and have
+been so hardy as yet to send to the court to Emmanuel for help.
+This I give you to understand, that ye may yet know how to carry it
+to the wretched town of Mansoul. Wherefore, O my trusty
+Diabolonians, I command that yet more and more ye distress this
+town of Mansoul, and vex it with your wiles, ravish their women,
+deflower their virgins, slay their children, brain their ancients,
+fire their town, and what other mischief you can; and let this be
+the reward of the Mansoulians from me, for their desperate
+rebellions against me.'
+
+This, you see, was the charge; but something stepped in betwixt
+that and execution, for as yet there was but little more done than
+to rage.
+
+Moreover, when Diabolus had done thus, he went the next way up to
+the castle gates, and demanded that, upon pain of death, the gates
+should be opened to him, and that entrance should be given him and
+his men that followed after. To whom Mr. Godly-Fear replied, (for
+he it was that had the charge of that gate,) that the gate should
+not be opened unto him, nor to the men that followed after him. He
+said, moreover, that Mansoul, when she had suffered awhile, should
+be made perfect, strengthened, settled.
+
+Then said Diabolus, 'Deliver me, then, the men that have petitioned
+against me, especially Captain Credence, that carried it to your
+Prince; deliver that varlet into my hands, and I will depart from
+the town.'
+
+Then up starts a Diabolonian, whose name was Mr. Fooling, and said,
+'My lord offereth you fair: it is better for you that one man
+perish, than that your whole Mansoul should be undone.'
+
+But Mr. Godly-Fear made him this replication, 'How long will
+Mansoul be kept out of the dungeon, when she hath given up her
+faith to Diabolus! As good lose the town, as lose Captain
+Credence; for if one be gone the other must follow.' But to that
+Mr. Fooling said nothing.
+
+Then did my Lord Mayor reply, and said, 'O thou devouring tyrant,
+be it known unto thee, we shall hearken to none of thy words; we
+are resolved to resist thee as long as a captain, a man, a sling,
+and a stone to throw at thee shall be found in the town of
+Mansoul.' But Diabolus answered, 'Do you hope, do you wait, do you
+look for help and deliverance? You have sent to Emmanuel, but your
+wickedness sticks too close in your skirts, to let innocent prayers
+come out of your lips. Think you that you shall be prevailers and
+prosper in this design? You will fail in your wish, you will fail
+in your attempts; for it is not only I, but your Emmanuel is
+against you: yea, it is he that hath sent me against you to subdue
+you. For what, then, do you hope? or by what means will you
+escape?'
+
+Then said the Lord Mayor, 'We have sinned indeed; but that shall be
+no help to thee, for our Emmanuel hath said it, and that in great
+faithfulness, "and him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast
+out." He hath also told us, O our enemy, that "all manner of sin
+and blasphemy shall be forgiven" to the sons of men. Therefore we
+dare not despair, but will look for, wait for, and hope for
+deliverance still.'
+
+Now, by this time, Captain Credence was returned and come from the
+court from Emmanuel to the castle of Mansoul, and he returned to
+them with a packet. So my Lord Mayor, hearing that Captain
+Credence was come, withdrew himself from the noise of the roaring
+of the tyrant, and left him to yell at the wall of the town, or
+against the gates of the castle. So he came up to the captain's
+lodgings, and saluting him, he asked him of his welfare, and what
+was the best news at court. But when he asked Captain Credence
+that, the water stood in his eyes. Then said the captain, 'Cheer
+up, my lord, for all will be well in time.' And with that he first
+produced his packet, and laid it by; but that the Lord Mayor, and
+the rest of the captains, took for sign of good tidings. Now a
+season of grace being come, he sent for all the captains and elders
+of the town, that were here and there in their lodgings in the
+castle and upon their guard, to let them know that Captain Credence
+was returned from the court, and that he had something in general,
+and something in special, to communicate to them. So they all came
+up to him, and saluted him, and asked him concerning his journey,
+and what was the best news at the court. And he answered them as
+he had done the Lord Mayor before, that all would be well at last.
+Now, when the captain had thus saluted them, he opened his packet,
+and thence did draw out his several notes for those that he had
+sent for.
+
+And the first note was for my Lord Mayor, wherein was signified:-
+That the Prince Emmanuel had taken it well that my Lord Mayor had
+been so true and trusty in his office, and the great concerns that
+lay upon him for the town and people of Mansoul. Also, he bid him
+to know, that he took it well that he had been so bold for his
+Prince Emmanuel, and had engaged so faithfully in his cause against
+Diabolus. He also signified, at the close of his letter, that he
+should shortly receive his reward.
+
+The second note that came out, was for the noble Lord Willbewill,
+wherein there was signified:- That his Prince Emmanuel did well
+understand how valiant and courageous he had been for the honour of
+his Lord, now in his absence, and when his name was under contempt
+by Diabolus. There was signified also, that his Prince had taken
+it well that he had been so faithful to the town of Mansoul, in his
+keeping of so strict a hand and eye over and so strict a rein upon
+the neck of the Diabolonians, that did still lie lurking in their
+several holes in the famous town of Mansoul. He signified,
+moreover, how that he understood that my Lord had, with his own
+hand, done great execution upon some of the chief of the rebels
+there, to the great discouragement of the adverse party and to the
+good example of the whole town of Mansoul; and that shortly his
+lordship should have his reward.
+
+The third note came out for the subordinate preacher, wherein was
+signified:- That his Prince took it well from him, that he had so
+honestly and so faithfully performed his office, and executed the
+trust committed to him by his Lord, while he exhorted, rebuked, and
+forewarned Mansoul according to the laws of the town. He
+signified, moreover, that he took it well at his hand that he
+called to fasting, to sackcloth, and ashes, when Mansoul was under
+her revolt. Also, that he called for the aid of the Captain
+Boanerges to help in so weighty a work; and that shortly he also
+should receive his reward.
+
+The fourth note came out for Mr. Godly-Fear, wherein his Lord thus
+signified:- That his Lordship observed, that he was the first of
+all the men in Mansoul that detected Mr. Carnal-Security as the
+only one that, through his subtlety and cunning, had obtained for
+Diabolus a defection and decay of goodness in the blessed town of
+Mansoul. Moreover, his Lord gave him to understand, that he still
+remembered his tears and mourning for the state of Mansoul. It was
+also observed, by the same note, that his Lord took notice of his
+detecting of this Mr. Carnal-Security, at his own table among his
+guests, in his own house, and that in the midst of his jolliness,
+even while he was seeking to perfect his villanies against the town
+of Mansoul. Emmanuel also took notice that this reverend person,
+Mr. Godly-Fear, stood stoutly to it, at the gates of the castle,
+against all the threats and attempts of the tyrant; and that he had
+put the townsmen in a way to make their petition to their Prince,
+so as that he might accept thereof, and as they might obtain an
+answer of peace; and that therefore shortly he should receive his
+reward.
+
+After all this, there was yet produced a note which was written to
+the whole town of Mansoul, whereby they perceived--That their Lord
+took notice of their so often repeating of petitions to him; and
+that they should see more of the fruits of such their doings in
+time to come. Their Prince did also therein tell them, that he
+took it well, that their heart and mind, now at last, abode fixed
+upon him and his ways, though Diabolus had made such inroads upon
+them; and that neither flatteries on the one hand, nor hardships on
+the other, could make them yield to serve his cruel designs. There
+was also inserted at the bottom of this note--That his Lordship had
+left the town of Mansoul in the hands of the Lord Secretary, and
+under the conduct of Captain Credence, saying, 'Beware that you yet
+yield yourselves unto their governance; and in due time you shall
+receive your reward.'
+
+So, after the brave Captain Credence had delivered his notes to
+those to whom they belonged, he retired himself to my Lord
+Secretary's lodgings, and there spends time in conversing with him;
+for they too were very great one with another, and did indeed know
+more how things would go with Mansoul than did all the townsmen
+besides. The Lord Secretary also loved the Captain Credence
+dearly; yea, many a good bit was sent him from my Lord's table;
+also, he might have a show of countenance, when the rest of Mansoul
+lay under the clouds: so, after some time for converse was spent,
+the captain betook himself to his chambers to rest. But it was not
+long after when my Lord did send for the captain again; so the
+captain came to him, and they greeted one another with usual
+salutations. Then said the captain to the Lord Secretary, 'What
+hath my Lord to say to his servant?' So the Lord Secretary took
+him and had him aside, and after a sign or two of more favour, he
+said, 'I have made thee the Lord's lieutenant over all the forces
+in Mansoul; so that, from this day forward, all men in Mansoul
+shall be at thy word; and thou shalt be he that shall lead in, and
+that shall lead out Mansoul. Thou shalt therefore manage,
+according to thy place, the war for thy Prince, and for the town of
+Mansoul, against the force and power of Diabolus; and at thy
+command shall the rest of the captains be.'
+
+Now the townsmen began to perceive what interest the captain had,
+both with the court, and also with the Lord Secretary in Mansoul;
+for no man before could speed when sent, nor bring such good news
+from Emmanuel as he. Wherefore what do they, after some
+lamentation that they made no more use of him in their distresses,
+but send by their subordinate preacher to the Lord Secretary, to
+desire him that all that ever they were and had might be put under
+the government, care, custody, and conduct of Captain Credence.
+
+So their preacher went and did his errand, and received this answer
+from the mouth of his Lord: that Captain Credence should be the
+great doer in all the King's army, against the King's enemies, and
+also for the welfare of Mansoul. So he bowed to the ground, and
+thanked his Lordship, and returned and told his news to the
+townsfolk. But all this was done with all imaginable secrecy,
+because the foes had yet great strength in the town. But to return
+to our story again.
+
+When Diabolus saw himself thus boldly confronted by the Lord Mayor,
+and perceived the stoutness of Mr. Godly-Fear, he fell into a rage,
+and forthwith called a council of war, that he might be revenged on
+Mansoul. So all the princes of the pit came together, and old
+Incredulity at the head of them, with all the captains of his army.
+So they consult what to do. Now the effect and conclusion of the
+council that day was how they might take the castle, because they
+could not conclude themselves masters of the town so long as that
+was in the possession of their enemies.
+
+So one advised this way, and another advised that; but when they
+could not agree in their verdict, Apollyon, that president of the
+council, stood up, and thus he began: 'My brotherhood,' quoth he,
+'I have two things to propound unto you; and my first is this. Let
+us withdraw ourselves from the town into the plain again, for our
+presence here will do us no good, because the castle is yet in our
+enemies' hands; nor is it possible that we should take that, so
+long as so many brave captains are in it, and that this bold
+fellow, Godly-Fear, is made the keeper of the gates of it. Now,
+when we have withdrawn ourselves into the plain, they, of their own
+accord, will be glad of some little ease; and it may be, of their
+own accord, they again may begin to be remiss, and even their so
+being will give them a bigger blow than we can possibly give them
+ourselves. But if that should fail, our going forth of the town
+may draw the captains out after us; and you know what it cost them
+when we fought them in the field before. Besides, can we but draw
+them out into the field, we may lay an ambush behind the town,
+which shall, when they are come forth abroad, rush in and take
+possession of the castle.'
+
+But Beelzebub stood up, and replied, saying: 'It is impossible to
+draw them all off from the castle; some, you may be sure, will lie
+there to keep that; wherefore it will be but in vain thus to
+attempt, unless we were sure that they will all come out.' He
+therefore concluded that what was done must be done by some other
+means. And the most likely means that the greatest of their heads
+could invent, was that which Apollyon had advised to before,
+namely, to get the townsmen again to sin. 'For,' said he, 'it is
+not our being in the town, nor in the field, nor our fighting, nor
+our killing of their men, that can make us the masters of Mansoul;
+for so long as one in the town is able to lift up his finger
+against us, Emmanuel will take their parts; and if he shall take
+their parts, we know what time of day it will be with us.
+Wherefore, for my part,' quoth he, 'there is, in my judgment, no
+way to bring them into bondage to us, like inventing a way to make
+them sin. Had we,' said he, 'left all our doubters at home, we had
+done as well as we have done now, unless we could have made them
+the masters and governors of the castle; for doubters at a distance
+are but like objections refelled with arguments. Indeed, can we
+but get them into the hold, and make them possessors of that, the
+day will be our own. Let us, therefore, withdraw ourselves into
+the plain, (not expecting that the captains in Mansoul should
+follow us,) but yet, I say, let us do this, and before we so do,
+let us advise again with our trusty Diabolonians that are yet in
+their holds of Mansoul, and set them to work to betray the town to
+us; for they indeed must do it, or it will be left undone for
+ever.' By these sayings of Beelzebub, (for I think it was he that
+gave this counsel,) the whole conclave was forced to be of his
+opinion, namely, that the way to get the castle was to get the town
+to sin. Then they fell to inventing by what means they might do
+this thing.
+
+Then Lucifer stood up, and said: 'The counsel of Beelzebub is
+pertinent. Now, the way to bring this to pass, in mine opinion, is
+this: let us withdraw our force from the town of Mansoul; let us
+do this, and let us terrify them no more, either with summons, or
+threats, or with the noise of our drum, or any other awakening
+means. Only let us lie in the field at a distance, and be as if we
+regarded them not; for frights, I see, do but awaken them, and make
+them more stand to their arms. I have also another stratagem in my
+head: you know Mansoul is a market-town, and a town that delights
+in commerce; what, therefore, if some of our Diabolonians shall
+feign themselves far-country men, and shall go out and bring to the
+market of Mansoul some of our wares to sell; and what matter at
+what rates they sell their wares, though it be but for half the
+worth? Now, let those that thus shall trade in their market be
+those that are witty and true to us, and I will lay my crown to
+pawn it will do. There are two that are come to my thoughts
+already, that I think will be arch at this work, and they are Mr.
+Penny-wise-pound-foolish, and Mr. Get-i'the-hundred-and-lose-i'the-
+shire; nor is this man with the long name at all inferior to the
+other. What, also, if you join with them Mr. Sweet-world and Mr.
+Present-good; they are men that are civil and cunning, but our true
+friends and helpers. Let these, with as many more, engage in this
+business for us, and let Mansoul be taken up in much business, and
+let them grow full and rich, and this is the way to get ground of
+them. Remember ye not that thus we prevailed upon Laodicea, and
+how many at present do we hold in this snare? Now, when they begin
+to grow full, they will forget their misery; and if we shall not
+affright them, they may happen to fall asleep, and so be got to
+neglect their town watch, their castle watch, as well as their
+watch at the gates.
+
+'Yea, may we not, by this means, so cumber Mansoul with abundance,
+that they shall be forced to make of their castle a warehouse,
+instead of a garrison fortified against us, and a receptacle for
+men of war. Thus, if we get our goods and commodities thither, I
+reckon that the castle is more than half ours. Besides, could we
+so order it that it shall be filled with such kind of wares, then
+if we made a sudden assault upon them, it would be hard for the
+captains to take shelter there. Do you not know that of the
+parable, "The deceitfulness of riches choke the word"? and again,
+"When the heart is over-charged with surfeiting and drunkenness,
+and the cares of this life," all mischief comes upon them at
+unawares?
+
+'Furthermore, my lords,' quoth he, 'you very well know that it is
+not easy for a people to be filled with our things, and not to have
+some of our Diabolonians as retainers to their houses and services.
+Where is a Mansoulian that is full of this world, that has not for
+his servants and waiting-men, Mr. Profuse, or Mr. Prodigality, or
+some other of our Diabolonian gang, as Mr. Voluptuous, Mr.
+Pragmatical, Mr. Ostentation, or the like? Now these can take the
+castle of Mansoul, or blow it up, or make it unfit for a garrison
+for Emmanuel, and any of these will do. Yea, these, for aught I
+know, may do it for us sooner than an army of twenty thousand men.
+Wherefore, to end as I began, my advice is, that we quietly
+withdraw ourselves, not offering any further force, or forcible
+attempts, upon the castle, at least at this time; and let us set on
+foot our new project, and let us see if that will not make them
+destroy themselves.'
+
+This advice was highly applauded by them all, and was accounted the
+very masterpiece of hell, namely, to choke Mansoul with a fulness
+of this world, and to surfeit her heart with the good things
+thereof. But see how things meet together! Just as this
+Diabolonian council was broken up, Captain Credence received a
+letter from Emmanuel, the contents of which were these: That upon
+the third day he would meet him in the field in the plains about
+Mansoul. 'Meet me in the field!' quoth the Captain; 'what meaneth
+my lord by this? I know not what he meaneth by meeting me in the
+field.' So he took the note in his hand, and did carry it to my
+Lord Secretary, to ask his thoughts thereupon; for my Lord was a
+seer in all matters concerning the King, and also for the good and
+comfort of the town of Mansoul. So he showed my Lord the note, and
+desired his opinion thereof. 'For my part,' quoth Captain
+Credence, 'I know not the meaning thereof.' So my lord did take
+and read it and, after a little pause, he said, 'The Diabolonians
+have had against Mansoul a great consultation to-day; they have, I
+say, this day been contriving the utter ruin of the town; and the
+result of their council is, to set Mansoul into such a way which,
+if taken, will surely make her destroy herself. And, to this end,
+they are making ready for their own departure out of the town,
+intending to betake themselves to the field again,' and there to
+lie till they shall see whether this their project will take or no.
+But be thou ready with the men of thy Lord, (for on the third day
+they will be in the plain,) there to fall upon the Diabolonians;
+for the Prince will by that time be in the field; yea, by that it
+is break of day, sun-rising, or before, and that with a mighty
+force against them. So he shall be before them, and thou shalt be
+behind them, and betwixt you both their army shall be destroyed.'
+
+When Captain Credence heard this, away goes he to the rest of the
+captains, and tells them what a note he had a while since received
+from the hand of Emmanuel. 'And,' said he, 'that which was dark
+therein hath my lord the Lord Secretary expounded unto me.' He
+told them, moreover, what by himself and by them must be done to
+answer the mind of their Lord. Then were the captains glad; and
+Captain Credence commanded that all the King's trumpeters should
+ascend to the battlements of the castle, and there, in the audience
+of Diabolus and of the whole town of Mansoul, make the best music
+that heart could invent. The trumpeters then did as they were
+commanded. They got themselves up to the top of the castle, and
+thus they began to sound. Then did Diabolus start, and said, 'What
+can be the meaning of this? they neither sound Boot-and-saddle, nor
+Horse-and-away, nor a charge. What do these madmen mean that yet
+they should be so merry and glad?' Then answered one of themselves
+and said, 'This is for joy that their Prince Emmanuel is coming to
+relieve the town of Mansoul; and to this end he is at the head of
+an army, and that this relief is near.'
+
+The men of Mansoul also were greatly concerned at this melodious
+charm of the trumpets; they said, yea, they answered one another,
+saying, 'This can be no harm to us; surely this can be no harm to
+us.' Then said the Diabolonians, 'What had we best to do?' and it
+was answered, 'It was best to quit the town;' and 'that,' said one,
+'ye may do in pursuance of your last counsel, and by so doing also
+be better able to give the enemy battle, should an army from
+without come upon us. So, on the second day, they withdrew
+themselves from Mansoul, and abode in the plains without; but they
+encamped themselves before Eye-gate, in what terrene and terrible
+manner they could. The reason why they would not abide in the town
+(besides the reasons that were debated in their late conclave) was,
+for that they were not possessed of the stronghold, and 'because,'
+said they, 'we shall have more convenience to fight, and also to
+fly, if need be, when we are encamped in the open plains.'
+Besides, the town would have been a pit for them rather than a
+place of defence, had the Prince come up and inclosed them fast
+therein. Therefore they betook themselves to the field, that they
+might also be out of the reach of the slings, by which they were
+much annoyed all the while that they were in the town.
+
+Well, the time that the captains were to fall upon the Diabolonians
+being come, they eagerly prepared themselves for action; for
+Captain Credence had told the captains over night, that they should
+meet their Prince in the field to-morrow. This, therefore, made
+them yet far more desirous to be engaging the enemy; for 'You shall
+see the Prince in the field to-morrow' was like oil to a flaming
+fire, for of a long time they had been at a distance: they
+therefore were for this the more earnest and desirous of the work.
+So, as I said, the hour being come, Captain Credence, with the rest
+of the men of war, drew out their forces before it was day by the
+sally-port of the town. And, being all ready, Captain Credence
+went up to the head of the army, and gave to the rest of the
+captains the word, and so they to their under-officers and
+soldiers: the word was 'The sword of the Prince Emmanuel, and the
+shield of Captain Credence;' which is, in the Mansoulian tongue,
+'The word of God and faith.' Then the captains fell on, and began
+roundly to front, and flank, and rear Diabolus's camp.
+
+Now, they left Captain Experience in the town, because he was yet
+ill of his wounds, which the Diabolonians had given him in the last
+fight. But when he perceived that the captains were at it, what
+does he but, calling for his crutches with haste, gets up, and away
+he goes to the battle, saying, 'Shall I lie here, when my brethren
+are in the fight, and when Emmanuel, the Prince, will show himself
+in the field to his servants?' But when the enemy saw the man come
+with his crutches, they were daunted yet the more; 'for,' thought
+they, 'what spirit has possessed these Mansoulians, that they fight
+us upon their crutches?' Well, the captains, as I said, fell on,
+and did bravely handle their weapons, still crying out and
+shouting, as they laid on blows, 'The sword of the Prince Emmanuel,
+and the shield of Captain Credence!'
+
+Now, when Diabolus saw that the captains were come out, and that so
+valiantly they surrounded his men, he concluded that, for the
+present, nothing from them was to be looked for but blows, and the
+dints of their 'two-edged sword.'
+
+Wherefore he also falls on upon the Prince's army with all his
+deadly force: so the battle was joined. Now who was it that at
+first Diabolus met with in the fight, but Captain Credence on the
+one hand, and the Lord Willbewill on the other: now Willbewill's
+blows were like the blows of a giant, for that man had a strong
+arm, and he fell in upon the election doubters, for they were the
+life-guard of Diabolus, and he kept them in play a good while,
+cutting and battering shrewdly. Now when Captain Credence saw my
+lord engaged, he did stoutly fall on, on the other hand, upon the
+same company also; so they put them to great disorder. Now Captain
+Good-Hope had engaged the vocation doubters, and they were sturdy
+men; but the captain was a valiant man: Captain Experience did
+also send him some aid; so he made the vocation doubters to
+retreat. The rest of the armies were hotly engaged, and that on
+every side, and the Diabolonians did fight stoutly. Then did my
+Lord Secretary command that the slings from the castle should be
+played; and his men could throw stones at an hair's breadth. But,
+after a while, those that were made to fly before the captains of
+the Prince, did begin to rally again, and they came up stoutly upon
+the rear of the Prince's army: wherefore the Prince's army began
+to faint; but, remembering that they should see the face of their
+Prince by-and-by, they took courage, and a very fierce battle was
+fought. Then shouted the captains, saying, 'The sword of the
+Prince Emmanuel, and the shield of Captain Credence!' and with that
+Diabolus gave back, thinking that more aid had been come. But no
+Emmanuel as yet appeared. Moreover, the battle did hang in doubt;
+and they made a little retreat on both sides. Now, in the time of
+respite, Captain Credence bravely encouraged his men to stand to
+it; and Diabolus did the like, as well as he could. But Captain
+Credence made a brave speech to his soldiers, the contents whereof
+here follow:-
+
+'Gentlemen soldiers, and my brethren in this design, it rejoiceth
+me much to see in the field for our Prince, this day, so stout and
+so valiant an army, and such faithful lovers of Mansoul. You have
+hitherto, as hath become you, shown yourselves men of truth and
+courage against the Diabolonian forces; so that, for all their
+boast, they have not yet much cause to boast of their gettings.
+Now take to yourselves your wonted courage, and show yourselves men
+even this once only; for in a few minutes after the next
+engagement, this time, you shall see your Prince show himself in
+the field; for we must make this second assault upon this tyrant
+Diabolus, and then Emmanuel comes.'
+
+No sooner had the captain made this speech to his soldiers, but one
+Mr. Speedy came post to the captain from the Prince, to tell him
+that Emmanuel was at hand. This news when the captain had
+received, he communicated to the other field-officers, and they
+again to their soldiers and men of war. Wherefore, like men raised
+from the dead, so the captains and their men arose, made up to the
+enemy, and cried as before, 'The sword of the Prince Emmanuel, and
+the shield of Captain Credence!'
+
+The Diabolonians also bestirred themselves, and made resistance as
+well as they could; but in this last engagement the Diabolonians
+lost their courage, and many of the doubters fell down dead to the
+ground. Now, when they had been in heat of battle about an hour or
+more, Captain Credence lift up his eyes and saw, and, behold,
+Emmanuel came; and he came with colours flying, trumpets sounding,
+and the feet of his men scarce touched the ground, they hasted with
+that celerity towards the captains that were engaged. Then did
+Credence wind with his men to the townward, and gave to Diabolus
+the field: so Emmanuel came upon him on the one side, and the
+enemies' place was betwixt them both. Then again they fell to it
+afresh; and now it was but a little while more but Emmanuel and
+Captain Credence met, still trampling down the slain as they came.
+
+But when the captains saw that the Prince was come, and that he
+fell upon the Diabolonians on the other side, and that Captain
+Credence and his Highness had got them up betwixt them, they
+shouted, (they so shouted that the ground rent again,) saying, 'The
+sword of Emmanuel, and the shield of Captain Credence!' Now, when
+Diabolus saw that he and his forces were so hard beset by the
+Prince and his princely army, what does he, and the lords of the
+pit that were with him, but make their escape, and forsake their
+army, and leave them to fall by the hand of Emmanuel, and of his
+noble Captain Credence: so they fell all down slain before them,
+before the Prince, and before his royal army; there was not left so
+much as one doubter alive; they lay spread upon the ground dead
+men, as one would spread dung upon the land.
+
+When the battle was over, all things came into order in the camp.
+Then the captains and elders of Mansoul came together to salute
+Emmanuel, while without the corporation: so they saluted him, and
+welcomed him, and that with a thousand welcomes, for that he was
+come to the borders of Mansoul again. So he smiled upon them, and
+said, 'Peace be to you.' Then they addressed themselves to go to
+the town; they went then to go up to Mansoul, they, the Prince,
+with all the new forces that now he had brought with him to the
+war. Also all the gates of the town were set open for his
+reception, so glad were they of his blessed return. And this was
+the manner and order of this going of his into Mansoul:
+
+First. As I said, all the gates of the town were set open, yea,
+the gates of the castle also; the elders, too, of the town of
+Mansoul placed themselves at the gates of the town, to salute him
+at his entrance thither: and so they did; for, as he drew near,
+and approached towards the gates, they said, 'Lift up your heads, O
+ye gates; and be ye lift up, ye everlasting doors; and the King of
+glory shall come in.' And they answered again, 'Who is the King of
+glory?' and they made return to themselves, 'The Lord, strong and
+mighty; the Lord mighty in battle. Lift up your heads, O ye gates;
+even lift them up, ye everlasting doors,' etc.
+
+Secondly. It was ordered also, by those of Mansoul, that all the
+way from the town gates to those of the castle, his blessed Majesty
+should be entertained with the song, by them that had the best
+skill in music in all the town of Mansoul: then did the elders,
+and the rest of the men of Mansoul, answer one another as Emmanuel
+entered the town, till he came at the castle gates, with songs and
+sound of trumpets, saying, 'They have seen thy goings, O God; even
+the goings of my God, my King, in the sanctuary. So the singers
+went before, the players on instruments followed after, and among
+them were the damsels playing on timbrels.'
+
+Thirdly. Then the captains, (for I would speak a word of them,)
+they in their order waited on the Prince, as he entered into the
+gates of Mansoul. Captain Credence went before, and Captain Good-
+Hope with him; Captain Charity came behind with other of his
+companions, and Captain Patience followed after all; and the rest
+of the captains, some on the right hand, and some on the left,
+accompanied Emmanuel into Mansoul. And all the while the colours
+were displayed, the trumpets sounded, and continual shoutings were
+among the soldiers. The Prince himself rode into the town in his
+armour, which was all of beaten gold, and in his chariot--the
+pillars of it were of silver, the bottom thereof of gold, the
+covering of it was of purple, the midst thereof being paved with
+love for the daughters of the town of Mansoul.
+
+Fourthly. When the Prince was come to the entrance of Mansoul, he
+found all the streets strewed with lilies and flowers, curiously
+decked with boughs and branches from the green trees that stood
+round about the town. Every door also was filled with persons, who
+had adorned every one their fore-part against their house with
+something of variety and singular excellency, to entertain him
+withal as he passed in the streets: they also themselves, as
+Emmanuel passed by, did welcome him with shouts and acclamations of
+joy, saying, 'Blessed be the Prince that cometh in the name of his
+Father Shaddai.'
+
+Fifthly. At the castle gates the elders of Mansoul, namely, the
+Lord Mayor, the Lord Willbewill, the subordinate preacher, Mr.
+Knowledge, and Mr. Mind, with other of the gentry of the place,
+saluted Emmanuel again. They bowed before him, they kissed the
+dust of his feet, they thanked, they blessed, and praised his
+Highness for not taking advantage against them for their sins, but
+rather had pity upon them in their misery, and returned to them
+with mercies, and to build up their Mansoul for ever. Thus was he
+had up straightway to the castle; for that was the royal palace,
+and the place where his honour was to dwell; the which was ready
+prepared for his Highness by the presence of the Lord Secretary,
+and the work of Captain Credence. So he entered in.
+
+Sixthly. Then the people and commonalty of the town of Mansoul
+came to him into the castle to mourn, and to weep, and to lament
+for their wickedness, by which they had forced him out of the town.
+So when they were come, bowed themselves to the ground seven times;
+they also wept, they wept aloud, and asked forgiveness of the
+Prince, and prayed that he would again, as of old, confirm his love
+to Mansoul.
+
+To the which the great Prince replied, 'Weep not, but go your way,
+eat the fat, and drink the sweet, and send portions to them for
+whom nought is prepared; for the joy of your Lord is your strength.
+I am returned to Mansoul with mercies, and my name shall be set up,
+exalted, and magnified by it.' He also took these inhabitants, and
+kissed them, and laid them in his bosom.
+
+Moreover, he gave to the elders of Mansoul, and to each town
+officer, a chain of gold and a signet. He also sent to their wives
+earrings and jewels, and bracelets, and other things. He also
+bestowed upon the true-born children of Mansoul many precious
+things.
+
+When Emmanuel, the Prince, had done all these things for the famous
+town of Mansoul, then he said unto them, first, 'Wash your
+garments, then put on your ornaments, and then come to me into the
+castle of Mansoul.' So they went to the fountain that was set open
+for Judah and Jerusalem to wash in; and there they washed, and
+there they made their 'garments white,' and came again to the
+Prince into the castle, and thus they stood before him.
+
+And now there was music and dancing throughout the whole town of
+Mansoul, and that because their Prince had again granted to them
+his presence and the light of his countenance; the bells also did
+ring, and the sun shone comfortably upon them for a great while
+together.
+
+The town of Mansoul did also now more thoroughly seek the
+destruction and ruin of all remaining Diabolonians that abode in
+the walls, and the dens that they had in the town of Mansoul; for
+there was of them that had, to this day, escaped with life and limb
+from the hand of their suppressors in the famous town of Mansoul.
+
+But my Lord Willbewill was a greater terror to them now than ever
+he had been before; forasmuch as his heart was yet more fully bent
+to seek, contrive, and pursue them to the death; he pursued them
+night and day, and did put them now to sore distress, as will
+afterwards appear.
+
+After things were thus far put into order in the famous town of
+Mansoul, care was taken, and order given by the blessed Prince
+Emmanuel, that the townsmen should, without further delay, appoint
+some to go forth into the plain to bury the dead that were there,--
+the dead that fell by the sword of Emmanuel, and by the shield of
+the Captain Credence,--lest the fumes and ill savours that would
+arise from them might infect the air, and so annoy the famous town
+of Mansoul. This also was a reason of this order, namely, that, as
+much as in Mansoul lay, they might cut off the name, and being, and
+remembrance of those enemies from the thought of the famous town of
+Mansoul and its inhabitants.
+
+So order was given out by the Lord Mayor, that wise and trusty
+friend of the town of Mansoul, that persons should be employed
+about this necessary business; and Mr. Godly-Fear, and one Mr.
+Upright, were to be overseers about this matter: so persons were
+put under them to work in the fields, and to bury the slain that
+lay dead in the plains. And these were their places of employment:
+some were to make the graves, some to bury the dead, and some were
+to go to and fro in the plains, and also round about the borders of
+Mansoul, to see if a skull, or a bone, or a piece of a bone of a
+doubter, was yet to be found above ground anywhere near the
+corporation; and if any were found, it was ordered, that the
+searchers that searched should set up a mark thereby, and a sign,
+that those that were appointed to bury them might find it, and bury
+it out of sight, that the name and remembrance of a Diabolonian
+doubter might be blotted out from under heaven; and that the
+children, and they that were to be born in Mansoul, might not know,
+if possible, what a skull, what a bone, or a piece of a bone of a
+doubter was. So the buriers, and those that were appointed for
+that purpose, did as they were commanded: they buried the
+doubters, and all the skulls and bones, and pieces of bones of
+doubters, wherever they found them; and so they cleansed the
+plains. Now also Mr. God's-Peace took up his commission, and acted
+again as in former days.
+
+Thus they buried in the plains about Mansoul the election doubters,
+the vocation doubters, the grace doubters, the perseverance
+doubters, the resurrection doubters, the salvation doubters, and
+the glory doubters; whose captains were Captain Rage, Captain
+Cruel, Captain Damnation, Captain Insatiable, Captain Brimstone,
+Captain Torment, Captain No-Ease, Captain Sepulchre, and Captain
+Past-Hope; and old Incredulity was, under Diabolus, their general.
+There were also the seven heads of their army; and they were the
+Lord Beelzebub, the Lord Lucifer, the Lord Legion, the Lord
+Apollyon, the Lord Python, the Lord Cerberus, and the Lord Belial.
+But the princes and the captains, with old Incredulity, their
+general, did all of them make their escape: so their men fell down
+slain by the power of the Prince's forces, and by the hands of the
+men of the town of Mansoul. They also were buried as is afore
+related, to the exceeding great joy of the now famous town of
+Mansoul. They that buried them buried also with them their arms,
+which were cruel instruments of death: (their weapons were arrows,
+darts, mauls, firebrands, and the like). They buried also their
+armour, their colours, banners, with the standard of Diabolus, and
+what else soever they could find that did but smell of a
+Diabolonian doubter.
+
+Now when the tyrant had arrived at Hell-Gate Hill, with his old
+friend Incredulity, they immediately descended the den, and having
+there with their fellows for a while condoled their misfortune and
+great loss that they sustained against the town of Mansoul, they
+fell at length into a passion, and revenged they would be for the
+loss that they sustained before the town of Mansoul. Wherefore
+they presently call a council to contrive yet further what was to
+be done against the famous town of Mansoul; for their yawning
+paunches could not wait to see the result of their Lord Lucifer's
+and their Lord Apollyon's counsel that they had given before; for
+their raging gorge thought every day, even as long as a short for
+ever, until they were filled with the body and soul, with the flesh
+and bones, and with all the delicates of Mansoul. They therefore
+resolve to make another attempt upon the town of Mansoul, and that
+by an army mixed and made up partly of doubters, and partly of
+blood-men. A more particular account now take of both.
+
+The doubters are such as have their name from their nature, as well
+as from the land and kingdom where they are born: their nature is
+to put a question upon every one of the truths of Emmanuel; and
+their country is called the land of Doubting, and that land lieth
+off, and farthest remote to the north, between the land of Darkness
+and that called the 'valley of the shadow of death.' For though
+the land of Darkness, and that called 'the valley of the shadow of
+death,' be sometimes called as if they were one and the self-same
+place, yet indeed they are two, lying but a little way asunder, and
+the land of Doubting points in, and lieth between them. This is
+the land of Doubting; and these that came with Diabolus to ruin the
+town of Mansoul are the natives of that country.
+
+The blood-men are a people that have their name derived from the
+malignity of their nature, and from the fury that is in them to
+execute it upon the town of Mansoul: their land lieth under the
+dog-star, and by that they are governed as to their intellectuals.
+The name of their country is the province of Loath-good: the
+remote parts of it are far distant from the land of Doubting, yet
+they do both butt and bound upon the hill called Hell-Gate Hill.
+These people are always in league with the doubters, for they
+jointly do make question of the faith and fidelity of the men of
+the town of Mansoul, and so are both alike qualified for the
+service of their prince.
+
+Now of these two countries did Diabolus, by the beating of his
+drum, raise another army against the town of Mansoul, of five-and-
+twenty thousand strong. There were ten thousand doubters, and
+fifteen thousand blood-men, and they were put under several
+captains for the war; and old Incredulity was again made general of
+the army.
+
+As for the doubters, their captains were five of the seven that
+were heads of the last Diabolonian army, and these are their names:
+Captain Beelzebub, Captain Lucifer, Captain Apollyon, Captain
+Legion, and Captain Cerberus; and the captains that they had before
+were some of them made lieutenants, and some ensigns of the army.
+
+But Diabolus did not count that, in this expedition of his, these
+doubters would prove his principal men, for their manhood had been
+tried before; also the Mansoulians had put them to the worst: only
+he did bring them to multiply a number, and to help, if need was,
+at a pinch. But his trust he put in his blood-men, for that they
+were all rugged villains, and he knew that they had done feats
+heretofore.
+
+As for the blood-men, they also were under command and the names of
+their captains were, Captain Cain, Captain Nimrod, Captain Ishmael,
+Captain Esau, Captain Saul, Captain Absalom, Captain Judas, and
+Captain Pope.
+
+1. Captain Cain was over two bands, namely, the zealous and the
+angry blood-men: his standard-bearer bare the red colours, and his
+scutcheon was the murdering club.
+
+2. Captain Nimrod was captain over two bands, namely, the
+tyrannical and encroaching blood-men: his standard-bearer bare the
+red colours, and his scutcheon was the great bloodhound.
+
+3. Captain Ishmael was captain over two bands, namely, the mocking
+and scorning blood-men: his standard-bearer bare the red colours,
+and his scutcheon was one mocking at Abraham's Isaac.
+
+4. Captain Esau was captain over two bands, namely, the blood-men
+that grudged that another should have the blessing; also over the
+blood-men that are for executing their private revenge upon others:
+his standard-bearer bare the red colours, and his scutcheon was one
+privately lurking to murder Jacob.
+
+5. Captain Saul was captain over two bands, namely, the
+groundlessly jealous and the devilishly furious blood-men: his
+standard-bearer bare the red colours, and his scutcheon was three
+bloody darts cast at harmless David.
+
+6. Captain Absalom was captain over two bands, namely, over the
+blood-men that will kill a father or a friend for the glory of this
+world; also over those blood-men that will hold one fair in hand
+with words, till they shall have pierced him with their swords:
+his standard-bearer did bear the red colours, and his scutcheon was
+the son pursuing the father's blood.
+
+7. Captain Judas was over two bands, namely, the blood-men that
+will sell a man's life for money, and those also that will betray
+their friend with a kiss: his standard-bearer bare the red
+colours, and his scutcheon was thirty pieces of silver and the
+halter.
+
+8. Captain Pope was captain over one band, for all these spirits
+are joined in one under him: his standard-bearer bare the red
+colours, and his scutcheon was the stake, the flame, and the good
+man in it.
+
+Now, the reason why Diabolus did so soon rally another force, after
+he had been beaten out of the field, was, for that he put mighty
+confidence in this army of blood-men; for he put a great deal of
+more trust in them than he did before in his army of doubters;
+though they had also often done great service for him in the
+strengthening of him in his kingdom. But these blood-men, he had
+proved them often, and their sword did seldom return empty.
+Besides, he knew that these, like mastiffs, would fasten upon any;
+upon father, mother, brother, sister, prince, or governor, yea upon
+the Prince of princes. And that which encouraged him the more was,
+for that they once did force Emmanuel out of the kingdom of
+Universe; 'And why,' thought he, 'may they not also drive him from
+the town of Mansoul?'
+
+So this army of five-and-twenty thousand strong was, by their
+general, the great Lord Incredulity, led up against the town of
+Mansoul. Now Mr. Prywell, the scoutmaster-general, did himself go
+out to spy, and he did bring Mansoul tidings of their coming.
+Wherefore they shut up their gates, and put themselves in a posture
+of defence against these new Diabolonians that came up against the
+town.
+
+So Diabolus brought up his army, and beleaguered the town of
+Mansoul; the doubters were placed about Feel-gate, and the blood-
+men set down before Eye-gate and Ear-gate.
+
+Now when this army had thus encamped themselves, Incredulity did,
+in the name of Diabolus, his own name, and in the name of the
+blood-men and the rest that were with him, send a summons as hot as
+a red-hot iron to Mansoul, to yield to their demands; threatening,
+that if they still stood it out against them, they would presently
+burn down Mansoul with fire. For you must know that, as for the
+blood-men, they were not so much that Mansoul should be
+surrendered, as that Mansoul should be destroyed, and cut off out
+of the land of the living. True, they send to them to surrender;
+but should they so do, that would not stench or quench the thirsts
+of these men. They must have blood, the blood of Mansoul, else
+they die; and it is from hence that they have their name.
+Wherefore these blood-men he reserved while now that they might,
+when all his engines proved ineffectual, as his last and sure card
+be played against the town of Mansoul.
+
+Now, when the townsmen had received this red-hot summons, it begat
+in them at present some changing and interchanging thoughts; but
+they jointly agreed, in less than half an hour, to carry the
+summons to the Prince, the which they did when they had writ at the
+bottom of it, 'Lord, save Mansoul from bloody men!'
+
+So he took it, and looked upon it, and considered it, and took
+notice also of that short petition that the men of Mansoul had
+written at the bottom of it, and called to him the noble Captain
+Credence, and bid him go and take Captain Patience with him, and go
+and take care of that side of Mansoul that was beleaguered by the
+blood-men. So they went and did as they were commanded: the
+Captain Credence went and took Captain Patience, and they both
+secured that side of Mansoul that was besieged by the blood-men.
+
+Then he commanded that Captain Good-hope and Captain Charity, and
+my Lord Willbewill, should take charge of the other side of the
+town. 'And I,' said the Prince, 'will set my standard upon the
+battlements of your castle, and do you three watch against the
+doubters.' This done, he again commanded that the brave captain,
+the Captain Experience, should draw up his men in the market-place,
+and that there he should exercise them day by day before the people
+of the town of Mansoul. Now this siege was long, and many a fierce
+attempt did the enemy, especially those called the blood-men, make
+upon the town of Mansoul; and many a shrewd brush did some of the
+townsmen meet with from them, especially Captain Self-Denial, who,
+I should have told you before, was commanded to take the care of
+Ear-gate and Eye-gate now against the blood-men. This Captain
+Self-Denial was a young man, but stout, and a townsman in Mansoul,
+as Captain Experience also was. And Emmanuel, at his second return
+to Mansoul, made him a captain over a thousand of the Mansoulians,
+for the good of the corporation. This captain, therefore, being an
+hardy man, and a man of great courage, and willing to venture
+himself for the good of the town of Mansoul, would now and then
+sally out upon the blood-men, and give them many notable alarms,
+and entered several brisk skirmishes with them, and also did some
+execution upon them; but you must think that this could not easily
+be done, but he must meet with brushes himself, for he carried
+several of their marks in his face; yea, and some in some other
+parts of his body.
+
+So, after some time spent for the trial of the faith, and hope, and
+love of the town of Mansoul, the Prince Emmanuel upon a day calls
+his captains and men of war together, and divides them into two
+companies; this done, he commands them at a time appointed, and
+that in the morning very early, to sally out upon the enemy,
+saying: 'Let half of you fall upon the doubters, and half of you
+fall upon the blood-men. Those of you that go out against the
+doubters, kill and slay, and cause to perish so many of them as by
+any means you can lay hands on; but for you that go out against the
+blood-men, slay them not, but take them alive.'
+
+So, at the time appointed, betimes in the morning, the captains
+went out as they were commanded, against the enemies. Captain
+Good-Hope, Captain Charity, and those that were joined with them,
+as Captain Innocent and Captain Experience, went out against the
+doubters; and Captain Credence, and Captain Patience, with Captain
+Self-Denial, and the rest that were to join with them, went out
+against the blood-men.
+
+Now, those that went out against the doubters drew up into a body
+before the plain, and marched on to bid them battle. But the
+doubters, remembering their last success, made a retreat, not
+daring to stand the shock, but fled from the Prince's men;
+wherefore they pursued them, and in their pursuit slew many, but
+they could not catch them all. Now those that escaped went some of
+them home; and the rest by fives, nines, and seventeens, like
+wanderers, went straggling up and down the country, where they upon
+the barbarous people showed and exercised many of their Diabolonian
+actions: nor did these people rise up in arms against them, but
+suffered themselves to be enslaved by them. They would also after
+this show themselves in companies before the town of Mansoul, but
+never to abide in it; for if Captain Credence, Captain Good-Hope,
+or Captain Experience did but show themselves, they fled.
+
+Those that went out against the blood-men did as they were
+commanded: they forbore to slay any, but sought to compass them
+about. But the blood-men, when they saw that no Emmanuel was in
+the field, concluded also that no Emmanuel was in Mansoul;
+wherefore they, looking upon what the captains did to be, as they
+called it, a fruit of the extravagancy of their wild and foolish
+fancies, rather despised them than feared them. But the captains,
+minding their business, at last did compass them round; they also
+that had routed the doubters came in amain to their aid: so, in
+fine, after some little struggling, (for the blood-men also would
+have run for it, only now it was too late; for though they are
+mischievous and cruel, where they can overcome, yet all blood-men
+are chicken-hearted men, when they once come to see themselves
+matched and equalled,)--so the captains took them, and brought them
+to the Prince.
+
+Now when they were taken, had before the Prince, and examined, he
+found them to be of three several counties, though they all came
+out of one land.
+
+1. One sort of them came out of Blind-man-shire, and they were such
+as did ignorantly what they did.
+
+2. Another sort of them came out of Blind-zeal-shire, and they did
+superstitiously what they did.
+
+3. The third sort of them came out of the town of Malice, in the
+county of Envy, and they did what they did out of spite and
+implacableness.
+
+For the first of these, namely, they that came out of Blind-man-
+shire, when they saw where they were, and against whom they had
+fought, they trembled and cried, as they stood before him; and as
+many of these as asked him mercy, he touched their lips with his
+golden sceptre.
+
+They that came out of Blind-zeal-shire, they did not as their
+fellows did; for they pleaded that they had a right to do what they
+did, because Mansoul was a town whose laws and customs were diverse
+from all that dwelt thereabouts. Very few of these could be
+brought to see their evil; but those that did, and asked mercy,
+they also obtained favour.
+
+Now, they that came out of the town of Malice, that is in the
+county of Envy, they neither wept, nor disputed, nor repented, but
+stood gnawing their tongues before him for anguish and madness,
+because they could not have their will upon Mansoul. Now these
+last, with all those of the other two sorts that did not
+unfeignedly ask pardon for their faults,--those he made to enter
+into sufficient bond to answer for what they had done against
+Mansoul, and against her King, at the great and general assizes to
+be holden for our Lord the King, where he himself should appoint
+for the country and kingdom of Universe. So they became bound each
+man for himself, to come in, when called upon, to answer before our
+Lord the King for what they had done as before.
+
+And thus much concerning this second army that was sent by Diabolus
+to overthrow Mansoul.
+
+But there were three of those that came from the land of Doubting,
+who, after they had wandered and ranged the country a while, and
+perceived that they had escaped, were so hardy as to thrust
+themselves, knowing that yet there were in the town Diabolonians,--
+I say, they were so hardy as to thrust themselves into Mansoul
+among them. (Three, did I say? I think there were four.) Now, to
+whose house should these Diabolonian doubters go, but to the house
+of an old Diabolonian in Mansoul, whose name was Evil-Questioning,
+a very great enemy he was to Mansoul, and a great doer among the
+Diabolonians there. Well, to this Evil-Questioning's house, as was
+said, did these Diabolonians come (you may be sure that they had
+directions how to find the way thither), so he made them welcome,
+pitied their misfortune, and succoured them with the best that he
+had in his house. Now, after a little acquaintance (and it was not
+long before they had that), this old Evil-Questioning asked the
+doubters if they were all of a town (he knew that they were all of
+one kingdom), and they answered: 'No, nor not of one shire
+neither; for I,' said one, 'am an election doubter:' 'I,' said
+another, 'am a vocation doubter:' then said the third, 'I am a
+salvation doubter:' and the fourth said he was a grace doubter.
+'Well,' quoth the old gentleman, 'be of what shire you will, I am
+persuaded that you are down, boys: you have the very length of my
+foot, are one with my heart, and shall be welcome to me.' So they
+thanked him, and were glad that they had found themselves an
+harbour in Mansoul.
+
+Then said Evil-Questioning to them: 'How many of your company
+might there be that came with you to the siege of Mansoul?' and
+they answered: 'There were but ten thousand doubters in all, for
+the rest of the army consisted of fifteen thousand blood-men.
+These blood-men,' quoth they, 'border upon our country; but, poor
+men! as we hear, they were every one taken by Emmanuel's forces.'
+'Ten thousand!' quoth the old gentleman; 'I will promise you, that
+is a round company. But how came it to pass, since you were so
+mighty a number, that you fainted, and durst not fight your foes?'
+'Our general,' said they, 'was the first man that did run for it.'
+'Pray,' quoth their landlord, 'who was that, your cowardly
+general?' 'He was once the Lord Mayor of Mansoul,' said they:
+'but pray call him not a cowardly general; for whether any from the
+east to the west has done more service for our prince Diabolus,
+than has my Lord Incredulity, will be a hard question for you to
+answer. But had they catched him, they would for certain have
+hanged him; and we promise you, hanging is but a bad business.'
+Then said the old gentleman, 'I would that all the ten thousand
+doubters were now well armed in Mansoul, and myself at the head of
+them; I would see what I could do.' 'Ay,' said they, 'that would
+be well if we could see that; but wishes, alas! what are they?' and
+these words were spoken aloud. 'Well,' said old Evil-Questioning,
+'take heed that you talk not too loud; you must be quat and close,
+and must take care of yourselves while you are here, or, I will
+assure you, you will be snapped.' 'Why?' quoth the doubters.
+'Why!' quoth the old gentleman; 'why! because both the Prince and
+Lord Secretary, and their captains and soldiers, are all at present
+in town; yea, the town is as full of them as ever it can hold. And
+besides, there is one whose name is Willbewill, a most cruel enemy
+of ours, and him the Prince has made keeper of the gates, and has
+commanded him that, with all the diligence he can, he should look
+for, search out, and destroy all, and all manner of Diabolonians.
+And if he lighteth upon you, down you go, though your heads were
+made of gold.'
+
+And now, to see how it happened, one of the Lord Willbewill's
+faithful soldiers, whose name was Mr. Diligence, stood all this
+while listening under old Evil-Questioning's eaves, and heard all
+the talk that had been betwixt him and the doubters that he
+entertained under his roof.
+
+The soldier was a man that my lord had much confidence in, and that
+he loved dearly; and that both because he was a man of courage, and
+also a man that was unwearied in seeking after Diabolonians to
+apprehend them.
+
+Now this man, as I told you, heard all the talk that was between
+old Evil-Questioning and these Diabolonians; wherefore what does he
+but goes to his lord, and tells him what he had heard. 'And sayest
+thou so, my trusty?' quoth my lord. 'Ay,' quoth Diligence, 'that I
+do; and if your lordship will be pleased to go with me, you shall
+find it as I have said.' 'And are they there?' quoth my lord. 'I
+know Evil-Questioning well, for he and I were great in the time of
+our apostasy: but I know not now where he dwells.' 'But I do,'
+said his man, 'and if your lordship will go, I will lead you the
+way to his den.' 'Go!' quoth my lord, 'that I will. Come, my
+Diligence, let us go find them out.'
+
+So my lord and his man went together the direct way to his house.
+Now his man went before to show him his way, and they went till
+they came even under old Mr. Evil-Questioning's wall. Then said
+Diligence, 'Hark! my lord, do you know the old gentleman's tongue
+when you hear it?' 'Yes,' said my lord, 'I know it well, but I
+have not seen him many a day. This I know, he is cunning; I wish
+he doth not give us the slip.' 'Let me alone for that,' said his
+servant Diligence. 'But how shall we find the door?' quoth my
+lord. 'Let me alone for that, too,' said his man. So he had my
+Lord Willbewill about, and showed him the way to the door. Then my
+lord, without more ado, broke open the door, rushed into the house,
+and caught them all five together, even as Diligence his man had
+told him. So my lord apprehended them, and led them away, and
+committed them to the hand of Mr. Trueman, the gaoler, and
+commanded, and he did put them in ward. This done, my Lord Mayor
+was acquainted in the morning with what my Lord Willbewill had done
+over night, and his lordship rejoiced much at the news, not only
+because there were doubters apprehended, but because that old Evil-
+Questioning was taken; for he had been a very great trouble to
+Mansoul, and much affliction to my Lord Mayor himself. He had also
+been sought for often, but no hand could ever be laid upon him till
+now.
+
+Well, the next thing was to make preparation to try these five that
+by my lord had been apprehended, and that were in the hands of Mr.
+Trueman, the gaoler. So the day was set, and the court called and
+come together, and the prisoners brought to the bar. My Lord
+Willbewill had power to have slain them when at first he took them,
+and that without any more ado; but he thought it at this time more
+for the honour of the Prince, the comfort of Mansoul, and the
+discouragement of the enemy, to bring them forth to public
+judgment.
+
+But, I say, Mr. Trueman brought them in chains to the bar; to the
+town-hall, for that was the place of judgment. So, to be short,
+the jury was panelled, the witnesses sworn, and the prisoners tried
+for their lives: the jury was the same that tried Mr. No-Truth,
+Pitiless, Haughty, and the rest of their companions.
+
+And, first, old Questioning himself was set to the bar for he was
+the receiver, the entertainer, and comforter of these doubters,
+that by nation were outlandish men: then he was bid to hearken to
+his charge, and was told that he had liberty to object, if he had
+ought to say for himself. So his indictment was read: the manner
+and form here follows.
+
+'Mr. Questioning, Thou art here indicted by the name of Evil-
+Questioning, an intruder upon the town of Mansoul, for that thou
+art a Diabolonian by nature, and also a hater of the Prince
+Emmanuel, and one that hast studied the ruin of the town of
+Mansoul. Thou art also here indicted for countenancing the King's
+enemies, after wholesome laws made to the contrary: for, 1. Thou
+hast questioned the truth of her doctrine and state: 2. In wishing
+that ten thousand doubters were in her: 3. In receiving, in
+entertaining, and encouraging of her enemies, that came from their
+army unto thee. What sayest thou to this indictment? art thou
+guilty or not guilty?'
+
+'My lord,' quoth he, 'I know not the meaning of this indictment,
+forasmuch as I am not the man concerned in it; the man that
+standeth by this charge accused before this bench is called by the
+name of Evil-Questioning, which name I deny to be mine, mine being
+Honest-Inquiry. The one indeed sounds like the other; but, I trow,
+your lordships know that between these two there is a wide
+difference; for I hope that a man, even in the worst of times, and
+that, too, amongst the worst of men, may make an honest inquiry
+after things, without running the danger of death.'
+
+Then spake my Lord Willbewill, for he was one of the witnesses:
+'My lord, and you the honourable bench and magistrates of the town
+of Mansoul, you all have heard with your ears that the prisoner at
+the bar has denied his name, and so thinks to shift from the charge
+of the indictment. But I know him to be the man concerned, and
+that his proper name is Evil-Questioning. I have known him, my
+lord, above these thirty years, for he and I (a shame it is for me
+to speak it) were great acquaintance, when Diabolus, that tyrant,
+had the government of Mansoul; and I testify that he is a
+Diabolonian by nature, an enemy to our Prince, and a hater of the
+blessed town of Mansoul. He has, in times of rebellion, been at
+and lain in my house, my lord, not so little as twenty nights
+together, and we did use to talk then, for the substance of talk,
+as he and his doubters have talked of late: true, I have not seen
+him many a day. I suppose that the coming of Emmanuel to Mansoul
+has made him change his lodgings, as this indictment has driven him
+to change his name; but this is the man, my lord.'
+
+Then said the court unto him, 'Hast thou any more to say?'
+
+'Yes,' quoth the old gentleman, 'that I have; for all that as yet
+has been said against me, is but by the mouth of one witness; and
+it is not lawful for the famous town of Mansoul, at the mouth of
+one witness, to put any man to death.'
+
+Then stood forth Mr. Diligence, and said, 'My lord, as I was upon
+my watch such a night at the head of Bad Street, in this town, I
+chanced to hear a muttering within this gentleman's house. Then,
+thought I, what is to do here? So I went up close, but very
+softly, to the side of the house to listen, thinking, as indeed it
+fell out, that there I might light upon some Diabolonian
+conventicle. So, as I said, I drew nearer and nearer; and when I
+was got up close to the wall, it was but a while before I perceived
+that there were outlandish men in the house; but I did well
+understand their speech, for I have been a traveller myself. Now,
+hearing such language in such a tottering cottage as this old
+gentleman dwelt in, I clapped mine ear to a hole in the window, and
+there heard them talk as followeth. This old Mr. Questioning asked
+these doubters what they were, whence they came, and what was their
+business in these parts; and they told him to all these questions,
+yet he did entertain them. He also asked what numbers there were
+of them; and they told him ten thousand men. He then asked them,
+why they made no more manly assault upon Mansoul; and they told
+him: so he called their general coward, for marching off when he
+should have fought for his prince. Further, this old Evil-
+Questioning wished, and I heard him wish, would all the ten
+thousand doubters were now in Mansoul, and himself at the head of
+them. He bid them also to take heed and lie quat; for if they were
+taken they must die, although they had heads of gold.' Then said
+the court: 'Mr. Evil-Questioning, here is now another witness
+against you, and his testimony is full: 1. He swears that you did
+receive these men into your house, and that you did nourish them
+there, though you knew that they were Diabolonians, and the King's
+enemies. 2. He swears that you did wish ten thousand of them in
+Mansoul. 3. He swears that you did give them advice to be quat and
+close, lest they were taken by the King's servants. All which
+manifesteth that thou art a Diabolonian; but hadst thou been a
+friend to the King, thou wouldst have apprehended them.'
+
+Then said Evil-Questioning: 'To the first of these I answer, The
+men that came into mine house were strangers, and I took them in;
+and is it now become a crime in Mansoul for a man to entertain
+strangers? That I did also nourish them is true; and why should my
+charity be blamed? As for the reason why I wished ten thousand of
+them in Mansoul, I never told it to the witnesses, nor to
+themselves. I might wish them to be taken, and so my wish might
+mean well to Mansoul, for aught that any yet knows. I did also bid
+them take heed that they fell not into the captains' hands; but
+that might be because I am unwilling that any man should be slain,
+and not because I would have the King's enemies as such escape.'
+
+My Lord Mayor then replied: 'That though it was a virtue to
+entertain strangers, yet it was treason to entertain the King's
+enemies. And for what else thou hast said, thou dost by words but
+labour to evade and defer the execution of judgment. But could
+there be no more proved against thee but that thou art a
+Diabolonian, thou must for that die the death by the law; but to be
+a receiver, a nourisher, a countenancer, and a harbourer of others
+of them, yea, of outlandish Diabolonians, yea, of them that came
+from far on purpose to cut off and destroy our Mansoul--this must
+not be borne.'
+
+Then said Evil-Questioning: 'I see how the game will go: I must
+die for my name, and for my charity.' And so he held his peace.
+
+Then they called the outlandish doubters to the bar, and the first
+of them that was arraigned was the election doubter. So his
+indictment was read; and because he was an outlandish man, the
+substance of it was told him by an interpreter; namely, 'That he
+was there charged with being an enemy of Emmanuel the Prince, a
+hater of the town of Mansoul, and an opposer of her most wholesome
+doctrine.'
+
+Then the judge asked him if he would plead? but he said only this--
+That he confessed that he was an election doubter, and that that
+was the religion that he had ever been brought up in. And said,
+moreover, 'If I must die for my religion, I trow, I shall die a
+martyr, and so I care the less.'
+
+Judge. Then it was replied: 'To question election, is to
+overthrow a great doctrine of the gospel, namely, the omnisciency,
+and power, and will of God; to take away the liberty of God with
+his creature, to stumble the faith of the town of Mansoul, and to
+make salvation to depend upon works, and not upon grace. It also
+belied the word, and disquieted the minds of the men of Mansoul;
+therefore by the best of laws he must die.'
+
+Then was the vocation doubter called, and set to the bar; and his
+indictment for substance was the same with the other, only he was
+particularly charged with denying the calling of Mansoul.
+
+The judge asked him also what he had to say for himself?
+
+So he replied: 'That he never believed that there was any such
+thing as a distinct and powerful call of God to Mansoul; otherwise
+than by the general voice of the word, nor by that neither,
+otherwise than as it exhorted them to forbear evil, and to do that
+which is good, and in so doing a promise of happiness is annexed.'
+
+Then said the judge: 'Thou art a Diabolonian, and hast denied a
+great part of one of the most experimental truths of the Prince of
+the town of Mansoul; for he has called, and she has heard a most
+distinct and powerful call of her Emmanuel, by which she has been
+quickened, awakened, and possessed with heavenly grace to desire to
+have communion with her Prince, to serve him, and to do his will,
+and to look for her happiness merely of his good pleasure. And for
+thine abhorrence of this good doctrine, thou must die the death.'
+
+Then the grace doubter was called, and his indictment was read and
+he replied thereto: 'That though he was of the land of doubting,
+his father was the offspring of a Pharisee, and lived in good
+fashion among his neighbours, and that he taught him to believe,
+and believe it I do, and will, that Mansoul shall never be saved
+freely by grace.'
+
+Then said the judge: 'Why, the law of the Prince is plain: 1.
+Negatively, "not of works:" 2. Positively, "by grace you are
+saved." And thy religion settleth in and upon the works of the
+flesh; for the works of the law are the works of the flesh.
+Besides, in saying as thou hast done, thou hast robbed God of His
+glory, and given it to a sinful man; thou hast robbed Christ of the
+necessity of His undertaking, and the sufficiency thereof, and hast
+given both these to the works of the flesh. Thou hast despised the
+work of the Holy Ghost, and hast magnified the will of the flesh,
+and of the legal mind. Thou art a Diabolonian, the son of a
+Diabolonian; and for thy Diabolonian principles thou must die.'
+
+The court then, having proceeded thus far with them, sent out the
+jury, who forthwith brought them in guilty of death. Then stood up
+the Recorder, and addressed himself to the prisoners: 'You, the
+prisoners at the bar, you have been here indicted, and proved
+guilty of high crimes against Emmanuel our Prince, and against the
+welfare of the famous town of Mansoul, crimes for which you must be
+put to death, and die ye accordingly.' So they were sentenced to
+the death of the cross. The place assigned them for execution, was
+that where Diabolus drew up his last army against Mansoul; save
+only that old Evil-Questioning was hanged at the top of Bad Street,
+just over against his own door.
+
+When the town of Mansoul had thus far rid themselves of their
+enemies, and of the troublers of their peace, in the next place a
+strict commandment was given out, that yet my Lord Willbewill
+should, with Diligence his man, search for, and do his best to
+apprehend what town Diabolonians were yet left alive in Mansoul.
+The names of several of them were, Mr. Fooling, Mr. Let-Good-Slip,
+Mr. Slavish-Fear, Mr. No-Love, Mr. Mistrust, Mr. Flesh, and Mr.
+Sloth. It was also commanded, that he should apprehend Mr. Evil-
+Questioning's children, that he left behind him, and that they
+should demolish his house. The children that he left behind him
+were these: Mr. Doubt, and he was his eldest son; the next to him
+was Legal-Life, Unbelief, Wrong-Thoughts-of-Christ, Clip-Promise,
+Carnal-Sense, Live-by-Feeling, Self-Love. All these he had by one
+wife, and her name was No-Hope; she was the kinswoman of old
+Incredulity, for he was her uncle; and when her father, old Dark,
+was dead, he took her and brought her up, and when she was
+marriageable, he gave her to this old Evil-Questioning to wife.
+
+Now the Lord Willbewill did put into execution his commission, with
+great Diligence, his man. He took Fooling in the streets, and
+hanged him up in Want-wit-Alley, over against his own house. This
+Fooling was he that would have had the town of Mansoul deliver up
+Captain Credence into the hands of Diabolus, provided that then he
+would have withdrawn his force out of the town. He also took Mr.
+Let-Good-Slip one day as he was busy in the market, and executed
+him according to law. Now there was an honest poor man in Mansoul,
+and his name was Mr. Meditation, one of no great account in the
+days of apostasy, but now of repute with the best of the town.
+This man, therefore, they were willing to prefer. Now Mr. Let-
+Good-Slip had a great deal of wealth heretofore in Mansoul, and, at
+Emmanuel's coming, it was sequestered to the use of the Prince:
+this, therefore, was now given to Mr. Meditation, to improve for
+the common good, and after him to his son, Mr. Think-Well; this
+Think-Well he had by Mrs. Piety his wife, and she was the daughter
+of Mr. Recorder.
+
+After this, my lord apprehended Clip-Promise: now because he was a
+notorious villain, for by his doings much of the King's coin was
+abused, therefore he was made a public example. He was arraigned
+and judged to be first set in the pillory, then to be whipped by
+all the children and servants in Mansoul, and then to be hanged
+till he was dead. Some may wonder at the severity of this man's
+punishment; but those that are honest traders in Mansoul, are
+sensible of the great abuse that one clipper of promises in little
+time may do to the town of Mansoul. And truly my judgment is, that
+all those of his name and life should be served even as he.
+
+He also apprehended Carnal-Sense, and put him in hold; but how it
+came about, I cannot tell, but he brake prison, and made his
+escape: yea, and the bold villain will not yet quit the town, but
+lurks in the Diabolonian dens a days, and haunts like a ghost
+honest men's houses a nights. Wherefore, there was a proclamation
+set up in the market-place in Mansoul, signifying that whosoever
+could discover Carnal-Sense, and apprehend him and slay him, should
+be admitted daily to the Prince's table, and should be made keeper
+of the treasure of Mansoul. Many, therefore, did bend themselves
+to do this thing, but take him and slay him they could not, though
+often he was discovered.
+
+But my lord took Mr. Wrong-Thoughts-of-Christ, and put him in
+prison, and he died there; though it was long first, for he died of
+a lingering consumption.
+
+Self-Love was also taken and committed to custody; but there were
+many that were allied to him in Mansoul, so his judgment was
+deferred. But at last Mr. Self-Denial stood up, and said: 'If
+such villains as these may be winked at in Mansoul, I will lay down
+my commission.' He also took him from the crowd, and had him among
+his soldiers, and there he was brained. But some in Mansoul
+muttered at it, though none durst speak plainly, because Emmanuel
+was in town. But this brave act of Captain Self-Denial came to the
+Prince's ears; so he sent for him, and made him a lord in Mansoul.
+My Lord Willbewill also obtained great commendations of Emmanuel,
+for what he had done for the town of Mansoul.
+
+Then my Lord Self-Denial took courage, and set to the pursuing of
+the Diabolonians, with my Lord Willbewill; and they took Live-by-
+Feeling, and they took Legal-Life, and put them in hold till they
+died. But Mr. Unbelief was a nimble Jack: him they could never
+lay hold of, though they attempted to do it often. He therefore,
+and some few more of the subtlest of the Diabolonian tribe, did yet
+remain in Mansoul, to the time that Mansoul left off to dwell any
+longer in the kingdom of Universe. But they kept them to their
+dens and holes: if one of them did appear, or happen to be seen in
+any of the streets of the town of Mansoul, the whole town would be
+up in arms after them; yea, the very children in Mansoul would cry
+out after them as after a thief, and would wish that they might
+stone them to death with stones. And now did Mansoul arrive to
+some good degree of peace and quiet; her Prince also did abide
+within her borders; her captains, also, and her soldiers did their
+duties; and Mansoul minded her trade that she had with the country
+that was afar off; also she was busy in her manufacture.
+
+When the town of Mansoul had thus far rid themselves of so many of
+their enemies, and the troublers of their peace, the Prince sent to
+them, and appointed a day wherein he would, at the market-place,
+meet the whole people, and there give them in charge concerning
+some further matters, that, if observed, would tend to their
+further safety and comfort, and to the condemnation and destruction
+of their home-bred Diabolonians. So the day appointed was come,
+and the townsmen met together; Emmanuel also came down in his
+chariot, and all his captains in their state attending him, on the
+right hand and on the left. Then was an oyes made for silence,
+and, after some mutual carriages of love, the Prince began, and
+thus proceeded:-
+
+'You, my Mansoul, and the beloved of mine heart, many and great are
+the privileges that I have bestowed upon you; I have singled you
+out from others, and have chosen you to myself, not for your
+worthiness, but for mine own sake. I have also redeemed you, not
+only from the dread of my Father's law, but from the hand of
+Diabolus. This I have done because I loved you, and because I have
+set my heart upon you to do you good. I have also, that all
+things, that might hinder thy way to the pleasures of paradise
+might be taken out of the way, laid down for thee for thy soul a
+plenary satisfaction, and have bought thee to myself; a price not
+of corruptible things, as of silver and gold, but a price of blood,
+mine own blood, which I have freely spilled upon the ground to make
+thee mine. So I have reconciled thee, O my Mansoul, to my Father,
+and entrusted thee in the mansion houses that are with my Father in
+the royal city, where things are, O my Mansoul, that eye hath not
+seen, nor hath entered into the heart of man to conceive.
+
+'Besides, O my Mansoul, thou seest what I have done, and how I have
+taken thee out of the hands of thine enemies: unto whom thou hadst
+deeply revolted from my Father, and by whom thou wast content to be
+possessed, and also to be destroyed. I came to thee first by my
+law, then by my gospel, to awaken thee, and show thee my glory.
+And thou knowest what thou wast, what thou saidst, what thou didst,
+and how many times thou rebelledst against my Father and me; yet I
+left thee not as thou seest this day, but came to thee, have borne
+thy manners, have waited upon thee, and, after all, accepted of
+thee, even of my mere grace and favour; and would not suffer thee
+to be lost, as thou most willingly wouldst have been. I also
+compassed thee about, and afflicted thee on every side, that I
+might make thee weary of thy ways, and bring down thy heart with
+molestation to a willingness to close with thy good and happiness.
+And when I had gotten a complete conquest over thee, I turned it to
+thy advantage.
+
+'Thou seest, also, what a company of my Father's host I have lodged
+within thy borders: captains and rulers, soldiers and men of war,
+engines and excellent devices to subdue and bring down thy foes;
+thou knowest my meaning, O Mansoul. And they are my servants, and
+thine, too, Mansoul. Yea, my design of possessing of thee with
+them, and the natural tendency of each of them is to defend, purge,
+strengthen, and sweeten thee for myself, O Mansoul, and to make
+thee meet for my Father's presence, blessing, and glory; for thou,
+my Mansoul, art created to be prepared unto these.
+
+'Thou seest, moreover, my Mansoul, how I have passed by thy
+backslidings, and have healed thee. Indeed I was angry with thee,
+but I have turned mine anger away from thee, because I loved thee
+still, and mine anger and mine indignation is ceased in the
+destruction of thine enemies, O Mansoul. Nor did thy goodness
+fetch me again unto thee, after that I for thy transgressions have
+hid my face, and withdrawn my presence from thee. The way of
+backsliding was thine, but the way and means of thy recovery was
+mine. I invented the means of thy return; it was I that made an
+hedge and a wall, when thou wast beginning to turn to things in
+which I delighted not. It was I that made thy sweet bitter, thy
+day night, thy smooth way thorny, and that also confounded all that
+sought thy destruction. It was I that set Mr. Godly-Fear to work
+in Mansoul. It was I that stirred up thy conscience and
+understanding, thy will and thy affections, after thy great and
+woful decay. It was I that put life into thee, O Mansoul, to seek
+me, that thou mightest find me, and in thy finding find thine own
+health, happiness, and salvation. It was I that fetched the second
+time the Diabolonians out of Mansoul; and it was I that overcame
+them, and that destroyed them before thy face.
+
+'And now, my Mansoul, I am returned to thee in peace, and thy
+transgressions against me are as if they had not been. Nor shall
+it be with thee as in former days, but I will do better for thee
+than at thy beginning.
+
+For yet a little while, O my Mansoul, even after a few more times
+are gone over thy head, I will (but be not thou troubled at what I
+say) take down this famous town of Mansoul, stick and stone, to the
+ground. And I will carry the stones thereof, and the timber
+thereof, and the walls thereof, and the dust thereof, and the
+inhabitants thereof, into mine own country, even into a kingdom of
+my Father; and will there set it up in such strength and glory, as
+it never did see in the kingdom where now it is placed. I will
+even there set it up for my Father's habitation; for for that
+purpose it was at first erected in the kingdom of Universe; and
+there will I make it a spectacle of wonder, a monument of mercy,
+and the admirer of its own mercy. There shall the natives of
+Mansoul see all that, of which they have seen nothing here: there
+shall they be equal to those unto whom they have been inferior
+here. And there shalt thou, O my Mansoul, have such communion with
+me, with my Father, and with your Lord Secretary, as it is not
+possible here to be enjoyed, nor ever could be, shouldest thou live
+in Universe the space of a thousand years.
+
+'And there, O my Mansoul, thou shalt be afraid of murderers no
+more; of Diabolonians, and their threats, no more. There, there
+shall be no more plots, nor contrivances, nor designs against thee,
+O my Mansoul. There thou shalt no more hear the evil-tidings, or
+the noise of the Diabolonian drum. There thou shalt not see the
+Diabolonian standard-bearers, nor yet behold Diabolus's standard.
+No Diabolonian mount shall be cast up against thee there; nor shall
+there the Diabolonian standard be set up to make thee afraid.
+There thou shalt not need captains, engines, soldiers, and men of
+war. There thou shalt meet with no sorrow, nor grief, nor shall it
+be possible that any Diabolonian should again, for ever, be able to
+creep into thy skirts, burrow in thy walls, or be seen again within
+thy borders all the days of eternity. Life shall there last longer
+than here you are able to desire it should; and yet it shall always
+be sweet and new, nor shall any impediment attend it for ever.
+
+'There, O Mansoul, thou shalt meet with many of those that have
+been like thee, and that have been partakers of thy sorrows; even
+such as I have chosen, and redeemed, and set apart, as thou, for my
+Father's court and city-royal. All they will be glad in thee, and
+thou, when thou seest them, shalt be glad in thine heart.
+
+'There are things, O Mansoul, even things of my Father's providing,
+and mine, that never were seen since the beginning of the world;
+and they are laid up with my Father, and sealed up among his
+treasures for thee, till thou shalt come thither to enjoy them. I
+told you before, that I would remove my Mansoul, and set it up
+elsewhere; and where I will set it, there are those that love thee,
+and those that rejoice in thee now; but how much more, when they
+shall see thee exalted to honour! My Father will then send them
+for you to fetch you; and their bosoms are chariots to put you in.
+And you, O my Mansoul, shall ride upon the wings of the wind. They
+will come to convey, conduct, and bring you to that, when your eyes
+see more, that will be your desired haven.
+
+'And thus, O my Mansoul, I have showed unto thee what shall be done
+to thee hereafter, if thou canst hear, if thou canst understand;
+and now I will tell thee what at present must be thy duty and
+practice, until I come and fetch thee to myself, according as is
+related in the Scriptures of truth.
+
+'First, I charge thee that thou dost hereafter keep more white and
+clean the liveries which I gave thee before my last withdrawing
+from thee. Do it, I say, for this will be thy wisdom. They are in
+themselves fine linen, but thou must keep them white and clean.
+This will be your wisdom, your honour, and will be greatly for my
+glory. When your garments are white, the world will count you
+mine. Also, when your garments are white, then I am delighted in
+your ways; for then your goings to and fro will be like a flash of
+lightning, that those that are present must take notice of; also
+their eyes will be made to dazzle thereat. Deck thyself,
+therefore, according to my bidding, and make thyself by my law
+straight steps for thy feet; so shall thy King greatly desire thy
+beauty, for he is thy Lord, and worship thou him.
+
+'Now, that thou mayest keep them as I bid thee, I have, as I before
+did tell thee, provided for thee an open fountain to wash thy
+garments in. Look, therefore, that thou wash often in my fountain,
+and go not in defiled garments; for as it is to my dishonour and my
+disgrace, so it will be to thy discomfort, when you shall walk in
+filthy garments. Let not, therefore, my garments, your garments,
+the garments that I gave thee, be defiled or spotted by the flesh.
+Keep thy garments always white, and let thy head lack no ointment.
+
+'My Mansoul, I have ofttimes delivered thee from the designs,
+plots, attempts, and conspiracies of Diabolus; and for all this I
+ask thee nothing, but that thou render not to me evil for my good;
+but that thou bear in mind my love, and the continuation of my
+kindness to my beloved Mansoul, so as to provoke thee to walk in
+thy measure according to the benefit bestowed on thee. Of old, the
+sacrifices were bound with coords to the horns of the altar.
+Consider what is said to thee, O my blessed Mansoul.
+
+'O my Mansoul, I have lived, I have died, I live, and will die no
+more for thee. I live, that thou mayest not die. Because I live,
+thou shalt live also. I reconciled thee to my Father by the blood
+of my cross; and being reconciled, thou shalt live through me. I
+will pray for thee; I will fight for thee; I will yet do thee good.
+
+'Nothing can hurt thee but sin; nothing can grieve me but sin;
+nothing can make thee base before thy foes but sin: take heed of
+sin, my Mansoul.
+
+'And dost thou know why I at first, and do still, suffer
+Diabolonians to dwell in thy walls, O Mansoul? It is to keep thee
+wakening, to try thy love, to make thee watchful, and to cause thee
+yet to prize my noble captains, their soldiers, and my mercy.
+
+'It is also, that yet thou mayest be made to remember what a
+deplorable condition thou once wast in. I mean when, not some, but
+all did dwell, not in thy walls, but in thy castle, and in thy
+stronghold, O Mansoul.
+
+'O my Mansoul, should I slay all them within, many there be
+without, that would bring thee into bondage; for were all these
+within cut off, those without would find thee sleeping; and then,
+as in a moment, they would swallow up my Mansoul. I therefore left
+them in thee, not to do thee hurt (the which they yet will, if thou
+hearken to them, and serve them,) but to do thee good, the which
+they must, if thou watch and fight against them. Know, therefore,
+that whatever they shall tempt thee to, my design is, that they
+should drive thee, not further off, but nearer to my father, to
+learn thee war, to make petitioning desirable to thee, and to make
+thee little in thine own eyes. Hearken diligently to this, my
+Mansoul.
+
+'Show me, then, thy love, my Mansoul, and let not those that are
+within thy walls, take thy affections off from him that hath
+redeemed thy soul. Yea, let the sight of a Diabolonian heighten
+thy love to me. I came once, and twice, and thrice, to save thee
+from the poison of those arrows that would have wrought thy death:
+stand for me, thy Friend, my Mansoul, against the Diabolonians, and
+I will stand for thee before my Father, and all his court. Love me
+against temptation, and I will love thee notwithstanding thine
+infirmities.
+
+'O my Mansoul, remember what my captains, my soldiers, and mine
+engines have done for thee. They have fought for thee, they have
+suffered by thee, they have borne much at thy hands to do thee
+good, O Mansoul. Hadst thou not had them to help thee, Diabolus
+had certainly made a hand of thee. Nourish them, therefore, my
+Mansoul. When thou dost well, they will be well; when thou dost
+ill, they will be ill, and sick, and weak. Make not my captains
+sick, O Mansoul; for if they be sick, thou canst not be well; if
+they be weak, thou canst not be strong; if they be faint, thou
+canst not be stout and valiant for thy King, O Mansoul. Nor must
+thou think always to live by sense: thou must live upon my word.
+Thou must believe, O my Mansoul, when I am from thee, that yet I
+love thee, and bear thee upon mine heart for ever.
+
+'Remember, therefore, O my Mansoul, that thou art beloved of me:
+as I have, therefore, taught thee to watch, to fight, to pray, and
+to make war against my foes; so now I command thee to believe that
+my love is constant to thee. O my Mansoul, how have I set my
+heart, my love upon thee! Watch. Behold, I lay none other burden
+upon thee, than what thou hast already. Hold fast, till I come.'
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, THE HOLY WAR ***
+
+This file should be named hlywr10.txt or hlywr10.zip
+Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks get a new NUMBER, hlywr11.txt
+VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, hlywr10a.txt
+
+Project Gutenberg eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the US
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we usually do not
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+We are now trying to release all our eBooks one year in advance
+of the official release dates, leaving time for better editing.
+Please be encouraged to tell us about any error or corrections,
+even years after the official publication date.
+
+Please note neither this listing nor its contents are final til
+midnight of the last day of the month of any such announcement.
+The official release date of all Project Gutenberg eBooks is at
+Midnight, Central Time, of the last day of the stated month. A
+preliminary version may often be posted for suggestion, comment
+and editing by those who wish to do so.
+
+Most people start at our Web sites at:
+http://gutenberg.net or
+http://promo.net/pg
+
+These Web sites include award-winning information about Project
+Gutenberg, including how to donate, how to help produce our new
+eBooks, and how to subscribe to our email newsletter (free!).
+
+
+Those of you who want to download any eBook before announcement
+can get to them as follows, and just download by date. This is
+also a good way to get them instantly upon announcement, as the
+indexes our cataloguers produce obviously take a while after an
+announcement goes out in the Project Gutenberg Newsletter.
+
+http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext04 or
+ftp://ftp.ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/etext04
+
+Or /etext03, 02, 01, 00, 99, 98, 97, 96, 95, 94, 93, 92, 92, 91 or 90
+
+Just search by the first five letters of the filename you want,
+as it appears in our Newsletters.
+
+
+Information about Project Gutenberg (one page)
+
+We produce about two million dollars for each hour we work. The
+time it takes us, a rather conservative estimate, is fifty hours
+to get any eBook selected, entered, proofread, edited, copyright
+searched and analyzed, the copyright letters written, etc. Our
+projected audience is one hundred million readers. If the value
+per text is nominally estimated at one dollar then we produce $2
+million dollars per hour in 2002 as we release over 100 new text
+files per month: 1240 more eBooks in 2001 for a total of 4000+
+We are already on our way to trying for 2000 more eBooks in 2002
+If they reach just 1-2% of the world's population then the total
+will reach over half a trillion eBooks given away by year's end.
+
+The Goal of Project Gutenberg is to Give Away 1 Trillion eBooks!
+This is ten thousand titles each to one hundred million readers,
+which is only about 4% of the present number of computer users.
+
+Here is the briefest record of our progress (* means estimated):
+
+eBooks Year Month
+
+ 1 1971 July
+ 10 1991 January
+ 100 1994 January
+ 1000 1997 August
+ 1500 1998 October
+ 2000 1999 December
+ 2500 2000 December
+ 3000 2001 November
+ 4000 2001 October/November
+ 6000 2002 December*
+ 9000 2003 November*
+10000 2004 January*
+
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been created
+to secure a future for Project Gutenberg into the next millennium.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+As of February, 2002, contributions are being solicited from people
+and organizations in: Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Connecticut,
+Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois,
+Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts,
+Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New
+Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio,
+Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South
+Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West
+Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
+
+We have filed in all 50 states now, but these are the only ones
+that have responded.
+
+As the requirements for other states are met, additions to this list
+will be made and fund raising will begin in the additional states.
+Please feel free to ask to check the status of your state.
+
+In answer to various questions we have received on this:
+
+We are constantly working on finishing the paperwork to legally
+request donations in all 50 states. If your state is not listed and
+you would like to know if we have added it since the list you have,
+just ask.
+
+While we cannot solicit donations from people in states where we are
+not yet registered, we know of no prohibition against accepting
+donations from donors in these states who approach us with an offer to
+donate.
+
+International donations are accepted, but we don't know ANYTHING about
+how to make them tax-deductible, or even if they CAN be made
+deductible, and don't have the staff to handle it even if there are
+ways.
+
+Donations by check or money order may be sent to:
+
+Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+PMB 113
+1739 University Ave.
+Oxford, MS 38655-4109
+
+Contact us if you want to arrange for a wire transfer or payment
+method other than by check or money order.
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been approved by
+the US Internal Revenue Service as a 501(c)(3) organization with EIN
+[Employee Identification Number] 64-622154. Donations are
+tax-deductible to the maximum extent permitted by law. As fund-raising
+requirements for other states are met, additions to this list will be
+made and fund-raising will begin in the additional states.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+You can get up to date donation information online at:
+
+http://www.gutenberg.net/donation.html
+
+
+***
+
+If you can't reach Project Gutenberg,
+you can always email directly to:
+
+Michael S. Hart <hart@pobox.com>
+
+Prof. Hart will answer or forward your message.
+
+We would prefer to send you information by email.
+
+
+**The Legal Small Print**
+
+
+(Three Pages)
+
+***START**THE SMALL PRINT!**FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS**START***
+Why is this "Small Print!" statement here? You know: lawyers.
+They tell us you might sue us if there is something wrong with
+your copy of this eBook, even if you got it for free from
+someone other than us, and even if what's wrong is not our
+fault. So, among other things, this "Small Print!" statement
+disclaims most of our liability to you. It also tells you how
+you may distribute copies of this eBook if you want to.
+
+*BEFORE!* YOU USE OR READ THIS EBOOK
+By using or reading any part of this PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+eBook, you indicate that you understand, agree to and accept
+this "Small Print!" statement. If you do not, you can receive
+a refund of the money (if any) you paid for this eBook by
+sending a request within 30 days of receiving it to the person
+you got it from. If you received this eBook on a physical
+medium (such as a disk), you must return it with your request.
+
+ABOUT PROJECT GUTENBERG-TM EBOOKS
+This PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook, like most PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBooks,
+is a "public domain" work distributed by Professor Michael S. Hart
+through the Project Gutenberg Association (the "Project").
+Among other things, this means that no one owns a United States copyright
+on or for this work, so the Project (and you!) can copy and
+distribute it in the United States without permission and
+without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth
+below, apply if you wish to copy and distribute this eBook
+under the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark.
+
+Please do not use the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark to market
+any commercial products without permission.
+
+To create these eBooks, the Project expends considerable
+efforts to identify, transcribe and proofread public domain
+works. Despite these efforts, the Project's eBooks and any
+medium they may be on may contain "Defects". Among other
+things, Defects may take the form of incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged
+disk or other eBook medium, a computer virus, or computer
+codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment.
+
+LIMITED WARRANTY; DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES
+But for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described below,
+[1] Michael Hart and the Foundation (and any other party you may
+receive this eBook from as a PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook) disclaims
+all liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including
+legal fees, and [2] YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE OR
+UNDER STRICT LIABILITY, OR FOR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR CONTRACT,
+INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE
+OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE
+POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
+
+If you discover a Defect in this eBook within 90 days of
+receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any)
+you paid for it by sending an explanatory note within that
+time to the person you received it from. If you received it
+on a physical medium, you must return it with your note, and
+such person may choose to alternatively give you a replacement
+copy. If you received it electronically, such person may
+choose to alternatively give you a second opportunity to
+receive it electronically.
+
+THIS EBOOK IS OTHERWISE PROVIDED TO YOU "AS-IS". NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, ARE MADE TO YOU AS
+TO THE EBOOK OR ANY MEDIUM IT MAY BE ON, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
+PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+Some states do not allow disclaimers of implied warranties or
+the exclusion or limitation of consequential damages, so the
+above disclaimers and exclusions may not apply to you, and you
+may have other legal rights.
+
+INDEMNITY
+You will indemnify and hold Michael Hart, the Foundation,
+and its trustees and agents, and any volunteers associated
+with the production and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
+texts harmless, from all liability, cost and expense, including
+legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of the
+following that you do or cause: [1] distribution of this eBook,
+[2] alteration, modification, or addition to the eBook,
+or [3] any Defect.
+
+DISTRIBUTION UNDER "PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm"
+You may distribute copies of this eBook electronically, or by
+disk, book or any other medium if you either delete this
+"Small Print!" and all other references to Project Gutenberg,
+or:
+
+[1] Only give exact copies of it. Among other things, this
+ requires that you do not remove, alter or modify the
+ eBook or this "small print!" statement. You may however,
+ if you wish, distribute this eBook in machine readable
+ binary, compressed, mark-up, or proprietary form,
+ including any form resulting from conversion by word
+ processing or hypertext software, but only so long as
+ *EITHER*:
+
+ [*] The eBook, when displayed, is clearly readable, and
+ does *not* contain characters other than those
+ intended by the author of the work, although tilde
+ (~), asterisk (*) and underline (_) characters may
+ be used to convey punctuation intended by the
+ author, and additional characters may be used to
+ indicate hypertext links; OR
+
+ [*] The eBook may be readily converted by the reader at
+ no expense into plain ASCII, EBCDIC or equivalent
+ form by the program that displays the eBook (as is
+ the case, for instance, with most word processors);
+ OR
+
+ [*] You provide, or agree to also provide on request at
+ no additional cost, fee or expense, a copy of the
+ eBook in its original plain ASCII form (or in EBCDIC
+ or other equivalent proprietary form).
+
+[2] Honor the eBook refund and replacement provisions of this
+ "Small Print!" statement.
+
+[3] Pay a trademark license fee to the Foundation of 20% of the
+ gross profits you derive calculated using the method you
+ already use to calculate your applicable taxes. If you
+ don't derive profits, no royalty is due. Royalties are
+ payable to "Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation"
+ the 60 days following each date you prepare (or were
+ legally required to prepare) your annual (or equivalent
+ periodic) tax return. Please contact us beforehand to
+ let us know your plans and to work out the details.
+
+WHAT IF YOU *WANT* TO SEND MONEY EVEN IF YOU DON'T HAVE TO?
+Project Gutenberg is dedicated to increasing the number of
+public domain and licensed works that can be freely distributed
+in machine readable form.
+
+The Project gratefully accepts contributions of money, time,
+public domain materials, or royalty free copyright licenses.
+Money should be paid to the:
+"Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+If you are interested in contributing scanning equipment or
+software or other items, please contact Michael Hart at:
+hart@pobox.com
+
+[Portions of this eBook's header and trailer may be reprinted only
+when distributed free of all fees. Copyright (C) 2001, 2002 by
+Michael S. Hart. Project Gutenberg is a TradeMark and may not be
+used in any sales of Project Gutenberg eBooks or other materials be
+they hardware or software or any other related product without
+express permission.]
+
+*END THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS*Ver.02/11/02*END*
+
diff --git a/old/hlywr10.zip b/old/hlywr10.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..60deca4
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/hlywr10.zip
Binary files differ
diff --git a/old/hlywr10h.htm b/old/hlywr10h.htm
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..dd3a605
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/hlywr10h.htm
@@ -0,0 +1,9715 @@
+<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN">
+<html>
+<head>
+<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=US-ASCII">
+<title>The Holy War</title>
+</head>
+<body>
+<h2>
+<a href="#startoftext">The Holy War, by John Bunyan</a>
+</h2>
+<pre>
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Holy War, by John Bunyan
+(#2 in our series by John Bunyan)
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing
+this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook.
+
+This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project
+Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do not change or edit the
+header without written permission.
+
+Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the
+eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included is
+important information about your specific rights and restrictions in
+how the file may be used. You can also find out about how to make a
+donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved.
+
+
+**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
+
+**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971**
+
+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: The Holy War
+
+Author: John Bunyan
+
+Release Date: January, 1996 [EBook #395]
+[This file was first posted on December 7, 1995]
+[Most recently updated: August 18, 2002]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+</pre>
+<p>
+<a name="startoftext"></a>
+Transcribed from the 1907 Religious Tract Society edition by David Price,
+email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+THE HOLY WAR<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+TO THE READER.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+&rsquo;Tis strange to me, that they that love to tell<br>
+Things done of old, yea, and that do excel<br>
+Their equals in historiology,<br>
+Speak not of Mansoul&rsquo;s wars, but let them lie<br>
+Dead, like old fables, or such worthless things,<br>
+That to the reader no advantage brings:<br>
+When men, let them make what they will their own,<br>
+Till they know this, are to themselves unknown.<br>
+Of stories, I well know, there&rsquo;s divers sorts,<br>
+Some foreign, some domestic; and reports<br>
+Are thereof made as fancy leads the writers:<br>
+(By books a man may guess at the inditers.)<br>
+Some will again of that which never was,<br>
+Nor will be, feign (and that without a cause)<br>
+Such matter, raise such mountains, tell such things<br>
+Of men, of laws, of countries, and of kings;<br>
+And in their story seem to be so sage,<br>
+And with such gravity clothe every page,<br>
+That though their frontispiece says all is vain,<br>
+Yet to their way disciples they obtain.<br>
+But, readers, I have somewhat else to do,<br>
+Than with vain stories thus to trouble you.<br>
+What here I say, some men do know so well,<br>
+They can with tears and joy the story tell.<br>
+The town of Mansoul is well known to many,<br>
+Nor are her troubles doubted of by any<br>
+That are acquainted with those Histories<br>
+That Mansoul and her wars anatomize.<br>
+Then lend thine ear to what I do relate,<br>
+Touching the town of Mansoul and her state:<br>
+How she was lost, took captive, made a slave:<br>
+And how against him set, that should her save;<br>
+Yea, how by hostile ways she did oppose<br>
+Her Lord, and with his enemy did close.<br>
+For they are true: he that will them deny<br>
+Must needs the best of records vilify.<br>
+For my part, I myself was in the town,<br>
+Both when &rsquo;twas set up, and when pulling down.<br>
+I saw Diabolus in his possession,<br>
+And Mansoul also under his oppression.<br>
+Yea, I was there when she own&rsquo;d him for lord,<br>
+And to him did submit with one accord.<br>
+When Mansoul trampled upon things divine,<br>
+And wallowed in filth as doth a swine;<br>
+When she betook herself unto her arms,<br>
+Fought her Emmanuel, despis&rsquo;d his charms;<br>
+Then I was there, and did rejoice to see<br>
+Diabolus and Mansoul so agree.<br>
+Let no men, then, count me a fable-maker,<br>
+Nor make my name or credit a partaker<br>
+Of their derision: what is here in view,<br>
+Of mine own knowledge, I dare say is true.<br>
+I saw the Prince&rsquo;s armed men come down<br>
+By troops, by thousands, to besiege the town;<br>
+I saw the captains, heard the trumpets sound,<br>
+And how his forces covered all the ground.<br>
+Yea, how they set themselves in battle-&rsquo;ray,<br>
+I shall remember to my dying day.<br>
+I saw the colours waving in the wind,<br>
+And they within to mischief how combin&rsquo;d<br>
+To ruin Mansoul, and to make away<br>
+Her primum mobile without delay.<br>
+I saw the mounts cast up against the town,<br>
+And how the slings were placed to beat it down:<br>
+I heard the stones fly whizzing by mine ears,<br>
+(What longer kept in mind than got in fears?)<br>
+I heard them fall, and saw what work they made.<br>
+And how old Mors did cover with his shade<br>
+The face of Mansoul; and I heard her cry,<br>
+&lsquo;Woe worth the day, in dying I shall die!&rsquo;<br>
+I saw the battering-rams, and how they play&rsquo;d<br>
+To beat open Ear-gate; and I was afraid<br>
+Not only Ear-gate, but the very town<br>
+Would by those battering-rams be beaten down.<br>
+I saw the fights, and heard the captains shout,<br>
+And in each battle saw who faced about;<br>
+I saw who wounded were, and who were slain;<br>
+And who, when dead, would come to life again.<br>
+I heard the cries of those that wounded were,<br>
+(While others fought like men bereft of fear,)<br>
+And while the cry, &lsquo;Kill, kill,&rsquo; was in mine ears,<br>
+The gutters ran, not so with blood as tears.<br>
+Indeed, the captains did not always fight,<br>
+But then they would molest us day and night;<br>
+Their cry, &lsquo;Up, fall on, let us take the town,&rsquo;<br>
+Kept us from sleeping, or from lying down.<br>
+I was there when the gates were broken ope,<br>
+And saw how Mansoul then was stripp&rsquo;d of hope;<br>
+I saw the captains march into the town,<br>
+How there they fought, and did their foes cut down.<br>
+I heard the Prince bid Boanerges go<br>
+Up to the castle, and there seize his foe;<br>
+And saw him and his fellows bring him down,<br>
+In chains of great contempt quite through the town.<br>
+I saw Emmanuel, when he possess&rsquo;d<br>
+His town of Mansoul; and how greatly blest<br>
+A town his gallant town of Mansoul was,<br>
+When she received his pardon, loved his laws.<br>
+When the Diabolonians were caught,<br>
+When tried, and when to execution brought,<br>
+Then I was there; yea, I was standing by<br>
+When Mansoul did the rebels crucify.<br>
+I also saw Mansoul clad all in white,<br>
+I heard her Prince call her his heart&rsquo;s delight.<br>
+I saw him put upon her chains of gold,<br>
+And rings, and bracelets, goodly to behold.<br>
+What shall I say?&nbsp; I heard the people&rsquo;s cries,<br>
+And saw the Prince wipe tears from Mansoul&rsquo;s eyes.<br>
+And heard the groans, and saw the joy of many:<br>
+Tell you of all, I neither will, nor can I.<br>
+But by what here I say, you well may see<br>
+That Mansoul&rsquo;s matchless wars no fables be.<br>
+Mansoul, the desire of both princes was:<br>
+One keep his gain would, t&rsquo;other gain his loss.<br>
+Diabolus would cry, &lsquo;The town is mine!&rsquo;<br>
+Emmanuel would plead a right divine<br>
+Unto his Mansoul: then to blows they go,<br>
+And Mansoul cries, &lsquo;These wars will me undo.&rsquo;<br>
+Mansoul! her wars seemed endless in her eyes;<br>
+She&rsquo;s lost by one, becomes another&rsquo;s prize:<br>
+And he again that lost her last would swear,<br>
+&lsquo;Have her I will, or her in pieces tear.&rsquo;<br>
+Mansoul! it was the very seat of war;<br>
+Wherefore her troubles greater were by far<br>
+Than only where the noise of war is heard,<br>
+Or where the shaking of a sword is fear&rsquo;d;<br>
+Or only where small skirmishes are fought,<br>
+Or where the fancy fighteth with a thought.<br>
+She saw the swords of fighting men made red,<br>
+And heard the cries of those with them wounded:<br>
+Must not her frights, then, be much more by far<br>
+Than theirs that to such doings strangers are?<br>
+Or theirs that hear the beating of a drum,<br>
+But not made fly for fear from house and home?<br>
+Mansoul not only heard the trumpet&rsquo;s sound,<br>
+But saw her gallants gasping on the ground:<br>
+Wherefore we must not think that she could rest<br>
+With them, whose greatest earnest is but jest:<br>
+Or where the blust&rsquo;ring threat&rsquo;ning of great wars<br>
+Do end in parlies, or in wording jars.<br>
+Mansoul! her mighty wars, they did portend<br>
+Her weal or woe, and that world without end:<br>
+Wherefore she must be more concern&rsquo;d than they<br>
+Whose fears begin, and end the selfsame day;<br>
+Or where none other harm doth come to him<br>
+That is engaged, but loss of life or limb,<br>
+As all must needs confess that now do dwell<br>
+In Universe, and can this story tell.<br>
+Count me not, then, with them that, to amaze<br>
+The people, set them on the stars to gaze,<br>
+Insinuating with much confidence,<br>
+That each of them is now the residence<br>
+Of some brave creatures: yea, a world they will<br>
+Have in each star, though it be past their skill<br>
+To make it manifest to any man,<br>
+That reason hath, or tell his fingers can.<br>
+But I have too long held thee in the porch,<br>
+And kept thee from the sunshine with a torch,<br>
+Well, now go forward, step within the door,<br>
+And there behold five hundred times much more<br>
+Of all sorts of such inward rarities<br>
+As please the mind will, and will feed the eyes<br>
+With those, which, if a Christian, thou wilt see<br>
+Not small, but things of greatest moment be.<br>
+Nor do thou go to work without my key;<br>
+(In mysteries men soon do lose their way;)<br>
+And also turn it right, if thou wouldst know<br>
+My riddle, and wouldst with my heifer plough;<br>
+It lies there in the window.&nbsp; Fare thee well,<br>
+My next may be to ring thy passing-bell.<br>
+<br>
+JOHN BUNYAN.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+AN ADVERTISEMENT TO THE READER.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Some say the &lsquo;Pilgrim&rsquo;s Progress&rsquo; is not mine,<br>
+Insinuating as if I would shine<br>
+In name and fame by the worth of another,<br>
+Like some made rich by robbing of their brother.<br>
+Or that so fond I am of being sire,<br>
+I&rsquo;ll father bastards; or, if need require,<br>
+I&rsquo;ll tell a lie in print to get applause.<br>
+I scorn it: John such dirt-heap never was,<br>
+Since God converted him.&nbsp; Let this suffice<br>
+To show why I my &lsquo;Pilgrim&rsquo; patronize.<br>
+It came from mine own heart, so to my head,<br>
+And thence into my fingers trickled;<br>
+Then to my pen, from whence immediately<br>
+On paper I did dribble it daintily.<br>
+Manner and matter, too, was all mine own,<br>
+Nor was it unto any mortal known<br>
+Till I had done it; nor did any then<br>
+By books, by wits, by tongues, or hand, or pen,<br>
+Add five words to it, or write half a line<br>
+Thereof: the whole, and every whit is mine.<br>
+Also for THIS, thine eye is now upon,<br>
+The matter in this manner came from none<br>
+But the same heart, and head, fingers, and pen,<br>
+As did the other.&nbsp; Witness all good men;<br>
+For none in all the world, without a lie,<br>
+Can say that this is mine, excepting I<br>
+I write not this of my ostentation,<br>
+Nor &lsquo;cause I seek of men their commendation;<br>
+I do it to keep them from such surmise,<br>
+As tempt them will my name to scandalize.<br>
+Witness my name, if anagram&rsquo;d to thee,<br>
+The letters make - &lsquo;Nu hony in a B.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+JOHN BUNYAN.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+A RELATION OF THE HOLY WAR.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+In my travels, as I walked through many regions and countries, it was
+my chance to happen into that famous continent of Universe.&nbsp; A
+very large and spacious country it is: it lieth between the two poles,
+and just amidst the four points of the heavens.&nbsp; It is a place
+well watered, and richly adorned with hills and valleys, bravely situate,
+and for the most part, at least where I was, very fruitful, also well
+peopled, and a very sweet air.<br>
+<br>
+The people are not all of one complexion, nor yet of one language, mode,
+or way of religion, but differ as much as, it is said, do the planets
+themselves.&nbsp; Some are right, and some are wrong, even as it happeneth
+to be in lesser regions.<br>
+<br>
+In this country, as I said, it was my lot to travel; and there travel
+I did, and that so long, even till I learned much of their mother tongue,
+together with the customs and manners of them among whom I was.&nbsp;
+And, to speak truth, I was much delighted to see and hear many things
+which I saw and heard among them; yea, I had, to be sure, even lived
+and died a native among them, (so was I taken with them and their doings,)
+had not my master sent for me home to his house, there to do business
+for him, and to oversee business done.<br>
+<br>
+Now there is in this gallant country of Universe a fair and delicate
+town, a corporation called Mansoul; a town for its building so curious,
+for its situation so commodious, for its privileges so advantageous,
+(I mean with reference to its origin,) that I may say of it, as was
+said before of the continent in which it is placed, There is not its
+equal under the whole heaven.<br>
+<br>
+As to the situation of this town, it lieth just between the two worlds;
+and the first founder and builder of it, so far as by the best and most
+authentic records I can gather, was one Shaddai; and he built it for
+his own delight.&nbsp; He made it the mirror and glory of all that he
+made, even the top-piece, beyond anything else that he did in that country.&nbsp;
+Yea, so goodly a town was Mansoul when first built, that it is said
+by some, the gods, at the setting up thereof, came down to see it, and
+sang for joy.&nbsp; And as he made it goodly to behold, so also mighty
+to have dominion over all the country round about.&nbsp; Yea, all were
+commanded to acknowledge Mansoul for their metropolitan, all were enjoined
+to do homage to it.&nbsp; Aye, the town itself had positive commission
+and power from her King to demand service of all, and also to subdue
+any that anyways denied to do it.<br>
+<br>
+There was reared up in the midst of this town a most famous and stately
+palace; for strength, it might be called a castle; for pleasantness,
+a paradise; for largeness, a place so copious as to contain all the
+world.&nbsp; This place the King Shaddai intended but for himself alone,
+and not another with him; partly because of his own delights, and partly
+because he would not that the terror of strangers should be upon the
+town.&nbsp; This place Shaddai made also a garrison of, but committed
+the keeping of it only to the men of the town.<br>
+<br>
+The walls of the town were well built, yea, so fast and firm were they
+knit and compact together, that, had it not been for the townsmen themselves,
+they could not have been shaken or broken for ever.&nbsp; For here lay
+the excellent wisdom of him that builded Mansoul, that the walls could
+never be broken down nor hurt by the most mighty adverse potentate,
+unless the townsmen gave consent thereto.<br>
+<br>
+This famous town of Mansoul had five gates, in at which to come, out
+at which to go; and these were made likewise answerable to the walls,
+to wit, impregnable, and such as could never be opened nor forced but
+by the will and leave of those within.&nbsp; The names of the gates
+were these: Ear-gate, Eye-gate, Mouth-gate, Nose-gate, and Feel-gate.<br>
+<br>
+Other things there were that belonged to the town of Mansoul, which
+if you adjoin to these, will yet give farther demonstration to all,
+of the glory and strength of the place.&nbsp; It had always a sufficiency
+of provision within its walls; it had the best, most wholesome, and
+excellent law that then was extant in the world.&nbsp; There was not
+a rascal, rogue, or traitorous person then within its walls; they were
+all true men, and fast joined together; and this, you know, is a great
+matter.&nbsp; And to all these, it had always (so long as it had the
+goodness to keep true to Shaddai the King) his countenance, his protection,
+and it was his delight, etc.<br>
+<br>
+Well, upon a time, there was one Diabolus, a mighty giant, made an assault
+upon this famous town of Mansoul, to take it, and make it his own habitation.&nbsp;
+This giant was king of the blacks, and a most raving prince he was.&nbsp;
+We will, if you please, first discourse of the origin of this Diabolus,
+and then of his taking of this famous town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+This Diabolus is indeed a great and mighty prince, and yet both poor
+and beggarly.&nbsp; As to his origin, he was at first one of the servants
+of King Shaddai, made, and taken, and put by him into most high and
+mighty place; yea, was put into such principalities as belonged to the
+best of his territories and dominions.&nbsp; This Diabolus was made
+&lsquo;son of the morning,&rsquo; and a brave place he had of it: it
+brought him much glory, and gave him much brightness, an income that
+might have contented his Luciferian heart, had it not been insatiable,
+and enlarged as hell itself.<br>
+<br>
+Well, he seeing himself thus exalted to greatness and honour, and raging
+in his mind for higher state and degree, what doth he but begins to
+think with himself how he might be set up as lord over all, and have
+the sole power under Shaddai.&nbsp; (Now that did the King reserve for
+his Son, yea, and had already bestowed it upon him.)&nbsp; Wherefore
+he first consults with himself what had best to be done; and then breaks
+his mind to some other of his companions, to the which they also agreed.&nbsp;
+So, in fine, they came to this issue that they should make an attempt
+upon the King&rsquo;s Son to destroy him, that the inheritance might
+be theirs.&nbsp; Well, to be short, the treason, as I said, was concluded,
+the time appointed, the word given, the rebels rendezvoused, and the
+assault attempted.&nbsp; Now the King and his Son being all and always
+eye, could not but discern all passages in his dominions; and he, having
+always love for his Son as for himself, could not at what he saw but
+be greatly provoked and offended: wherefore what does he, but takes
+them in the very nick and first trip that they made towards their design,
+convicts them of the treason, horrid rebellion, and conspiracy that
+they had devised, and now attempted to put into practice, and casts
+them altogether out of all place of trust, benefit, honour, and preferment.&nbsp;
+This done, he banishes them the court, turns them down into the horrible
+pits, as fast bound in chains, never more to expect the least favour
+from his hands, but to abide the judgment that he had appointed, and
+that for ever.<br>
+<br>
+Now they being thus cast out of all place of trust, profit, and honour,
+and also knowing that they had lost their prince&rsquo;s favour for
+ever, (being banished his court, and cast down to the horrible pits,)
+you may he sure they would now add to their former pride what malice
+and rage against Shaddai, and against his Son, they could.&nbsp; Wherefore,
+roving and ranging in much fury from place to place, if, perhaps, they
+might find something that was the King&rsquo;s, by spoiling of that,
+to revenge themselves on him; at last they happened into this spacious
+country of Universe, and steer their course towards the town of Mansoul;
+and considering that that town was one of the chief works and delights
+of King Shaddai, what do they but, after counsel taken, make an assault
+upon that.&nbsp; I say, they knew that Mansoul belonged unto Shaddai;
+for they were there when he built it and beautified it for himself.&nbsp;
+So when they had found the place, they shouted horribly for joy, and
+roared on it as a lion upon the prey, saying, &lsquo;Now we have found
+the prize, and how to be revenged on King Shaddai for what he hath done
+to us.&rsquo;&nbsp; So they sat down and called a council of war, and
+considered with themselves what ways and methods they had best to engage
+in for the winning to themselves this famous town of Mansoul, and these
+four things were then propounded to be considered of.<br>
+<br>
+First.&nbsp; Whether they had best all of them to show themselves in
+this design to the town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+Secondly.&nbsp; Whether they had best to go and sit down against Mansoul
+in their now ragged and beggarly guise.<br>
+<br>
+Thirdly.&nbsp; Whether they had best show to Mansoul their intentions,
+and what design they came about, or whether to assault it with words
+and ways of deceit.<br>
+<br>
+Fourthly.&nbsp; Whether they had not best to some of their companions
+to give out private orders to take the advantage, if they see one or
+more of the principal townsmen, to shoot them, if thereby they shall
+judge their cause and design will the better be promoted.<br>
+<br>
+1. It was answered to the first of these proposals in the negative,
+to wit, that it would not be best that all should show themselves before
+the town, because the appearance of many of them might alarm and frighten
+the town; whereas a few or but one of them was not so likely to do it.&nbsp;
+And to enforce this advice to take place it was added further, that
+if Mansoul was frighted, or did take the alarm, &lsquo;It is impossible,&rsquo;
+said Diabolus (for he spake now), &lsquo;that we should take the town:
+for that none can enter into it without its own consent.&nbsp; Let,
+therefore, but few, or but one, assault Mansoul; and in mine opinion,&rsquo;
+said Diabolus, &lsquo;let me be he.&rsquo;&nbsp; Wherefore to this they
+all agreed.<br>
+<br>
+2. And then to the second proposal they came, namely, Whether they had
+best go and sit down before Mansoul in their now ragged and beggarly
+guise.&nbsp; To which it was answered also in the negative, By no means;
+and that because, though the town of Mansoul had been made to know,
+and to have to do, before now, with things that are invisible, they
+did never as yet see any of their fellow-creatures in so sad and rascally
+condition as they; and this was the advice of that fierce Alecto.&nbsp;
+Then said Apollyon, &lsquo;The advice is pertinent; for even one of
+us appearing to them as we are now, must needs both beget and multiply
+such thoughts in them as will both put them into a consternation of
+spirit, and necessitate them to put themselves upon their guard.&nbsp;
+And if so,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;then, as my Lord Diabolus said but
+now, it is in vain for us to think of taking the town.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Then said that mighty giant Beelzebub, &lsquo;The advice that already
+is given is safe; for though the men of Mansoul have seen such things
+as we once were, yet hitherto they did never behold such things as we
+now are; and it is best, in mine opinion, to come upon them in such
+a guise as is common to, and most familiar among them.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+To this, when they had consented, the next thing to be considered was,
+in what shape, hue, or guise Diabolus had best to show himself when
+he went about to make Mansoul his own.&nbsp; Then one said one thing,
+and another the contrary.&nbsp; At last Lucifer answered, that, in his
+opinion, it was best that his lordship should assume the body of some
+of those creatures that they of the town had dominion over; &lsquo;for,&rsquo;
+quoth he, &lsquo;these are not only familiar to them, but, being under
+them, they will never imagine that an attempt should by them be made
+upon the town; and, to blind all, let him assume the body of one of
+those beasts that Mansoul deems to be wiser than any of the rest.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+This advice was applauded of all: so it was determined that the giant
+Diabolus should assume the dragon, for that he was in those days as
+familiar with the town of Mansoul as now is the bird with the boy; for
+nothing that was in its primitive state was at all amazing to them.&nbsp;
+Then they proceeded to the third thing, which was:<br>
+<br>
+3. Whether they had best to show their intentions, or the design of
+his coming, to Mansoul, or no.&nbsp; This also was answered in the negative,
+because of the weight that was in the former reasons, to wit, for that
+Mansoul were a strong people, a strong people in a strong town, whose
+wall and gates were impregnable, (to say nothing of their castle,) nor
+can they by any means be won but by their own consent.&nbsp; &lsquo;Besides,&rsquo;
+said Legion, (for he gave answer to this,) &lsquo;a discovery of our
+intentions may make them send to their king for aid; and if that be
+done, I know quickly what time of day it will be with us.&nbsp; Therefore
+let us assault them in all pretended fairness, covering our intentions
+with all manner of lies, flatteries, delusive words; feigning things
+that never will be, and promising that to them that they shall never
+find.&nbsp; This is the way to win Mansoul, and to make them of themselves
+open their gates to us; yea, and to desire us too to come in to them.&nbsp;
+And the reason why I think that this project will do is, because the
+people of Mansoul now are, every one, simple and innocent, all honest
+and true; nor do they as yet know what it is to be assaulted with fraud,
+guile, and hypocrisy.&nbsp; They are strangers to lying and dissembling
+lips; wherefore we cannot, if thus we be disguised, by them at all be
+discerned; our lies shall go for true sayings, and our dissimulations
+for upright dealings.&nbsp; What we promise them they will in that believe
+us, especially if, in all our lies and feigned words, we pretend great
+love to them, and that our design is only their advantage and honour.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Now there was not one bit of a reply against this; this went as current
+down as doth the water down a steep descent.&nbsp; Wherefore they go
+to consider of the last proposal, which was:<br>
+<br>
+4. Whether they had not best to give out orders to some of their company
+to shoot some one or more of the principal of the townsmen, if they
+judge that their cause may be promoted thereby.&nbsp; This was carried
+in the affirmative, and the man that was designed by this stratagem
+to be destroyed was one Mr. Resistance, otherwise called Captain Resistance.&nbsp;
+And a great man in Mansoul this Captain Resistance was, and a man that
+the giant Diabolus and his band more feared than they feared the whole
+town of Mansoul besides.&nbsp; Now who should be the actor to do the
+murder?&nbsp; That was the next, and they appointed one Tisiphone, a
+fury of the lake, to do it.<br>
+<br>
+They thus having ended their council of war, rose up, and essayed to
+do as they had determined; they marched towards Mansoul, but all in
+a manner invisible, save one, only one; nor did he approach the town
+in his own likeness, but under the shade and in the body of the dragon.<br>
+<br>
+So they drew up and sat down before Ear-gate, for that was the place
+of hearing for all without the town, as Eye-gate was the place of perspection.&nbsp;
+So, as I said, he came up with his train to the gate, and laid his ambuscado
+for Captain Resistance within bow-shot of the town.&nbsp; This done,
+the giant ascended up close to the gate, and called to the town of Mansoul
+for audience.&nbsp; Nor took he any with him but one Ill-pause, who
+was his orator in all difficult matters.&nbsp; Now, as I said, he being
+come up to the gate, (as the manner of those times was,) sounded his
+trumpet for audience; at which the chief of the town of Mansoul, such
+as my Lord Innocent, my Lord Willbewill, my Lord Mayor, Mr. Recorder,
+and Captain Resistance, came down to the wall to see who was there,
+and what was the matter.&nbsp; And my Lord Willbewill, when he had looked
+over and saw who stood at the gate, demanded what he was, wherefore
+he was come, and why he roused the town of Mansoul with so unusual a
+sound.<br>
+<br>
+Diabolus, then, as if he had been a lamb, began his oration, and said:
+&lsquo;Gentlemen of the famous town of Mansoul, I am, as you may perceive,
+no far dweller from you, but near, and one that is bound by the king
+to do you my homage and what service I can; wherefore, that I may be
+faithful to myself and to you, I have somewhat of concern to impart
+unto you.&nbsp; Wherefore, grant me your audience, and hear me patiently.&nbsp;
+And first, I will assure you, it is not myself, but you - not mine,
+but your advantage that I seek by what I now do, as will full well be
+made manifest, by that I have opened my mind unto you.&nbsp; For, gentlemen,
+I am (to tell you the truth) come to show you how you may obtain great
+and ample deliverance from a bondage that, unawares to yourselves, you
+are captivated and enslaved under.&rsquo;&nbsp; At this the town of
+Mansoul began to prick up its ears.&nbsp; And &lsquo;What is it?&nbsp;
+Pray what is it?&rsquo; thought they.&nbsp; And he said, &lsquo;I have
+somewhat to say to you concerning your King, concerning his law, and
+also touching yourselves.&nbsp; Touching your King, I know he is great
+and potent; but yet all that he hath said to you is neither true nor
+yet for your advantage.&nbsp; 1. It is not true, for that wherewith
+he hath hitherto awed you, shall not come to pass, nor be fulfilled,
+though you do the thing that he hath forbidden.&nbsp; But if there was
+danger, what a slavery is it to live always in fear of the greatest
+of punishments, for doing so small and trivial a thing as eating of
+a little fruit is.&nbsp; 2. Touching his laws, this I say further, they
+are both unreasonable, intricate, and intolerable.&nbsp; Unreasonable,
+as was hinted before; for that the punishment is not proportioned to
+the offence: there is great difference and disproportion between the
+life and an apple; yet the one must go for the other by the law of your
+Shaddai.&nbsp; But it is also intricate, in that he saith, first, you
+may eat of all; and yet after forbids the eating of one.&nbsp; And then,
+in the last place, it must needs be intolerable, forasmuch as that fruit
+which you are forbidden to eat of (if you are forbidden any) is that,
+and that alone, which is able, by your eating, to minister to you a
+good as yet unknown by you.&nbsp; This is manifest by the very name
+of the tree; it is called the &ldquo;tree of knowledge of good and evil;&rdquo;
+and have you that knowledge as yet? No, no; nor can you conceive how
+good, how pleasant, and how much to be desired to make one wise it is,
+so long as you stand by your King&rsquo;s commandment.&nbsp; Why should
+you be holden in ignorance and blindness?&nbsp; Why should you not be
+enlarged in knowledge and understanding?&nbsp; And now, O ye inhabitants
+of the famous town of Mansoul, to speak more particularly to yourselves
+you are not a free people!&nbsp; You are kept both in bondage and slavery,
+and that by a grievous threat; no reason being annexed but, &ldquo;So
+I will have it; so it shall be.&rdquo;&nbsp; And is it not grievous
+to think on, that that very thing which you are forbidden to do might
+you but do it, would yield you both wisdom and honour? for then your
+eyes will be opened, and you shall be as gods.&nbsp; Now, since this
+is thus,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;can you be kept by any prince in more
+slavery and in greater bondage than you are under this day?&nbsp; You
+are made underlings, and are wrapped up in inconveniences, as I have
+well made appear.&nbsp; For what bondage greater than to be kept in
+blindness?&nbsp; Will not reason tell you that it is better to have
+eyes than to be without them? and so to be at liberty to be better than
+to be shut up in a dark and stinking cave?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+And just now, while Diabolus was speaking these words to Mansoul, Tisiphone
+shot at Captain Resistance, where he stood on the gate, and mortally
+wounded him in the head; so that he, to the amazement of the townsmen,
+and the encouragement of Diabolus, fell down dead quite over the wall.&nbsp;
+Now, when Captain Resistance was dead, (and he was the only man of war
+in the town,) poor Mansoul was wholly left naked of courage, nor had
+she now any heart to resist.&nbsp; But this was as the devil would have
+it.&nbsp; Then stood forth he, Mr. Ill-pause, that Diabolus brought
+with him, who was his orator; and he addressed himself to speak to the
+town of Mansoul; the tenour of whose speech here follows:-<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Gentlemen,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;it is my master&rsquo;s happiness
+that he has this day a quiet and teachable auditory; and it is hoped
+by us that we shall prevail with you not to cast off good advice.&nbsp;
+My master has a very great love for you; and although, as he very well
+knows, that he runs the hazard of the anger of King Shaddai, yet love
+to you will make him do more than that.&nbsp; Nor doth there need that
+a word more should be spoken to confirm for truth what he hath said;
+there is not a word but carries with it self-evidence in its bowels;
+the very name of the tree may put an end to all controversy in this
+matter.&nbsp; I therefore, at this time, shall only add this advice
+to you, under and by the leave of my lord;&rsquo; (and with that he
+made Diabolus a very low congee;) &lsquo;consider his words, look on
+the tree and the promising fruit thereof; remember also that yet you
+know but little, and that this is the way to know more: and if your
+reasons be not conquered to accept of such good counsel, you are not
+the men that I took you to be.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+But when the townsfolk saw that the tree was good for food, and that
+it was pleasant to the eye, and a tree to be desired to make one wise,
+they did as old Ill-pause advised; they took and did eat thereof.&nbsp;
+Now this I should have told you before, that even then, when this Ill-pause
+was making his speech to the townsmen, my Lord Innocency (whether by
+a shot from the camp of the giant, or from some sinking qualm that suddenly
+took him, or whether by the stinking breath of that treacherous villain
+old Ill-pause, for so I am most apt to think) sunk down in the place
+where he stood, nor could be brought to life again.&nbsp; Thus these
+two brave men died - brave men, I call them; for they were the beauty
+and glory of Mansoul, so long as they lived therein; nor did there now
+remain any more a noble spirit in Mansoul; they all fell down and yielded
+obedience to Diabolus; and became his slaves and vassals, as you shall
+hear.<br>
+<br>
+Now these being dead, what do the rest of the townsfolk, but, as men
+that had found a fool&rsquo;s paradise, they presently, as afore was
+hinted, fall to prove the truth of the giant&rsquo;s words.&nbsp; And,
+first, they did as Ill-pause had taught them; they looked, they considered
+they were taken with the forbidden fruit; they took thereof, and did
+eat; and having eaten, they became immediately drunken therewith.&nbsp;
+So they open the gate, both Ear-gate and Eye-gate, and let in Diabolus
+with all his bands, quite forgetting their good Shaddai, his law, and
+the judgment that he had annexed, with solemn threatening, to the breach
+thereof.<br>
+<br>
+&nbsp;Diabolus, having now obtained entrance in at the gates of the
+town, marches up to the middle thereof, to make his conquest as sure
+as he could; and finding, by this time, the affections of the people
+warmly inclining to him, he, as thinking it was best striking while
+the iron is hot, made this further deceivable speech unto them, saying,
+&lsquo;Alas, my poor Mansoul!&nbsp; I have done thee indeed this service,
+as to promote thee to honour, and to greaten thy liberty; but, alas!
+alas! poor Mansoul, thou wantest now one to defend thee; for assure
+thyself that when Shaddai shall hear what is done, he will come; for
+sorry will he be that thou hast broken his bonds, and cast his cords
+away from thee.&nbsp; What wilt thou do?&nbsp; Wilt thou, after enlargement,
+suffer thy privileges to be invaded and taken away, or what wilt resolve
+with thyself?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then they all with one consent said to this bramble, &lsquo;Do thou
+reign over us.&rsquo;&nbsp; So he accepted the motion, and became the
+king of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; This being done, the next thing was
+to give him possession of the castle, and so of the whole strength of
+the town.&nbsp; Wherefore, into the castle he goes; it was that which
+Shaddai built in Mansoul for his own delight and pleasure; this now
+was become a den and hold for the giant Diabolus.<br>
+<br>
+Now, having got possession of this stately palace or castle, what doth
+he but makes it a garrison for himself, and strengthens and fortifies
+it with all sorts of provision, against the King Shaddai, or those that
+should endeavour the regaining of it to him and his obedience again.<br>
+<br>
+This done, but not thinking himself yet secure enough, in the next place
+he bethinks himself of new modelling the town; and so he does, setting
+up one, and putting down another at pleasure.&nbsp; Wherefore my Lord
+Mayor, whose name was my Lord Understanding, and Mr. Recorder, whose
+name was Mr. Conscience, these he put out of place and power.<br>
+<br>
+As for my Lord Mayor, though he was an understanding man, and one too
+that had complied with the rest of the town of Mansoul in admitting
+the giant into the town, yet Diabolus thought not fit to let him abide
+in his former lustre and glory, because he was a seeing man.&nbsp; Wherefore
+he darkened him, not only by taking from him his office and power, but
+by building a high and strong tower, just between the sun&rsquo;s reflections
+and the windows of my lord&rsquo;s palace; by which means his house
+and all, and the whole of his habitation, were made as dark as darkness
+itself.&nbsp; And thus, being alienated from the light, he became as
+one that was born blind.&nbsp; To this, his house, my lord was confined
+as to a prison; nor might he, upon his parole, go farther than within
+his own bounds.&nbsp; And now, had he had a heart to do for Mansoul,
+what could he do for it, or wherein could he be profitable to her?&nbsp;
+So then, so long as Mansoul was under the power and government of Diabolus,
+(and so long it was under him, as it was obedient to him, which was
+even until by a war it was rescued out of his hand,) so long my Lord
+Mayor was rather an impediment in, than an advantage to the famous town
+of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+As for Mr. Recorder, before the town was taken, he was a man well read
+in the laws of his king, and also a man of courage and faithfulness
+to speak truth at every occasion; and he had a tongue as bravely hung
+as he had a head filled with judgment.&nbsp; Now, this man Diabolus
+could by no means abide, because, though he gave his consent to his
+coming into the town, yet he could not, by all the wiles, trials, stratagems,
+and devices that he could use, make him wholly his own.&nbsp; True,
+he was much degenerated from his former king, and also much pleased
+with many of the giant&rsquo;s laws and service; but all this would
+not do, forasmuch as he was not wholly his.&nbsp; He would now and then
+think upon Shaddai, and have dread of his law upon him, and then he
+would speak against Diabolus with a voice as great as when a lion roareth.&nbsp;
+Yea, and would also at certain times, when his fits were upon him, (for
+you must know that sometimes he had terrible fits,) make the whole town
+of Mansoul shake with his voice: and therefore the now king of Mansoul
+could not abide him.<br>
+<br>
+Diabolus, therefore, feared the Recorder more than any that was left
+alive in the town of Mansoul, because, as I said, his words did shake
+the whole town; they were like the rattling thunder, and also like thunder-claps.&nbsp;
+Since, therefore, the giant could not make him wholly his own, what
+doth he do but studies all that he could to debauch the old gentleman,
+and by debauchery to stupefy his mind, and more harden his heart in
+the ways of vanity.&nbsp; And as he attempted, so he accomplished his
+design: he debauched the man, and by little and little so drew him into
+sin and wickedness, that at last he was not only debauched, as at first,
+and so by consequence defiled, but was almost (at last, I say) past
+all conscience of sin.&nbsp; And this was the farthest Diabolus could
+go.&nbsp; Wherefore he bethinks him of another project, and that was,
+to persuade the men of the town that Mr. Recorder was mad, and so not
+to be regarded.&nbsp; And for this he urged his fits, and said, &lsquo;If
+he be himself, why doth he not do thus always?&nbsp; But,&rsquo; quoth
+he, &lsquo;as all mad folks have their fits, and in them their raving
+language, so hath this old and doating gentleman.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Thus, by one means or another, he quickly got Mansoul to slight, neglect,
+and despise whatever Mr. Recorder could say.&nbsp; For, besides what
+already you have heard, Diabolus had a way to make the old gentleman,
+when he was merry, unsay and deny what he in his fits had affirmed.&nbsp;
+And, indeed, this was the next way to make himself ridiculous, and to
+cause that no man should regard him.&nbsp; Also now he never spake freely
+for King Shaddai, but also by force and constraint.&nbsp; Besides, he
+would at one time be hot against that at which, at another, he would
+hold his peace; so uneven was he now in his doings.&nbsp; Sometimes
+he would be as if fast asleep, and again sometimes as dead, even then
+when the whole town of Mansoul was in her career after vanity, and in
+her dance after the giant&rsquo;s pipe.<br>
+<br>
+Wherefore, sometimes when Mansoul did use to be frighted with the thundering
+voice of the Recorder that was, and when they did tell Diabolus of it,
+he would answer, that what the old gentleman said was neither of love
+to him nor pity to them, but of a foolish fondness that he had to be
+prating; and so would hush, still, and put all to quiet again.&nbsp;
+And that he might leave no argument unurged that might tend to make
+them secure, he said, and said it often, &lsquo;O Mansoul! consider
+that, notwithstanding the old gentleman&rsquo;s rage, and the rattle
+of his high and thundering words, you hear nothing of Shaddai himself;&rsquo;
+when, liar and deceiver that he was, every outcry of Mr. Recorder against
+the sin of Mansoul was the voice of God in him to them.&nbsp; But he
+goes on, and says, &lsquo;You see that he values not the loss nor rebellion
+of the town of Mansoul, nor will he trouble himself with calling his
+town to a reckoning for their giving themselves to me.&nbsp; He knows
+that though you were his, now you are lawfully mine; so, leaving us
+one to another, he now hath shaken his hands of us.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Moreover, O Mansoul!&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;consider how I have
+served you, even to the uttermost of my power; and that with the best
+that I have, could get, or procure for you in all the world: besides,
+I dare say that the laws and customs that you now are under, and by
+which you do homage to me, do yield you more solace and content than
+did the paradise that at first you possessed.&nbsp; Your liberty also,
+as yourselves do very well know, has been greatly widened and enlarged
+by me; whereas I found you a penned-up people.&nbsp; I have not laid
+any restraint upon you; you have no law, statute, or judgment of mine
+to fright you; I call none of you to account for your doings, except
+the madman - you know who I mean; I have granted you to live, each man
+like a prince in his own, even with as little control from me as I myself
+have from you.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+And thus would Diabolus hush up and quiet the town of Mansoul, when
+the Recorder that was, did at times molest them: yea, and with such
+cursed orations as these, would set the whole town in a rage and fury
+against the old gentleman.&nbsp; Yea, the rascal crew at some times
+would be for destroying him.&nbsp; They have often wished, in my hearing,
+that he had lived a thousand miles off from them: his company, his words,
+yea, the sight of him, and specially when they remembered how in old
+times he did use to threaten and condemn them, (for all he was now so
+debauched,) did terrify and afflict them sore.<br>
+<br>
+But all wishes were vain, for I do not know how, unless by the power
+of Shaddai, and his wisdom, he was preserved in being amongst them.&nbsp;
+Besides, his house was as strong as a castle, and stood hard by a stronghold
+of the town: moreover, if at any time any of the crew or rabble attempted
+to make him away, he could pull up the sluices, and let in such floods
+as would drown all round about him.<br>
+<br>
+But to leave Mr. Recorder, and to come to my Lord Willbewill, another
+of the gentry of the famous town of Mansoul.&nbsp; This Willbewill was
+as high-born as any man in Mansoul, and was as much, if not more, a
+freeholder than many of them were; besides, if I remember my tale aright,
+he had some privileges peculiar to himself in the famous town of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+Now, together with these, he was a man of great strength, resolution,
+and courage, nor in his occasion could any turn him away.&nbsp; But
+I say, whether he was proud of his estate, privileges, strength, or
+what, (but sure it was through pride of something,) he scorns now to
+be a slave in Mansoul; and therefore resolves to bear office under Diabolus,
+that he might (such an one as he was) be a petty ruler and governor
+in Mansoul.&nbsp; And, headstrong man that he was! thus he began betimes;
+for this man, when Diabolus did make his oration at Ear-gate, was one
+of the first that was for consenting to his words, and for accepting
+his counsel at wholesome, and that was for the opening of the gate,
+and for letting him into the town; wherefore Diabolus had a kindness
+for him, and therefore he designed for him a place.&nbsp; And perceiving
+the valour and stoutness of the man, he coveted to have him for one
+of his great ones, to act and do in matters of the highest concern.<br>
+<br>
+So he sent for him, and talked with him of that secret matter that lay
+in his breast, but there needed not much persuasion in the case.&nbsp;
+For as at first he was willing that Diabolus should be let into the
+town, so now he was as willing to serve him there.&nbsp; When the tyrant,
+therefore, perceived the willingness of my lord to serve him, and that
+his mind stood bending that way, he forthwith made him the captain of
+the castle, governor of the wall, and keeper of the gates of Mansoul:
+yea, there was a clause in his commission, that nothing without him
+should be done in all the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; So that now, next to
+Diabolus himself, who but my Lord Willbewill in all the town of Mansoul!
+nor could anything now be done, but at his will and pleasure, throughout
+the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; He had also one Mr. Mind for his clerk, a
+man to speak on every way like his master: for he and his lord were
+in principle one, and in practice not far asunder.&nbsp; And now was
+Mansoul brought under to purpose, and made to fulfil the lusts of the
+will, and of the mind.<br>
+<br>
+But it will not out of my thoughts what a desperate one this Willbewill
+was when power was put into his hand.&nbsp; First, he flatly denied
+that he owed any suit or service to his former prince and liege lord.&nbsp;
+This done, in the next place he took an oath, and swore fidelity to
+his great master Diabolus, and then, being stated and settled in his
+places, offices, advancements, and preferments, oh! you cannot think,
+unless you had seen it, the strange work that this workman made in the
+town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+First, he maligned Mr. Recorder to death; he would neither endure to
+see him, nor hear the words of his mouth; he would shut his eyes when
+he saw him, and stop his ears when he heard him speak.&nbsp; Also he
+could not endure that so much as a fragment of the law of Shaddai should
+be anywhere seen in the town.&nbsp; For example, his clerk, Mr. Mind,
+had some old, rent, and torn parchments of the law of Shaddai in his
+house, but when Willbewill saw them, he cast them behind his back.&nbsp;
+True, Mr. Recorder had some of the laws in his study; but my lord could
+by no means come at them.&nbsp; He also thought and said, that the windows
+of my old Lord Mayor&rsquo;s house were always too light for the profit
+of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; The light of a candle he could not endure.&nbsp;
+Now nothing at all pleased Willbewill but what pleased Diabolus his
+lord.<br>
+<br>
+There was none like him to trumpet about the streets the brave nature,
+the wise conduct, and great glory of the king Diabolus.&nbsp; He would
+range and rove throughout all the streets of Mansoul to cry up his illustrious
+lord, and would make himself even as an abject, among the base and rascal
+crew, to cry up his valiant prince.&nbsp; And I say, when and wheresoever
+he found these vassals, he would even make himself as one of them.&nbsp;
+In all ill courses he would act without bidding, and do mischief without
+commandment.<br>
+<br>
+The Lord Willbewill also had a deputy under him, and his name was Mr.
+Affection, one that was also greatly debauched in his principles, and
+answerable thereto in his life: he was wholly given to the flesh, and
+therefore they called him Vile-Affection.&nbsp; Now there was he and
+one Carnal-Lust, the daughter of Mr. Mind, (like to like,) that fell
+in love, and made a match, and were married; and, as I take it, they
+had several children, as Impudent, Blackmouth, and Hate-Reproof.&nbsp;
+These three were black boys.&nbsp; And besides these they had three
+daughters, as Scorn-Truth and Slight-God, and the name of the youngest
+was Revenge.&nbsp; These were all married in the town, and also begot
+and yielded many bad brats, too many to be here inserted.&nbsp; But
+to pass by this.<br>
+<br>
+When the giant had thus engarrisoned himself in the town of Mansoul,
+and had put down and set up whom he thought good, he betakes himself
+to defacing.&nbsp; Now there was in the market-place in Mansoul, and
+also upon the gates of the castle, an image of the blessed King Shaddai.&nbsp;
+This image was so exactly engraven, (and it was engraven in gold,) that
+it did the most resemble Shaddai himself of anything that then was extant
+in the world.&nbsp; This he basely commanded to be defaced, and it was
+as basely done by the hand of Mr. No-Truth.&nbsp; Now you must know
+that, as Diabolus had commanded, and that by the hand of Mr. No-Truth,
+the image of Shaddai was defaced, he likewise gave order that the same
+Mr. No-Truth should set up in its stead the horrid and formidable image
+of Diabolus, to the great contempt of the former King, and debasing
+of his town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+Moreover, Diabolus made havoc of all remains of the laws and statutes
+of Shaddai that could be found in the town of Mansoul; to wit, such
+as contained either the doctrines of morals, with all civil and natural
+documents.&nbsp; Also relative severities he sought to extinguish.&nbsp;
+To be short, there was nothing of the remains of good in Mansoul which
+he and Willbewill sought not to destroy; for their design was to turn
+Mansoul into a brute, and to make it like to the sensual sow, by the
+hand of Mr. No-Truth.<br>
+<br>
+When he had destroyed what law and good orders he could, then further
+to effect his design, namely, to alienate Mansoul from Shaddai her King,
+he commands, and they set up his own vain edicts, statutes, and commandments,
+in all places of resort or concourse in Mansoul, to wit, such as gave
+liberty to the lusts of the flesh, the lusts of the eyes, and the pride
+of life, which are not of Shaddai, but of the world.&nbsp; He encouraged,
+countenanced, and promoted lasciviousness, and all ungodliness there.&nbsp;
+Yea, much more did Diabolus to encourage wickedness in the town of Mansoul;
+he promised them peace, content, joy, and bliss, in doing his commands,
+and that they should never be called to an account for their not doing
+the contrary.&nbsp; And let this serve to give a taste to them that
+love to hear tell of what is done beyond their knowledge afar off in
+other countries.<br>
+<br>
+Now Mansoul being wholly at his beck, and brought wholly to his bow,
+nothing was heard or seen therein but that which tended to set up him.<br>
+<br>
+But now he, having disabled the Lord Mayor and Mr. Recorder from bearing
+of office in Mansoul, and seeing that the town, before he came to it,
+was the most ancient of corporations in the world, and fearing, if he
+did not maintain greatness, they at any time should object that he had
+done them an injury; therefore, I say, (that they might see that he
+did not intend to lessen their grandeur, or to take from them any of
+their advantageous things,) he did choose for them a Lord Mayor and
+a Recorder himself, and such as contented them at the heart, and such
+also as pleased him wondrous well.<br>
+<br>
+The name of the Mayor that was of Diabolus&rsquo; making was the Lord
+Lustings, a man that had neither eyes nor ears.&nbsp; All that he did,
+whether as a man or an officer, he did it naturally, as doth the beast.&nbsp;
+And that which made him yet the more ignoble, though not to Mansoul,
+yet to them that beheld and were grieved for its ruin, was, that he
+never could favour good, but evil.<br>
+<br>
+The Recorder was one whose name was Forget-Good, and a very sorry fellow
+he was.&nbsp; He could remember nothing but mischief, and to do it with
+delight.&nbsp; He was naturally prone to do things that were hurtful,
+even hurtful to the town of Mansoul, and to all the dwellers there.&nbsp;
+These two, therefore, by their power and practice, examples, and smiles
+upon evil, did much more grammar and settle the common people in hurtful
+ways.&nbsp; For who doth not perceive that when those that sit aloft
+are vile and corrupt themselves, they corrupt the whole region and country
+where they are?<br>
+<br>
+Besides these, Diabolus made several burgesses and aldermen in Mansoul,
+such as out of whom the town, when it needed, might choose them officers,
+governors, and magistrates.&nbsp; And these are the names of the chief
+of them: Mr. Incredulity, Mr. Haughty, Mr. Swearing, Mr. Whoring, Mr.
+Hard-Heart, Mr. Pitiless, Mr. Fury, Mr. No-Truth, Mr. Stand-to-Lies,
+Mr. False-Peace, Mr. Drunkenness, Mr. Cheating, Mr. Atheism - thirteen
+in all.&nbsp; Mr. Incredulity is the eldest, and Mr. Atheism the youngest
+of the company.<br>
+<br>
+There was also an election of common councilmen and others, as bailiffs,
+sergeants, constables, and others; but all of them like to those afore-named,
+being either fathers, brothers, cousins, or nephews to them, whose names,
+for brevity&rsquo;s sake, I omit to mention.<br>
+<br>
+When the giant had thus far proceeded in his work, in the next place,
+he betook him to build some strongholds in the town, and he built three
+that seemed to be impregnable.&nbsp; The first he called the Hold of
+Defiance, because it was made to command the whole town, and to keep
+it from the knowledge of its ancient King.&nbsp; The second he called
+Midnight Hold, because it was built on purpose to keep Mansoul from
+the true knowledge of itself.&nbsp; The third was called Sweet-Sin Hold,
+because by that he fortified Mansoul against all desires of good.&nbsp;
+The first of these holds stood close by Eye-gate, that, as much might
+be, light might be darkened there; the second was built hard by the
+old castle, to the end that that might be made more blind, if possible;
+and the third stood in the market-place.<br>
+<br>
+He that Diabolus made governor over the first of these was one Spite-God,
+a most blasphemous wretch: he came with the whole rabble of them that
+came against Mansoul at first, and was himself one of themselves.&nbsp;
+He that was made the governor of Midnight Hold was one Love-no-Light;
+he was also of them that came first against the town.&nbsp; And he that
+was made the governor of the hold called Sweet-Sin Hold was one whose
+name was Love-Flesh: he was also a very lewd fellow, but not of that
+country where the other are bound.&nbsp; This fellow could find more
+sweetness when he stood sucking of a lust than he did in all the paradise
+of God.<br>
+<br>
+And now Diabolus thought himself safe.&nbsp; He had taken Mansoul, he
+had engarrisoned himself therein; he had put down the old officers,
+and had set up new ones; he had defaced the image of Shaddai, and had
+set up his own; he had spoiled the old law books, and had promoted his
+own vain lies; he had made him new magistrates, and set up new aldermen;
+he had builded him new holds, and had manned them for himself: and all
+this he did to make himself secure, in case the good Shaddai, or his
+Son, should come to make an incursion upon him.<br>
+<br>
+Now you may well think, that long before this time, word, by some one
+or other, could not but be carried to the good King Shaddai, how his
+Mansoul, in the continent of Universe, was lost; and that the runagate
+giant Diabolus, once one of his Majesty&rsquo;s servants, had, in rebellion
+against the King, made sure thereof for himself.&nbsp; Yea, tidings
+were carried and brought to the King thereof, and that to a very circumstance.<br>
+<br>
+At first, how Diabolus came upon Mansoul (they being a simple people
+and innocent) with craft, subtlety, lies, and guile.&nbsp; <i>Item</i>,
+that he had treacherously slain the right noble and valiant captain,
+their Captain Resistance, as he stood upon the gate with the rest of
+the townsmen.&nbsp; <i>Item</i>, how my brave Lord Innocent fell down
+dead (with grief, some say, or with being poisoned with the stinking
+breath of one Ill-Pause, as say others) at the hearing of his just lord
+and rightful prince, Shaddai, so abused by the mouth of so filthy a
+Diabolian as that varlet Ill-Pause was.&nbsp; The messenger further
+told, that after this Ill-Pause had made a short oration to the townsmen
+in behalf of Diabolus, his master; the simple town, believing that what
+was said was true, with one consent did open Ear-gate, the chief gate
+of the corporation, and did let him, with his crew, into a possession
+of the famous town of Mansoul.&nbsp; He further showed how Diabolus
+had served the Lord Mayor and Mr. Recorder, to wit, that he had put
+them from all place of power and trust.&nbsp; <i>Item</i>, he showed
+also that my Lord Willbewill was turned a very rebel, and runagate,
+and that so was one Mr. Mind, his clerk; and that they two did range
+and revel it all the town over, and teach the wicked ones their ways.&nbsp;
+He said, moreover, that this Willbewill was put into great trust, and
+particularly that Diabolus had put into Willbewill&rsquo;s hand all
+the strong places in Mansoul; and that Mr. Affection was made my Lord
+Willbewill&rsquo;s deputy in his most rebellious affairs.&nbsp; &lsquo;Yea,&rsquo;
+said the messenger, &lsquo;this monster, Lord Willbewill, has openly
+disavowed his King Shaddai, and hath horribly given his faith and plighted
+his troth to Diabolus.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Also,&rsquo; said the messenger, &lsquo;besides all this, the
+new king, or rather rebellious tyrant, over the once famous, but now
+perishing town of Mansoul, has set up a Lord Mayor and a Recorder of
+his own.&nbsp; For Mayor, he has set up one Mr. Lustings; and for Recorder,
+Mr. Forget-Good; two of the vilest of all the town of Mansoul.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+This faithful messenger also proceeded, and told what a sort of new
+burgesses Diabolus had made; also that he had built several strong forts,
+towers, and strongholds in Mansoul.&nbsp; He told, too, the which I
+had almost forgot, how Diabolus had put the town of Mansoul into arms,
+the better to capacitate them, on his behalf, to make resistance against
+Shaddai their King, should he come to reduce them to their former obedience.<br>
+<br>
+Now this tidings-teller did not deliver his relation of things in private,
+but in open court, the King and his Son, high lords, chief captains,
+and nobles, being all there present to hear.&nbsp; But by that they
+had heard the whole of the story, it would have amazed one to have seen,
+had he been there to behold it, what sorrow and grief, and compunction
+of spirit, there was among all sorts, to think that famous Mansoul was
+now taken: only the King and his Son foresaw all this long before, yea,
+and sufficiently provided for the relief of Mansoul, though they told
+not everybody thereof.&nbsp; Yet because they also would have a share
+in condoling of the Misery of Mansoul, therefore they also did, and
+that at a rate of the highest degree, bewail the losing of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+The King said plainly that it grieved him at the heart, and you may
+be sure that his Son was not a whit behind him.&nbsp; Thus gave they
+conviction to all about them that they had love and compassion for the
+famous town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Well, when the King and his Son were retired
+into the privy chamber, there they again consulted about what they had
+designed before, to wit, that as Mansoul should in time be suffered
+to be lost, so as certainly it should be recovered again; recovered,
+I say, in such a way, as that both the King and his Son would get themselves
+eternal fame and glory thereby.&nbsp; Wherefore, after this consult,
+the Son of Shaddai (a sweet and comely Person, and one that had always
+great affection for those that were in affliction, but one that had
+mortal enmity in his heart against Diabolus, because he was designed
+for it, and because he sought his crown and dignity) - this Son of Shaddai,
+I say, having stricken hands with his Father and promised that he would
+be his servant to recover his Mansoul again, stood by his resolution,
+nor would he repent of the same.&nbsp; The purport of which agreement
+was this: to wit, that at a certain time, prefixed by both, the King&rsquo;s
+Son should take a journey into the country of Universe, and there, in
+a way of justice and equity, by making amends for the follies of Mansoul,
+he should lay a foundation of perfect deliverance from Diabolus and
+from his tyranny.<br>
+<br>
+Moreover Emmanuel resolved to make, at a time convenient, a war upon
+the giant Diabolus, even while he was possessed of the town of Mansoul;
+and that he would fairly by strength of hand drive him out of his hold,
+his nest, and take it to himself to be his habitation.<br>
+<br>
+This now being resolved upon, order was given to the Lord Chief Secretary
+to draw up a fair record of what was determined, and to cause that it
+should be published in all the corners of the kingdom of Universe.&nbsp;
+A short breviate of the contents thereof you may, if you please, take
+here as follows:<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Let all men know who are concerned, that the Son of Shaddai,
+the great King, is engaged by covenant to his Father to bring his Mansoul
+to him again; yea, and to put Mansoul, too, through the power of his
+matchless love, into a far better and more happy condition than it was
+in before it was taken by Diabolus.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+These papers, therefore, were published in several places, to the no
+little molestation of the tyrant Diabolus; &lsquo;for now,&rsquo; thought
+he, &lsquo;I shall be molested, and my habitation will be taken from
+me.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+But when this matter, I mean this purpose of the King and his Son, did
+at first take air at court, who can tell how the high lords, chief captains,
+and noble princes that were there, were taken with the business!&nbsp;
+First, they whispered it one to another, and after that it began to
+ring out through the King&rsquo;s palace, all wondering at the glorious
+design that between the King and his Son was on foot for the miserable
+town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Yea, the courtiers could scarce do anything either
+for the King or kingdom, but they would mix, with the doing thereof,
+a noise of the love of the King and his Son, that they had for the town
+of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+Nor could these lords, high captains, and princes be content to keep
+this news at court; yea, before the records thereof were perfected,
+themselves came down and told it in Universe.&nbsp; At last it came
+to the ears, as I said, of Diabolus, to his no little discontent; for
+you must think it would perplex him to hear of such a design against
+him.&nbsp; Well, but after a few casts in his mind, he concluded upon
+these four things.<br>
+<br>
+First, that this news, these good tidings, (if possible,) should be
+kept from the ears of the town of Mansoul; &lsquo;for,&rsquo; said he,
+&lsquo;if they should once come to the knowledge that Shaddai, their
+former King, and Emmanuel his Son, are contriving good for the town
+of Mansoul, what can be expected by me, but that Mansoul will make a
+revolt from under my hand and government, and return again to him?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Now, to accomplish this his design, he renews his flattery with my Lord
+Willbewill, and also gives him strict charge and command, that he should
+keep watch by day and by night at all the gates of the town, especially
+Ear-gate and Eye-gate; &lsquo;for I hear of a design,&rsquo; quoth he,
+&lsquo;a design to make us all traitors, and that Mansoul must be reduced
+to its first bondage again.&nbsp; I hope they are but flying stories,&rsquo;
+quoth he; &lsquo;however, let no such news by any means be let into
+Mansoul, lest the people be dejected thereat.&nbsp; I think, my lord,
+it can be no welcome news to you; I am sure it is none to me; and I
+think that, at this time, it should be all our wisdom and care to nip
+the head of all such rumours as shall tend to trouble our people.&nbsp;
+Wherefore I desire, my lord, that you will in this matter do as I say.&nbsp;
+Let there be strong guards daily kept at every gate of the town.&nbsp;
+Stop also and examine from whence such come that you perceive do from
+far come hither to trade, nor let them by any means be admitted into
+Mansoul, unless you shall plainly perceive that they are favourers of
+our excellent government.&nbsp; I command, moreover,&rsquo; said Diabolus,
+&lsquo;that there be spies continually walking up and down the town
+of Mansoul, and let them have power to suppress and destroy any that
+they shall perceive to be plotting against us, or that shall prate of
+what by Shaddai and Emmanuel is intended.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+This, therefore, was accordingly done; my Lord Willbewill hearkened
+to his lord and master, went willingly after the commandment, and, with
+all the diligence he could, kept any that would from going out abroad,
+or that sought to bring these tidings to Mansoul, from coming into the
+town.<br>
+<br>
+Secondly, this done, in the next place, Diabolus, that he might make
+Mansoul as sure as he could, frames and imposes a new oath and horrible
+covenant upon the townsfolk:- To wit, that they should never desert
+him nor his government, nor yet betray him, nor seek to alter his laws;
+but that they should own, confess, stand by, and acknowledge him for
+their rightful king, in defiance to any that do or hereafter shall,
+by any pretence, law, or title whatever, lay claim to the town of Mansoul;
+thinking, belike, that Shaddai had not power to absolve them from this
+covenant with death, and agreement with hell.&nbsp; Nor did the silly
+Mansoul stick or boggle at all at this most monstrous engagement; but,
+as if it had been a sprat in the mouth of a whale, they swallowed it
+without any chewing.&nbsp; Were they troubled at all?&nbsp; Nay, they
+rather bragged and boasted of their so brave fidelity to the tyrant,
+their pretended king, swearing that they would never be changelings,
+nor forsake their old lord for a new.&nbsp; Thus did Diabolus tie poor
+Mansoul fast.<br>
+<br>
+Thirdly.&nbsp; But jealousy, that never thinks itself strong enough,
+put him, in the next place, upon another exploit, which was, yet more,
+if possible, to debauch this town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Wherefore he caused,
+by the hand of one Mr. Filth, an odious, nasty, lascivious piece of
+beastliness to be drawn up in writing, and to be set upon the castle
+gates; whereby he granted and gave license to all his true and trusty
+sons in Mansoul to do whatsoever their lustful appetites prompted them
+to do; and that no man was to let, hinder, or control them, upon pain
+of incurring the displeasure of their prince.<br>
+<br>
+Now this he did for these reasons:-<br>
+<br>
+1. That the town of Mansoul might be yet made weaker and weaker, and
+so more unable, should tidings come that their redemption was designed,
+to believe, hope, or consent to the truth thereof; for reason says,
+The bigger the sinner, the less grounds of hopes of mercy.<br>
+<br>
+2. The second reason was, if perhaps Emmanuel, the Son of Shaddai their
+King, by seeing the horrible and profane doings of the town of Mansoul,
+might repent, though entered into a covenant of redeeming them, of pursuing
+that covenant of their redemption; for he knew that Shaddai was holy,
+and that his Son Emmanuel was holy; yea, he knew it by woeful experience,
+for for his iniquity and sin was Diabolus cast from the highest orbs.&nbsp;
+Wherefore what more rational than for him to conclude that thus, for
+sin, it might fare with Mansoul?&nbsp; But fearing also lest this knot
+should break, he bethinks himself of another, to wit:-<br>
+<br>
+Fourthly.&nbsp; To endeavour to possess all hearts in the town of Mansoul
+that Shaddai was raising an army, to come to overthrow and utterly to
+destroy this town of Mansoul.&nbsp; And this he did to forestall any
+tidings that might come to their ears of their deliverance: &lsquo;For,&rsquo;
+thought he, &lsquo;if I first bruit this, the tidings that shall come
+after will all be swallowed up of this; for what else will Mansoul say,
+when they shall hear that they must be delivered, but that the true
+meaning is, Shaddai intends to destroy them?&nbsp; Wherefore he summons
+the whole town into the market-place, and there, with deceitful tongue,
+thus he addressed himself unto them:-<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Gentlemen, and my very good friends, you are all, as you know,
+my legal subjects, and men of the famous town of Mansoul.&nbsp; You
+know how, from the first day that I have been with you until now, I
+have behaved myself among you, and what liberty and great privileges
+you have enjoyed under my government, I hope to your honour and mine,
+and also to your content and delight.&nbsp; Now, my famous Mansoul,
+a noise of trouble there is abroad, of trouble to the town of Mansoul;
+sorry I am thereof for your sakes: for I received but now by the post
+from my Lord Lucifer, (and he useth to have good intelligence,) that
+your old King Shaddai is raising an army to come against you, to destroy
+you root and branch; and this, O Mansoul, is now the cause that at this
+time I have called you together, namely, to advise what in this juncture
+is best to be done.&nbsp; For my part, I am but one, and can with ease
+shift for myself, did I list to seek my own case, and to leave my Mansoul
+in all the danger; but my heart is so firmly united to you, and so unwilling
+am I to leave you, that I am willing to stand and fall with you, to
+the utmost hazard that shall befall me.&nbsp; What say you, O my Mansoul?&nbsp;
+Will you now desert your old friend, or do you think of standing by
+me?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then, as one man, with one mouth, they cried out together, &lsquo;Let
+him die the death that will not.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said Diabolus again, &lsquo;It is in vain for us to hope for quarter,
+for this King knows not how to show it.&nbsp; True, perhaps, he, at
+his first sitting down before us, will talk of and pretend to mercy,
+that thereby, with the more ease, and less trouble, he may again make
+himself the master of Mansoul.&nbsp; Whatever, therefore, he shall say,
+believe not one syllable or tittle of it; for all such language is but
+to overcome us, and to make us, while we wallow in our blood, the trophies
+of his merciless victory.&nbsp; My mind is, therefore, that we resolve
+to the last man to resist him, and not to believe him upon any terms,
+for in at that door will come our danger.&nbsp; But shall we be flattered
+out of our lives?&nbsp; I hope you know more of the rudiments of politics
+than to suffer yourselves so pitifully to be served.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;But suppose he should, if he get us to yield, save some of our
+lives, or the lives of some of them that are underlings in Mansoul,
+what help will that be to you that are the chief of the town, especially
+you whom I have set up and whose greatness has been procured by you
+through your faithful sticking to me?&nbsp; And suppose, again, that
+he should give quarter to every one of you, be sure he will bring you
+into that bondage under which you were captivated before, or a worse,
+and then what good will your lives do you?&nbsp; Shall you with him
+live in pleasure as you do now?&nbsp; No, no; you must be bound by laws
+that will pinch you, and be made to do that which at present is hateful
+to you.&nbsp; I am for you, if you are for me; and it is better to die
+valiantly than to live like pitiful slaves.&nbsp; But, I say, the life
+of a slave will be counted a life too good for Mansoul now.&nbsp; Blood,
+blood, nothing but blood is in every blast of Shaddai&rsquo;s trumpet
+against poor Mansoul now.&nbsp; Pray, be concerned; I hear he is coming.&nbsp;
+Up, and stand to your arms that now, while you have any leisure, I may
+learn you some feats of war.&nbsp; Armour for you I have, and by me
+it is; yea, and it is sufficient for Mansoul from top to toe; nor can
+you be hurt by what his force can do, if you shall keep it well girt
+and fastened about you.&nbsp; Come, therefore, to my castle, and welcome,
+and harness yourselves for the war.&nbsp; There is helmet, breastplate,
+sword, and shield, and what not, that will make you fight like men.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;1. My helmet, otherwise called an head-piece, is in hope of doing
+well at last, what lives soever you live.&nbsp; This is that which they
+had who said, that they should have peace, though they walked in the
+wickedness of their heart, to add drunkenness to thirst.&nbsp; A piece
+of approved armour this is, and whoever has it, and can hold it, so
+long no arrow, dart, sword, or shield can hurt him.&nbsp; This, therefore,
+keep on, and thou wilt keep off many a blow, my Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;2. My breastplate is a breastplate of iron.&nbsp; I had it forged
+in mine own country, and all my soldiers are armed therewith.&nbsp;
+In plain language, it is a hard heart, a heart as hard as iron, and
+as much past feeling as a stone; the which if you get and keep, neither
+mercy shall win you, nor judgment fright you.&nbsp; This therefore,
+is a piece of armour most necessary for all to put on that hate Shaddai,
+and that would fight against him under my banner.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;3. My sword is a tongue that is set on fire of hell, and that
+can bend itself to speak evil of Shaddai, his Son, his ways, and people.&nbsp;
+Use this; it has been tried a thousand times twice told.&nbsp; Whoever
+hath it, keeps it, and makes that use of it as I would have him, can
+never be conquered by mine enemy.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;4. My, shield is unbelief, or calling into question the truth
+of the word, or all the sayings that speak of the judgment that Shaddai
+has appointed for wicked men.&nbsp; Use this shield; many attempts he
+has made upon it, and sometimes, it is true, it has been bruised; but
+they that have writ of the wars of Emmanuel against my servants, have
+testified that he could do no mighty work there because of their unbelief.&nbsp;
+Now, to handle this weapon of mine aright, it is not to believe things
+because they are true, of what sort or by whomsoever asserted.&nbsp;
+If he speaks of judgment, care not for it; if he speaks of mercy, care
+not for it; if he promises, if he swears that he would do to Mansoul,
+if it turns, no hurt, but good, regard not what is said, question the
+truth of all, for it is to wield the shield of unbelief aright, and
+as my servants ought and do; and he that doth otherwise loves me not,
+nor do I count him but an enemy to me.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;5. Another part or piece,&rsquo; said Diabolus, &lsquo;of mine
+excellent armour is a dumb and prayerless spirit, a spirit that scorns
+to cry for mercy: wherefore be you, my Mansoul, sure that you make use
+of this.&nbsp; What! cry for quarter!&nbsp; Never do that, if you would
+be mine.&nbsp; I know you are stout men, and am sure that I have clad
+you with that which is armour of proof.&nbsp; Wherefore, to cry to Shaddai
+for mercy, let that be far from you.&nbsp; Besides all this, I have
+a maul, firebrands, arrows, and death, all good hand-weapons, and such
+as will do execution.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+After he had thus furnished his men with armour and arms, he addressed
+himself to them in such like words as these: &lsquo;Remember,&rsquo;
+quoth he, &lsquo;that I am your rightful king, and that you have taken
+an oath and entered into covenant to be true to me and my cause: I say,
+remember this, and show yourselves stout and valiant men of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+Remember also the kindness that I have always showed to you, and that
+without your petition I have granted to you external things; wherefore
+the privileges, grants, immunities, profits, and honours wherewith I
+have endowed you do call for, at your hands, returns of loyalty, my
+lion-like men of Mansoul: and when so fit a time to show it as when
+another shall seek to take my dominion over you into his own hands?&nbsp;
+One word more, and I have done.&nbsp; Can we but stand, and overcome
+this one shock or brunt, I doubt not but in little time all the world
+will be ours; and when that day comes, my true hearts, I will make you
+kings, princes, and captains, and what brave days shall we have then!&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Diabolus having thus armed and forearmed his servants and vassals in
+Mansoul against their good and lawful King Shaddai, in the next place,
+he doubleth his guards at the gates of the town, and he takes himself
+to the castle, which was his stronghold.&nbsp; His vassals also, to
+show their wills, and supposed (but ignoble) gallantry, exercise themselves
+in their arms every day, and teach one another feats of war; they also
+defied their enemies, and sang up the praises of their tyrant; they
+threatened also what men they would be if ever things should rise so
+high as a war between Shaddai and their king.<br>
+<br>
+Now all this time the good King, the King Shaddai, was preparing to
+send an army to recover the town of Mansoul again from under the tyranny
+of their pretended king Diabolus; but he thought good, at first, not
+to send them by the hand and conduct of brave Emmanuel his Son, but
+under the hand of some of his servants, to see first by them the temper
+of Mansoul, and whether by them they would be won to the obedience of
+their King.&nbsp; The army consisted of above forty thousand, all true
+men, for they came from the King&rsquo;s own court, and were those of
+his own choosing.<br>
+<br>
+They came up to Mansoul under the conduct of four stout generals, each
+man being a captain of ten thousand men, and these are their names and
+their ensigns.&nbsp; The name of the first was Boanerges, the name of
+the second was Captain Conviction, the name of the third was Captain
+Judgment, and the name of the fourth was Captain Execution.&nbsp; These
+were the captains that Shaddai sent to regain Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+These four captains, as was said, the King thought fit, in the first
+place, to send to Mansoul, to make an attempt upon it; for indeed generally
+in all his wars he did use to send these four captains in the van, for
+they were very stout and rough-hewn men, men that were fit to break
+the ice, and to make their way by dint of sword, and their men were
+like themselves.<br>
+<br>
+To each of these captains the King gave a banner, that it might be displayed,
+because of the goodness of his cause, and because of the right that
+he had to Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+First, to Captain Boanerges, for he was the chief, to him, I say, were
+given ten thousand men.&nbsp; His ensign was Mr. Thunder; he bare the
+black colours, and his scutcheon was the three burning thunderbolts.<br>
+<br>
+The second captain was Captain Conviction; to him also were given ten
+thousand men.&nbsp; His ensign&rsquo;s name was Mr. Sorrow; he did bear
+the pale colours, and his scutcheon was the book of the law wide open,
+from whence issued a flame of fire.<br>
+<br>
+The third captain was Captain Judgment; to him were given ten thousand
+men.&nbsp; His ensign&rsquo;s name was Mr. Terror; he bare the red colours,
+and his scutcheon was a burning fiery furnace.<br>
+<br>
+The fourth captain was Captain Execution; to him were given ten thousand
+men.&nbsp; His ensign was one Mr. Justice; he also bare the red colours,
+and his scutcheon was a fruitless tree, with an axe lying at the root
+thereof.<br>
+<br>
+These four captains, as I said, had every one of them under his command
+ten thousand men, all of good fidelity to the King, and stout at their
+military actions.<br>
+<br>
+Well, the captains and their forces, their men and under officers, being
+had upon a day by Shaddai into the field, and there called all over
+by their names, were then and there put into such harness as became
+their degree and that service which now they were going about for their
+King.<br>
+<br>
+Now, when the King had mustered his forces, (for it is he that mustereth
+the host to the battle,) he gave unto the captains their several commissions,
+with charge and commandment in the audience of all the soldiers, that
+they should take heed faithfully and courageously to do and execute
+the same.&nbsp; Their commissions were, for the substance of them, the
+same in form, though, as to name, title, place and degree of the captains,
+there might be some, but very small variation.&nbsp; And here let me
+give you an account of the matter and sum contained in their commission.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<i>A Commission from the great Shaddai, King of Mansoul, to his trusty
+and noble Captain, the Captain Boanerges, for his making War upon the
+town of Mansoul</i>.<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;O, thou Boanerges, one of my stout and thundering captains over
+one ten thousand of my valiant and faithful servants, go thou in my
+name, with this thy force, to the miserable town of Mansoul; and when
+thou comest thither, offer them first conditions of peace; and command
+them that, casting off the yoke and tyranny of the wicked Diabolus,
+they return to me, their rightful Prince and Lord.&nbsp; Command them
+also that they cleanse themselves from all that is his in the town of
+Mansoul, and look to thyself, that thou hast good satisfaction touching
+the truth of their obedience.&nbsp; Thus when thou hast commanded them,
+(if they in truth submit thereto,) then do thou, to the uttermost of
+thy power, what in thee lies to set up for me a garrison in the famous
+town of Mansoul; nor do thou hurt the least native that moveth or breatheth
+therein, if they will submit themselves to me, but treat thou such as
+if they were thy friend or brother; for all such I love, and they shall
+be dear unto me, and tell them that I will take a time to come unto
+them, and to let them know that I am merciful.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;But if they shall, notwithstanding thy summons and the producing
+of thy authority, resist, stand out against thee, and rebel, then do
+I command thee to make use of all thy cunning, power, might, and force,
+to bring them under by strength of hand.&nbsp; Farewell.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+Thus you see the sum of their commissions; for, as I said before, for
+the substance of them, they were the same that the rest of the noble
+captains had.<br>
+<br>
+Wherefore they, having received each commander his authority at the
+hand of their King, the day being appointed, and the place of their
+rendezvous prefixed, each commander appeared in such gallantry as became
+his cause and calling.&nbsp; So, after a new entertainment from Shaddai,
+with flying colours they set forward to march towards the famous town
+of Mansoul.&nbsp; Captain Boanerges led the van, Captain Conviction
+and Captain Judgment made up the main body, and Captain Execution brought
+up the rear.&nbsp; They then, having a great way to go, (for the town
+of Mansoul was far off from the court of Shaddai,) marched through the
+regions and countries of many people, not hurting or abusing any, but
+blessing wherever they came.&nbsp; They also lived upon the King&rsquo;s
+cost in all the way they went.<br>
+<br>
+Having travelled thus for many days, at last they came within sight
+of Mansoul; the which when they saw, the captains could for their hearts
+do no less than for a while bewail the condition of the town; for they
+quickly saw how that it was prostrate to the will of Diabolus, and to
+his ways and designs.<br>
+<br>
+Well, to be short, the captains came up before the town, march up to
+Ear-gate, sit down there (for that was the place of hearing).&nbsp;
+So, when they had pitched their tents and entrenched themselves, they
+addressed themselves to make their assault.<br>
+<br>
+Now the townsfolk at first, beholding so gallant a company, so bravely
+accoutred, and so excellently disciplined, having on their glittering
+armour, and displaying of their flying colours, could not but come out
+of their houses and gaze.&nbsp; But the cunning fox Diabolus, fearing
+that the people, after this sight, should, on a sudden summons, open
+the gates to the captains, came down with all haste from the castle,
+and made them retire into the body of the town, who, when he had them
+there, made this lying and deceivable speech unto them:<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Gentlemen,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;although you are my trusty
+and well-beloved friends, yet I cannot but a little chide you for your
+late uncircumspect action, in going out to gaze on that great and mighty
+force that but yesterday sat down before, and have now entrenched themselves
+in order to the maintaining of a siege against the famous town of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+Do you know who they are, whence they come, and what is their purpose
+in sitting down before the town of Mansoul?&nbsp; They are they of whom
+I have told you long ago, that they would come to destroy this town,
+and against whom I have been at the cost to arm you with <i>cap-a-pie</i>
+for your body, besides great fortifications for your mind.&nbsp; Wherefore,
+then, did you not rather, even at the first appearance of them, cry
+out, &ldquo;Fire the beacons!&rdquo; and give the whole town an alarm
+concerning them, that we might all have been in a posture of defence,
+and been ready to have received them with the highest acts of defiance?&nbsp;
+Then had you showed yourselves men to my liking; whereas, by what you
+have done, you have made me half afraid - I say, half afraid - that
+when they and we shall come to push a pike, I shall find you want courage
+to stand it out any longer.&nbsp; Wherefore have I commanded a watch,
+and that you should double your guards at the gates?&nbsp; Wherefore
+have I endeavoured to make you as hard as iron, and your hearts as a
+piece of the nether millstone?&nbsp; Was it, think you, that you might
+show yourselves women, and that you might go out like a company of innocents
+to gaze on your mortal foes?&nbsp; Fie, fie! put yourselves into a posture
+of defence, beat up the drum, gather together in warlike manner, that
+our foes may know that, before they shall conquer this corporation,
+there are valiant men in the town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;I will leave off now to chide, and will not further rebuke you;
+but I charge you, that henceforwards you let me see no more such actions.&nbsp;
+Let not henceforward a man of you, without order first obtained from
+me, so much as show his head over the wall of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+You have now heard me; do as I have commanded, and you shall cause me
+that I dwell securely with you, and that I take care, as for myself,
+so for your safety and honour also.&nbsp; Farewell.&rdquo;<br>
+<br>
+Now were the townsmen strangely altered; they were as men stricken with
+a panic fear; they ran to and fro through the streets of the town of
+Mansoul, crying out, &lsquo;Help, help! the men that turn the world
+upside down are come hither also.&rsquo;&nbsp; Nor could any of them
+be quiet after; but still, as men bereft of wit, they cried out, &lsquo;The
+destroyers of our peace and people are come.&rsquo;&nbsp; This went
+down with Diabolus.&nbsp; &lsquo;Ah,&rsquo; quoth he to himself, &lsquo;this
+I like well: now it is as I would have it; now you show your obedience
+to your prince.&nbsp; Hold you but here, and then let them take the
+town if they can.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Well, before the King&rsquo;s forces had sat before Mansoul three days,
+Captain Boanerges commanded his trumpeter to go down to Ear-gate, and
+there, in the name of the great Shaddai, to summon Mansoul to give audience
+to the message that he, in his Master&rsquo;s name, was to them commanded
+to deliver.&nbsp; So the trumpeter, whose name was Take-heed-what-you-hear,
+went up, as he was commanded, to Ear-gate, and there sounded his trumpet
+for a hearing; but there was none that appeared that gave answer or
+regard, for so had Diabolus commanded.&nbsp; So the trumpeter returned
+to his captain, and told him what he had done, and also how he had sped;
+whereat the captain was grieved, but bid the trumpeter go to his tent.<br>
+<br>
+Again Captain Boanerges sendeth his trumpeter to Ear-gate, to sound
+as before for a hearing; but they again kept close, came not out, nor
+would they give him an answer, so observant were they of the command
+of Diabolus their king.<br>
+<br>
+Then the captains and other field officers called a council of war,
+to consider what further was to be done for the gaining of the town
+of Mansoul; and, after some close and thorough debate upon the contents
+of their commissions, they concluded yet to give to the town, by the
+hand of the fore-named trumpeter, another summons to hear; but if that
+shall be refused, said they, and that the town shall stand it out still,
+then they determined, and bid the trumpeter tell them so, that they
+would endeavour, by what means they could, to compel them by force to
+the obedience of their King.<br>
+<br>
+So Captain Boanerges commanded his trumpeter to go up to Ear-gate again,
+and, in the name of the great King Shaddai, to give it a very loud summons
+to come down without delay to Ear-gate, there to give audience to the
+King&rsquo;s most noble captains.&nbsp; So the trumpeter went, and did
+as he was commanded: he went up to Ear-gate, and sounded his trumpet,
+and gave a third summons to Mansoul.&nbsp; He said, moreover, that if
+this they should still refuse to do, the captains of his prince would
+with might come down upon them, and endeavour to reduce them to their
+obedience by force.<br>
+<br>
+Then stood up my Lord Willbewill, who was the governor of the town,
+(this Willbewill was that apostate of whom mention was made before,)
+and the keeper of the gates of Mansoul.&nbsp; He therefore, with big
+and ruffling words, demanded of the trumpeter who he was, whence he
+came, and what was the cause of his making so hideous a noise at the
+gate, and speaking such insufferable words against the town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+The trumpeter answered, &lsquo;I am servant to the most noble captain,
+Captain Boanerges, general of the forces of the great King Shaddai,
+against whom both thyself, with the whole town of Mansoul, have rebelled,
+and lift up the heel; and my master, the captain, hath a special message
+to this town, and to thee, as a member thereof; the which if you of
+Mansoul shall peaceably hear, so; and if not, you must take what follows.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said the Lord Willbewill, &lsquo;I will carry thy words to my lord,
+and will know what he will say.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+But the trumpeter soon replied, saying.&nbsp; &lsquo;Our message is
+not to the giant Diabolus, but to the miserable town of Mansoul; nor
+shall we at all regard what answer by him is made, nor yet by any for
+him.&nbsp; We are sent to this town to recover it from under his cruel
+tyranny, and to persuade it to submit, as in former times it did, to
+the most excellent King Shaddai.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said the Lord Willbewill, &lsquo;I will do your errand to the town.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+The trumpeter then replied, &lsquo;Sir, do not deceive us, lest, in
+so doing, you deceive yourselves much more.&rsquo;&nbsp; He added, moreover,
+&lsquo;For we are resolved, if in peaceable manner you do not submit
+yourselves, then to make a war upon you, and to bring you under by force.&nbsp;
+And of the truth of what I now say, this shall be a sign unto you, -
+you shall see the black flag, with its hot, burning thunder-bolts, set
+upon the mount to-morrow, as a token of defiance against your prince,
+and of our resolutions to reduce you to your Lord and rightful King.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+So the said Lord Willbewill returned from off the wall, and the trumpeter
+came into the camp.&nbsp; When the trumpeter was come into the camp,
+the captains and officers of the mighty King Shaddai came together to
+know if he had obtained a hearing, and what was the effect of his errand.&nbsp;
+So the trumpeter told, saying, &lsquo;When I had sounded my trumpet,
+and had called aloud to the town for a hearing, my Lord Willbewill,
+the governor of the town, and he that hath charge of the gates, came
+up when he heard me sound, and, looking over the wall, he asked me what
+I was, whence I came, and what was the cause of my making this noise.&nbsp;
+So I told him my errand, and by whose authority I brought it.&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Then,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I will tell it to the governor and
+to Mansoul;&rdquo; and then I returned to my lords.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said the brave Boanerges, &lsquo;Let us yet for a while lie still
+in our trenches, and see what these rebels will do.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Now when the time drew nigh that audience by Mansoul must be given to
+the brave Boanerges and his companions, it was commanded that all the
+men of war throughout the whole camp of Shaddai should as one man stand
+to their arms, and make themselves ready, if the town of Mansoul shall
+hear, to receive it forthwith to mercy; but if not, to force a subjection.&nbsp;
+So the day being come, the trumpeters sounded, and that throughout the
+whole camp, that the men of war might be in a readiness for that which
+then should be the work of the day.&nbsp; But when they that were in
+the town of Mansoul heard the sound of the trumpets throughout the camp
+of Shaddai, and thinking no other but that it must be in order to storm
+the corporation, they at first were put to great consternation of spirit;
+but after they a little were settled again, they also made what preparation
+they could for a war, if they did storm; else, to secure themselves.<br>
+<br>
+Well, when the utmost time was come, Boanerges was resolved to hear
+their answer; wherefore he sent out his trumpeter again to summon Mansoul
+to a hearing of the message that they had brought from Shaddai.<br>
+<br>
+So he went and sounded, and the townsmen came up, but made Ear-gate
+as sure as they could.&nbsp; Now when they were come up to the top of
+the wall, Captain Boanerges desired to see the Lord Mayor; but my Lord
+Incredulity was then Lord Mayor, for he came in the room of my Lord
+Lustings.&nbsp; So Incredulity came up and showed himself over the wall;
+but when the Captain Boanerges had set his eyes upon him, he cried out
+aloud, &lsquo;This is not he: where is my Lord Understanding, the ancient
+Lord Mayor of the town of Mansoul? for to him I would deliver my message.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said the giant (for Diabolus was also come down) to the captain,
+&lsquo;Mr.&nbsp; Captain, you have by your boldness given to Mansoul
+at least four summonses to subject herself to your King, by whose authority
+I know not, nor will I dispute that now.&nbsp; I ask, therefore, what
+is the reason of all this ado, or what would you be at if you knew yourselves?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then Captain Boanerges, whose were the black colours, and whose scutcheon
+was the three burning thunderbolts, taking no notice of the giant or
+of his speech, thus addressed himself to the town of Mansoul: &lsquo;Be
+it known unto you, O unhappy and rebellious Mansoul, that the most gracious
+King, the great King Shaddai, my Master, hath sent me unto you with
+commission&rsquo; (and so he showed to the town his broad seal) &lsquo;to
+reduce you to his obedience; and he hath commanded me, in case you yield
+upon my summons, to carry it to you as if you were my friends or brethren;
+but he also hath bid, that if, after summons to submit you still stand
+out and rebel, we should endeavour to take you by force.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then stood forth Captain Conviction, and said, (his were the pale colours,
+and for a scutcheon he had the book of the law wide open, etc.,) &lsquo;Hear,
+O Mansoul!&nbsp; Thou, O Mansoul, wast once famous for innocency, but
+now thou art degenerated into lies and deceit.&nbsp; Thou hast heard
+what my brother, the Captain Boanerges, hath said; and it is your wisdom,
+and will be your happiness, to stoop to, and accept of conditions of
+peace and mercy when offered, specially when offered by one against
+whom thou hast rebelled, and one who is of power to tear thee in pieces,
+for so is Shaddai, our King; nor, when he is angry, can anything stand
+before him.&nbsp; If you say you have not sinned, or acted rebellion
+against our King, the whole of your doings since the day that you cast
+off his service (and there was the beginning of your sin) will sufficiently
+testify against you.&nbsp; What else means your hearkening to the tyrant,
+and your receiving him for your king?&nbsp; What means else your rejecting
+of the laws of Shaddai, and your obeying of Diabolus?&nbsp; Yea, what
+means this your taking up of arms against, and the shutting of your
+gates upon us, the faithful servants of your King?&nbsp; Be ruled then,
+and accept of my brother&rsquo;s invitation, and overstand not the time
+of mercy, but agree with thine adversary quickly.&nbsp; Ah, Mansoul!
+suffer not thyself to be kept from mercy, and to be run into a thousand
+miseries, by the flattering wiles of Diabolus.&nbsp; Perhaps that piece
+of deceit may attempt to make you believe that we seek our own profit
+in this our service, but know it is obedience to our King, and love
+to your happiness, that is the cause of this undertaking of ours.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Again I say to thee, O Mansoul, consider if it be not amazing
+grace that Shaddai should so humble himself as he doth: now he, by us,
+reasons with you, in a way of entreaty and sweet persuasions, that you
+would subject yourselves to him.&nbsp; Has he that need of you that
+we are sure you have of him?&nbsp; No, no; but he is merciful, and will
+not that Mansoul should die, but turn to him and live.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then stood forth Captain Judgment, whose were the red colours, and for
+a scutcheon he had the burning fiery furnace, and he said, &lsquo;O
+ye, the inhabitants of the town of Mansoul, that have lived so long
+in rebellion and acts of treason against the King Shaddai, know that
+we come not to-day to this place, in this manner, with our message of
+our own minds, or to revenge our own quarrel; it is the King, my Master,
+that hath sent us to reduce you to your obedience to him; the which
+if you refuse in a peaceable way to yield, we have commission to compel
+you thereto.&nbsp; And never think of yourselves, nor yet suffer the
+tyrant Diabolus to persuade you to think, that our King, by his power,
+is not able to bring you down, and to lay you under his feet; for he
+is the former of all things, and if he touches the mountains, they smoke.&nbsp;
+Nor will the gate of the King&rsquo;s clemency stand always open; for
+the day that shall burn like an oven is before him; yea, it hasteth
+greatly, it slumbereth not.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;O Mansoul, is it little in thine eyes that our King doth offer
+thee mercy, and that after so many provocations?&nbsp; Yea, he still
+holdeth out his golden sceptre to thee, and will not yet suffer his
+gate to be shut against thee: wilt thou provoke him to do it?&nbsp;
+If so, consider of what I say; to thee it is opened no more for ever.&nbsp;
+If thou sayest thou shalt not see him, yet judgment is before him; therefore
+trust thou in him.&nbsp; Yea, because there is wrath, beware lest he
+take thee away with his stroke; then a great ransom cannot deliver thee.&nbsp;
+Will he esteem thy riches?&nbsp; No, not gold, nor all the forces of
+strength.&nbsp; He hath prepared his throne for judgment, for he will
+come with fire, and with his chariots like a whirlwind, to render his
+anger with fury, and his rebukes with flames of fire.&nbsp; Therefore,
+O Mansoul, take heed lest, after thou hast fulfilled the judgment of
+the wicked, justice and judgment should take hold of thee.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Now while the Captain Judgment was making this oration to the town of
+Mansoul, it was observed by some that Diabolus trembled; but he proceeded
+in his parable and said, &lsquo;O thou woful town of Mansoul, wilt thou
+not yet set open thy gate to receive us, the deputies of thy King, and
+those that would rejoice to see thee live?&nbsp; Can thine heart endure,
+or can thy hands be strong, in the day that he shall deal in judgment
+with thee?&nbsp; I say, canst thou endure to be forced to drink, as
+one would drink sweet wine, the sea of wrath that our King has prepared
+for Diabolus and his angels?&nbsp; Consider, betimes consider.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then stood forth the fourth captain, the noble Captain Execution, and
+said, &lsquo;O town of Mansoul, once famous, but now like the fruitless
+bough, once the delight of the high ones, but now a den for Diabolus,
+hearken also to me, and to the words that I shall speak to thee in the
+name of the great Shaddai.&nbsp; Behold, the axe is laid to the root
+of the trees: every tree, therefore, that bringeth not forth good fruit,
+is hewn down and cast into the fire.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Thou, O town of Mansoul, hast hitherto been this fruitless tree;
+thou bearest nought but thorns and briars.&nbsp; Thy evil fruit bespeaks
+thee not to be a good tree; thy grapes are grapes of gall, thy clusters
+are bitter.&nbsp; Thou hast rebelled against thy King; and, lo! we,
+the power and force of Shaddai, are the axe that is laid to thy root.&nbsp;
+What sayest thou?&nbsp; Wilt thou turn?&nbsp; I say again, tell me,
+before the first blow is given, wilt thou turn?&nbsp; Our axe must first
+be laid <i>to</i> thy root before it be laid <i>at</i> thy root; it
+must first be laid <i>to</i> thy root in a way of threatening, before
+it is laid <i>at</i> thy root by way of execution; and between these
+two is required thy repentance, and this is all the time that thou hast.&nbsp;
+What wilt thou do?&nbsp; Wilt thou turn, or shall I smite?&nbsp; If
+I fetch my blow, Mansoul, down you go; for I have commission to lay
+my axe <i>at</i> as well as <i>to</i> thy roots, nor will anything but
+yielding to our King prevent doing of execution.&nbsp; What art thou
+fit for, O Mansoul, if mercy preventeth not, but to be hewn down, and
+cast into the fire and burned?<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;O Mansoul, patience and forbearance do not act for ever: a year,
+or two, or three, they may; but if thou provoke by a three years&rsquo;
+rebellion, (and thou hast already done more than this,) then what follows
+but, &lsquo;Cut it down&rsquo;? nay, &lsquo;After that thou shalt cut
+it down.&rsquo;&nbsp; And dost thou think that these are but threatenings,
+or that our King has not power to execute his words?&nbsp; O Mansoul,
+thou wilt find that in the words of our King, when they are by sinners
+made little or light of, there is not only threatening, but burning
+coals of fire.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Thou hast been a cumber-ground long already, and wilt thou continue
+so still?&nbsp; Thy sin has brought this army to thy walls, and shall
+it bring it in judgment to do execution into thy town?&nbsp; Thou hast
+heard what the captains have said, but as yet thou shuttest thy gates.&nbsp;
+Speak out, Mansoul; wilt thou do so still, or wilt thou accept of conditions
+of peace?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+These brave speeches of these four noble captains the town of Mansoul
+refused to hear; yet a sound thereof did beat against Ear-gate, though
+the force thereof could not break it open.&nbsp; In fine, the town desired
+a time to prepare their answer to these demands.&nbsp; The captains
+then told them, that if they would throw out to them one Ill-Pause that
+was in the town, that they might reward him according to his works,
+then they would give them time to consider; but if they would not cast
+him to them over the wall of Mansoul, then they would give them none;
+&lsquo;for,&rsquo; said they, &lsquo;we know that, so long as Ill-Pause
+draws breath in Mansoul, all good consideration will be confounded,
+and nothing but mischief will come thereon.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then Diabolus, who was there present, being loath to lose his Ill-Pause,
+because he was his orator, (and yet be sure he had, could the captains
+have laid their fingers on him,) was resolved at this instant to give
+them answer by himself; but then changing his mind, he commanded the
+then Lord Mayor, the Lord Incredulity, to do it, saying, &lsquo;My lord,
+do you give these runagates an answer, and speak out, that Mansoul may
+hear and understand you.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+So Incredulity, at Diabolus&rsquo; command, began, and said, &lsquo;Gentlemen,
+you have here, as we do behold, to the disturbance of our prince and
+the molestation of the town of Mansoul, camped against it: but from
+whence you come, we will not know; and what you are, we will not believe.&nbsp;
+Indeed, you tell us in your terrible speech that you have this authority
+from Shaddai, but by what right he commands you to do it, of that we
+shall yet be ignorant.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;You have also, by the authority aforesaid, summoned this town
+to desert her lord, and, for protection, to yield up herself to the
+great Shaddai, your King; flatteringly telling her, that if she will
+do it, he will pass by and not charge her with her past offences.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Further, you have also, to the terror of the town of Mansoul,
+threatened with great and sore destructions to punish this corporation,
+if she consents not to do as your wills would have her.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Now, captains, from whencesoever you come, and though your designs
+be ever so right, yet know ye that neither my Lord Diabolus, nor I,
+his servant, Incredulity, nor yet our brave Mansoul, doth regard either
+your persons, message, or the King that you say hath sent you.&nbsp;
+His power, his greatness, his vengeance, we fear not; nor will we yield
+at all to your summons.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;As for the war that you threaten to make upon us, we must therein
+defend ourselves as well as we can; and know ye, that we are not without
+wherewithal to bid defiance to you; and, in short, (for I will not be
+tedious,) I tell you, that we take you to be some vagabond runagate
+crew, that having shaken off all obedience to your King, have gotten
+together in tumultuous manner, and are ranging from place to place to
+see if, through the flatteries you are skilled to make on the one side,
+and threats wherewith you think to fright on the other, to make some
+silly town, city, or country, desert their place, and leave it to you;
+but Mansoul is none of them.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;To conclude: we dread you not, we fear you not, nor will we obey
+your summons.&nbsp; Our gates we will shut upon you, our place we will
+keep you out of.&nbsp; Nor will we long thus suffer you to sit down
+before us: our people must live in quiet: your appearance doth disturb
+them.&nbsp; Wherefore arise with bag and baggage, and begone, or we
+will let fly from the walls against you.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+This oration, made by old Incredulity, was seconded by desperate Willbewill,
+in words to this effect: &lsquo;Gentlemen, we have heard your demands,
+and the noise of your threats, and have heard the sound of your summons;
+but we fear not your force, we regard not your threats, but will still
+abide as you found us.&nbsp; And we command you, that in three days&rsquo;
+time you cease to appear in these parts, or you shall know what it is
+once to dare offer to rouse the lion Diabolus when asleep in his town
+of Mansoul.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+The Recorder, whose name was Forget-Good, he also added as followeth:
+&lsquo;Gentlemen, my lords, as you see, have with mild and gentle words
+answered your rough and angry speeches: they have, moreover, in my hearing,
+given you leave quietly to depart as you came; wherefore, take their
+kindness and be gone.&nbsp; We might have come out with force upon you,
+and have caused you to feel the dint of our swords; but as we love ease
+and quiet ourselves, so we love not to hurt or molest others.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then did the town of Mansoul shout for joy, as if by Diabolus and his
+crew some great advantage had been gotten of the captains.&nbsp; They
+also rang the bells, and made merry, and danced upon the walls.<br>
+<br>
+Diabolus also returned to the castle, and the Lord Mayor and Recorder
+to their place; but the Lord Willbewill took special care that the gates
+should be secured with double guards, double bolts, and double locks
+and bars; and that Ear-gate especially might the better be looked to,
+for that was the gate in at which the King&rsquo;s forces sought most
+to enter.&nbsp; The Lord Willbewill made one old Mr. Prejudice, an angry
+and ill-conditioned fellow, captain of the ward at that gate, and put
+under his power sixty men, called deaf men; men advantageous for that
+service, forasmuch as they mattered no words of the captains, nor of
+the soldiers.<br>
+<br>
+Now when the captains saw the answer of the great ones, and that they
+could not get a hearing from the old natives of the town, and that Mansoul
+was resolved to give the King&rsquo;s army battle, they prepared themselves
+to receive them, and to try it out by the power of the arm.&nbsp; And,
+first, they made their force more formidable against Ear-gate; for they
+knew that, unless they could penetrate that, no good could be done upon
+the town.&nbsp; This done, they put the rest of their men in their places;
+after which, they gave out the word, which was, &lsquo;YE MUST BE BORN
+AGAIN.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then they sounded the trumpet; then they in the
+town made them answer, with shout against shout, charge against charge,
+and so the battle began.&nbsp; Now they in the town had planted upon
+the tower over Ear-gate two great guns, the one called High-mind, and
+the other Heady.&nbsp; Unto these two guns they trusted much; they were
+cast in the castle by Diabolus&rsquo; founder, whose name was Mr. Puff-up,
+and mischievous pieces they were.&nbsp; But so vigilant and watchful,
+when the captains saw them, were they, that though sometimes their shot
+would go by their ears with a whiz, yet they did them no harm.&nbsp;
+By these two guns the townsfolk made no question but greatly to annoy
+the camp of Shaddai, and well enough to secure the gate; but they had
+not much cause to boast of what execution they did, as by what follows
+will be gathered.<br>
+<br>
+The famous Mansoul had also some other small pieces in it, of the which
+they made use against the camp of Shaddai.<br>
+<br>
+They from the camp also did as stoutly, and with as much of that as
+may in truth be called valour, let fly as fast at the town and at Ear-gate;
+for they saw that, unless they could break open Ear-gate, it would be
+but in vain to batter the wall.&nbsp; Now the King&rsquo;s captains
+had brought with them several slings, and two or three battering-rams;
+with their slings, therefore, they battered the houses and people of
+the town, and with their rams they sought to break Ear-gate open.<br>
+<br>
+The camp and the town had several skirmishes and brisk encounters, while
+the captains with their engines made many brave attempts to break open
+or beat down the tower that was over Ear-gate, and at the said gate
+to make their entrance; but Mansoul stood it out so lustily, through
+the rage of Diabolus, the valour of the Lord Willbewill, and the conduct
+of old Incredulity, the Mayor, and Mr. Forget-Good, the Recorder, that
+the charge and expense of that summer&rsquo;s wars, on the King&rsquo;s
+side, seemed to be almost quite lost, and the advantage to return to
+Mansoul.&nbsp; But when the captains saw how it was they made a fair
+retreat, and entrenched themselves in their winter quarters.&nbsp; Now,
+in this war, you must needs think there was much loss on both sides,
+of which be pleased to accept of this brief account following.<br>
+<br>
+The King&rsquo;s captains, when they marched from the court to come
+up against Mansoul to war, as they came crossing over the country, they
+happened to light upon three young fellows that had a mind to go for
+soldiers: proper men they were, and men of courage and skill, to appearance.&nbsp;
+Their names were Mr. Tradition, Mr. Human-Wisdom, and Mr. Man&rsquo;s-Invention.&nbsp;
+So they came up to the captains, and proffered their service to Shaddai.&nbsp;
+The captains then told them of their design, and bid them not to be
+rash in their offers; but the young men told them they had considered
+the thing before, and that hearing they were upon their march for such
+a design, came hither on purpose to meet them, that they might be listed
+under their excellencies.&nbsp; Then Captain Boanerges, for that they
+were men of courage, listed them into his company, and so away they
+went to the war.<br>
+<br>
+Now, when the war was begun, in one of the briskest skirmishes, so it
+was, that a company of the Lord Willbewill&rsquo;s men sallied out at
+the sallyport or postern of the town, and fell in upon the rear of Captain
+Boanerges&rsquo; men, where these three fellows happened to be; so they
+took them prisoners, and away they carried them into the town, where
+they had not lain long in durance, but it began to be noised about the
+streets of the town what three notable prisoners the Lord Willbewill&rsquo;s
+men had taken, and brought in prisoners out of the camp of Shaddai.&nbsp;
+At length tidings thereof were carried to Diabolus to the castle, to
+wit what my Lord Willbewill&rsquo;s men had done, and whom they had
+taken prisoners.<br>
+<br>
+Then Diabolus called for Willbewill, to know the certainty of this matter.&nbsp;
+So he asked him, and he told him.&nbsp; Then did the giant send for
+the prisoners, and, when they were come, demanded of them who they were,
+whence they came, and what they did in the camp of Shaddai; and they
+told him.&nbsp; Then he sent them to ward again.&nbsp; Not many days
+after, he sent for them to him again, and then asked them if they would
+be willing to serve him against their former captains.&nbsp; They then
+told him that they did not so much live by religion as by the fates
+of fortune; and that since his lordship was willing to entertain them,
+they should be willing to serve him.&nbsp; Now while things were thus
+in hand, there was one Captain Anything, a great doer, in the town of
+Mansoul; and to this Captain Anything did Diabolus send these men, and
+a note under his hand, to receive them into his company, the contents
+of which letter were thus:<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Anything, my darling, - The three men that are the bearers of
+this letter have a desire to serve me in the war; nor know I better
+to whose conduct to commit them than to thine.&nbsp; Receive them, therefore,
+in my name, and, as need shall require, make use of them against Shaddai
+and his men.&nbsp; Farewell.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+So they came, and he received them; and he made of two of them sergeants;
+but he made Mr. Man&rsquo;s-Invention his ancient-bearer.&nbsp; But
+thus much for this, and now to return to the camp.<br>
+<br>
+They of the camp did also some execution upon the town; for they did
+beat down the roof of the Lord Mayor&rsquo;s house, and so laid him
+more open than he was before.&nbsp; They had almost, with a sling, slain
+my Lord Willbewill outright; but he made a shift to recover again.&nbsp;
+But they made a notable slaughter among the aldermen, for with one only
+shot they cut off six of them; to wit, Mr. Swearing, Mr. Whoring, Mr.
+Fury, Mr. Stand-to-Lies, Mr. Drunkenness, and Mr. Cheating.<br>
+<br>
+They also dismounted the two guns that stood upon the tower over Ear-gate,
+and laid them flat in the dirt.&nbsp; I told you before that the King&rsquo;s
+noble captains had drawn off to their winter quarters, and had there
+entrenched themselves and their carriages, so as with the best advantage
+to their King, and the greatest annoyance to the enemy, they might give
+seasonable and warm alarms to the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; And this design
+of them did so hit, that I may say they did almost what they would to
+the molestation of the corporation.&nbsp; For now could not Mansoul
+sleep securely as before, nor could they now go to their debaucheries
+with that quietness as in times past; for they had from the camp of
+Shaddai such frequent, warm, and terrifying alarms, yea, alarms upon
+alarms, first at one gate and then at another, and again at all the
+gates at once, that they were broken as to former peace.&nbsp; Yea,
+they had their alarms so frequently, and that when the nights were at
+longest, the weather coldest, and so consequently the season most unseasonable,
+that that winter was to the town of Mansoul a winter by itself.&nbsp;
+Sometimes the trumpets would sound, and sometimes the slings would whirl
+the stones into the town.&nbsp; Sometimes ten thousand of the King&rsquo;s
+soldiers would be running round the walls of Mansoul at midnight, shouting
+and lifting up the voice for the battle.&nbsp; Sometimes, again, some
+of them in the town would be wounded, and their cry and lamentable voice
+would be heard, to the great molestation of the now languishing town
+of Mansoul.&nbsp; Yea, so distressed with those that laid siege against
+them were they, that, I dare say, Diabolus, their king, had in these
+days his rest much broken.<br>
+<br>
+In these days, as I was informed, new thoughts, and thoughts that began
+to run counter one to another, began to possess the minds of the men
+of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Some would say, &lsquo;There is no living
+thus.&rsquo;&nbsp; Others would then reply, &lsquo;This will be over
+shortly.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then would a third stand up and answer, &lsquo;Let
+us turn to the King Shaddai, and so put an end to these troubles.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+And a fourth would come in with a fear, saying, &lsquo;I doubt he will
+not receive us.&rsquo;&nbsp; The old gentleman, too, the Recorder, that
+was so before Diabolus took Mansoul, he also began to talk aloud, and
+his words were now to the town of Mansoul as if they were great claps
+of thunder.&nbsp; No noise now so terrible to Mansoul as was his, with
+the noise of the soldiers and shoutings of the captains.<br>
+<br>
+Also things began to grow scarce in Mansoul; now the things that her
+soul lusted after were departing from her.&nbsp; Upon all her pleasant
+things there was a blast, and burning instead of beauty.&nbsp; Wrinkles
+now, and some shows of the shadow of death, were upon the inhabitants
+of Mansoul.&nbsp; And now, O how glad would Mansoul have been to have
+enjoyed quietness and satisfaction of mind, though joined with the meanest
+condition in the world!<br>
+<br>
+The captains also, in the deep of this winter, did send by the mouth
+of Boanerges&rsquo; trumpeter a summons to Mansoul to yield up herself
+to the King, the great King Shaddai.&nbsp; They sent it once, and twice,
+and thrice; not knowing but that at some times there might be in Mansoul
+some willingness to surrender up themselves unto them, might they but
+have the colour of an invitation to do it under.&nbsp; Yea, so far as
+I could gather, the town had been surrendered up to them before now,
+had it not been for the opposition of old Incredulity, and the fickleness
+of the thoughts of my Lord Willbewill.&nbsp; Diabolus also began to
+rave; wherefore Mansoul, as to yielding, was not yet all of one mind;
+therefore they still lay distressed under these perplexing fears.<br>
+<br>
+I told you but now that they of the King&rsquo;s army had this winter
+sent three times to Mansoul to submit herself.<br>
+<br>
+The first time the trumpeter went he went with words of peace, telling
+them that the captains, the noble captains of Shaddai, did pity and
+bewail the misery of the now perishing town of Mansoul, and were troubled
+to see them so much to stand in the way of their own deliverance.&nbsp;
+He said, moreover, that the captains bid him tell them, that if now
+poor Mansoul would humble herself and turn, her former rebellions and
+most notorious treasons should by their merciful King be forgiven them,
+yea, and forgotten too.&nbsp; And having bid them beware that they stood
+not in their own way, that they opposed not themselves, nor made themselves
+their own losers, he returned again into the camp.<br>
+<br>
+The second time the trumpeter went, he did treat them a little more
+roughly; for, after sound of trumpet, he told them that their continuing
+in their rebellion did but chafe and heat the spirit of the captains,
+and that they were resolved to make a conquest of Mansoul, or to lay
+their bones before the town walls.<br>
+<br>
+He went again the third time, and dealt with them yet more roughly;
+telling them that now, since they had been so horribly profane, he did
+not know, not certainly know, whether the captains were inclining to
+mercy or judgment.&nbsp; &lsquo;Only,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;they commanded
+me to give you a summons to open the gates unto them.&rsquo;&nbsp; So
+he returned, and went into the camp.<br>
+<br>
+These three summonses, and especially the last two, did so distress
+the town that they presently call a consultation, the result of which
+was this - That my Lord Willbewill should go up to Ear-gate, and there,
+with sound of trumpet, call to the captains of the camp for a parley.&nbsp;
+Well, the Lord Willbewill sounded upon the wall; so the captains came
+up in their harness, with their ten thousands at their feet.&nbsp; The
+townsmen then told the captains that they had heard and considered their
+summons, and would come to an agreement with them, and with their King
+Shaddai, upon such certain terms, articles, and propositions as, with
+and by the order of their prince, they to them were appointed to propound;
+to wit, they would agree upon these grounds to be one people with them.<br>
+<br>
+1. If that those of their own company, as the now Lord Mayor and their
+Mr. Forget-Good, with then brave Lord Willbewill, might, under Shaddai,
+be still the governors of the town, castle, and gates of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+2. Provided that no man that now serveth under their great giant Diabolus
+be by Shaddai cast out of house, harbour, or the freedom that he hath
+hitherto enjoyed in the famous town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+3. That it shall be granted them, that they of the town of Mansoul shall
+enjoy certain of their rights and privileges; to wit, such as have formerly
+been granted them, and that they have long lived in the enjoyment of,
+under the reign of their king Diabolus, that now is, and long has been,
+their only lord and great defender.<br>
+<br>
+4. That no new law, officer, or executioner of law or office, shall
+have any power over them, without their own choice and consent.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;These be our propositions, or conditions of peace; and upon these
+terms,&rsquo; said they, &lsquo;we will submit to your King.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+But when the captains had heard this weak and feeble offer of the town
+of Mansoul, and their high and bold demands, they made to them again,
+by their noble captain, the Captain Boanerges, this speech following:<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;O ye inhabitants of the town of Mansoul, when I heard your trumpet
+sound for a parley with us, I can truly say I was glad; but when you
+said you were willing to submit yourselves to our King and Lord, then
+I was yet more glad; but when, by your silly provisos and foolish cavils,
+you laid the stumbling-block of your iniquity before your own faces,
+then was my gladness turned into sorrows, and my hopeful beginnings
+of your return, into languishing fainting fears.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;I count that old Ill-Pause, the ancient enemy of Mansoul, did
+draw up those proposals that now you present us with as terms of an
+agreement; but they deserve not to be admitted to sound in the ear of
+any man that pretends to have service for Shaddai.&nbsp; We do therefore
+jointly, and that with the highest disdain, refuse and reject such things,
+as the greatest of iniquities.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;But, O Mansoul, if you will give yourselves into our hands, or
+rather into the hands of our King, and will trust him to make such terms
+with and for you as shall seem good in his eyes, (and I dare say they
+shall be such as you shall find to be most profitable to you,) then
+we will receive you, and be at peace with you; but if you like not to
+trust yourselves in the arms of Shaddai our King, then things are but
+where they were before, and we know also what we have to do.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then cried out old Incredulity, the Lord Mayor, and said, &lsquo;And
+who, being out of the hands of their enemies, as ye see we are now,
+will be so foolish as to put the staff out of their own hands into the
+hands of they know not who?&nbsp; I, for my part, will never yield to
+so unlimited a proposition.&nbsp; Do we know the manner and temper of
+their King?&nbsp; It is said by some that he will be angry with his
+subjects if but the breadth of an hair they chance to step out of the
+way; and by others, that he requireth of them much more than they can
+perform.&nbsp; Wherefore, it seems, O Mansoul, to be thy wisdom to take
+good heed what thou dost in this matter; for if you once yield, you
+give up yourselves to another, and so you are no more your own.&nbsp;
+Wherefore, to give up yourselves to an unlimited power, is the greatest
+folly in the world; for now you indeed may repent, but can never justly
+complain.&nbsp; But do you indeed know, when you are his, which of you
+he will kill, and which of you he will save alive; or whether he will
+not cut off every one of us, and send out of his own country another
+new people, and cause them to inhabit this town?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+This speech of the Lord Mayor undid all, and threw flat to the ground
+their hopes of an accord.&nbsp; Wherefore the captains returned to their
+trenches, to their tents, and to their men, as they were; and the Mayor
+to the castle and to his King.<br>
+<br>
+Now Diabolus had waited for his return, for he had heard that they had
+been at their points.&nbsp; So, when he was come into the chamber of
+state, Diabolus saluted him with - &lsquo;Welcome, my lord.&nbsp; How
+went matters betwixt you to-day?&rsquo;&nbsp; So the Lord Incredulity,
+with a low congee, told him the whole of the matter, saying, &lsquo;Thus
+and thus said the captains of Shaddai, and thus and thus said I.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+The which when it was told to Diabolus, he was very glad to hear it,
+and said, &lsquo;My Lord Mayor, my faithful Incredulity, I have proved
+thy fidelity above ten times already, but never yet found thee false.&nbsp;
+I do promise thee, if we rub over this brunt, to prefer thee to a place
+of honour, a place far better than to be Lord Mayor of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+I will make thee my universal deputy, and thou shalt, next to me, have
+all nations under thy hand; yea, and thou shalt lay bands upon them,
+that they may not resist thee; nor shall any of our vassals walk more
+at liberty, but those that shall be content to walk in thy fetters.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Now came the Lord Mayor out from Diabolus, as if he had obtained a favour
+indeed.&nbsp; Wherefore to his habitation he goes in great state, and
+thinks to feed himself well enough with hopes, until the time came that
+his greatness should be enlarged.<br>
+<br>
+But now, though the Lord Mayor and Diabolus did thus well agree, yet
+this repulse to the brave captains put Mansoul into a mutiny.&nbsp;
+For while old Incredulity went into the castle to congratulate his lord
+with what had passed, the old Lord Mayor, that was so before Diabolus
+came to the town, to wit, my Lord Understanding, and the old Recorder,
+Mr. Conscience, getting intelligence of what had passed at Ear-gate,
+(for you must know that they might not be suffered to be at that debate,
+lest they should then have mutinied for the captains; but, I say, they
+got intelligence of what had passed there, and were much concerned therewith,)
+wherefore they, getting some of the town together, began to possess
+them with the reasonableness of the noble captains&rsquo; demands, and
+with the bad consequences that would follow upon the speech of old Incredulity,
+the Lord Mayor; to wit how little reverence he showed therein either
+to the captains or to their King; also how he implicitly charged them
+with unfaithfulness and treachery.&nbsp; &lsquo;For what less,&rsquo;
+quoth they, &lsquo;could be made of his words, when he said he would
+not yield to their proposition; and added, moreover, a supposition that
+he would destroy us, when before he had sent us word that he would show
+us mercy!&rsquo;&nbsp; The multitude, being now possessed with the conviction
+of the evil that old Incredulity had done, began to run together by
+companies in all places, and in every corner of the streets of Mansoul;
+and first they began to mutter, then to talk openly, and after that
+they run to and fro, and cried as they run, &lsquo;Oh the brave captains
+of Shaddai! would we were under the government of the captains, and
+of Shaddai their King!&rsquo;&nbsp; When the Lord Mayor had intelligence
+that Mansoul was in an uproar, down he comes to appease the people,
+and thought to have quashed their heat with the bigness and the show
+of his countenance; but when they saw him, they came running upon him,
+and had doubtless done him a mischief, had he not betaken himself to
+house.&nbsp; However, they strongly assaulted the house where he was,
+to have pulled it down about his ears; but the place was too strong,
+so they failed of that.&nbsp; So he, taking some courage, addressed
+himself, out at a window, to the people in this manner:<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Gentlemen, what is the reason that there is here such an uproar
+to-day?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then answered my Lord Understanding, &lsquo;It is even because that
+thou and thy master have carried it not rightly, and as you should,
+to the captains of Shaddai; for in three things you are faulty.&nbsp;
+First, in that you would not let Mr. Conscience and myself be at the
+hearing of your discourse.&nbsp; Secondly, in that you propounded such
+terms of peace to the captains that by no means could be granted, unless
+they had intended that their Shaddai should have been only a titular
+prince, and that Mansoul should still have had power by law to have
+lived in all lewdness and vanity before him, and so by consequence Diabolus
+should still here be king in power, and the other only king in name.&nbsp;
+Thirdly, for that thou didst thyself, after the captains had showed
+us upon what conditions they would have received us to mercy, even undo
+all again with thy unsavoury, unseasonable, and ungodly speech.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+When old Incredulity had heard this speech, he cried out, &lsquo;Treason!
+treason!&nbsp; To your arms! to your arms!&nbsp; O ye, the trusty friends
+of Diabolus in Mansoul.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+<i>Und</i>. - Sir, you may put upon my words what meaning you please;
+but I am sure that the captains of such an high lord as theirs is, deserved
+a better treatment at your hands.<br>
+<br>
+Then said old Incredulity, &lsquo;This is but little better.&nbsp; But,
+Sir,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;what I spake I spake for my prince, for
+his government, and the quieting of the people, whom by your unlawful
+actions you have this day set to mutiny against us.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then replied the old Recorder, whose name was Mr. Conscience, and said,
+&lsquo;Sir, you ought not thus to retort upon what my Lord Understanding
+hath said.&nbsp; It is evident enough that he hath spoken the truth,
+and that you are an enemy to Mansoul.&nbsp; Be convinced, then, of the
+evil of your saucy and malapert language, and of the grief that you
+have put the captains to; yea, and of the damages that you have done
+to Mansoul thereby.&nbsp; Had you accepted of the conditions, the sound
+of the trumpet and the alarm of war had now ceased about the town of
+Mansoul; but that dreadful sound abides, and your want of wisdom in
+your speech has been the cause of it.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said old Incredulity, &lsquo;Sir, if I live, I will do your errand
+to Diabolus, and there you shall have an answer to your words.&nbsp;
+Meanwhile we will seek the good of the town, and not ask counsel of
+you.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+<i>Und</i>. - Sir, your prince and you are both foreigners to Mansoul,
+and not the natives thereof; and who can tell but that, when you have
+brought us into greater straits, (when you also shall see that yourselves
+can be safe by no other means than by flight,) you may leave us and
+shift for yourselves, or set us on fire, and go away in the smoke, or
+by the light of our burning, and so leave us in our ruins?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Incred</i>. - Sir, you forget that you are under a governor, and
+that you ought to demean yourself like a subject; and know ye, when
+my lord the king shall hear of this day&rsquo;s work, he will give you
+but little thanks for your labour.<br>
+<br>
+Now while these gentlemen were thus in their chiding words, down come
+from the walls and gates of the town the Lord Willbewill, Mr. Prejudice,
+old Ill-Pause, and several of the new-made aldermen and burgesses, and
+they asked the reason of the hubbub and tumult; and with that every
+man began to tell his own tale, so that nothing could be heard distinctly.&nbsp;
+Then was a silence commanded, and the old fox Incredulity began to speak.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;My lord,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;here are a couple of peevish
+gentlemen, that have, as a fruit of their bad dispositions, and, as
+I fear, through the advice of one Mr. Discontent, tumultuously gathered
+this company against me this day, and also attempted to run the town
+into acts of rebellion against our prince.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then stood up all the Diabolonians that were present, and affirmed these
+things to be true.<br>
+<br>
+Now when they that took part with my Lord Understanding and with Mr.
+Conscience perceived that they were like to come to the worst, for that
+force and power was on the other side, they came in for their help and
+relief; so a great company was on both sides.&nbsp; Then they on Incredulity&rsquo;s
+side would have had the two old gentlemen presently away to prison;
+but they on the other side said they should not.&nbsp; Then they began
+to cry up parties again: the Diabolonians cried up old Incredulity,
+Forget-Good, the new aldermen, and their great one Diabolus; and the
+other party, they as fast cried up Shaddai, the captains, his laws,
+their mercifulness, and applauded their conditions and ways.&nbsp; Thus
+the bickerment went awhile; at last they passed from words to blows,
+and now there were knocks on both sides.&nbsp; The good old gentleman,
+Mr. Conscience, was knocked down twice by one of the Diabolonians, whose
+name was Mr. Benumbing; and my Lord Understanding had like to have been
+slain with an arquebuse, but that he that shot did not take his aim
+aright.&nbsp; Nor did the other side wholly escape; for there was one
+Mr. Rashhead, a Diabolonian, that had his brains beaten out by Mr. Mind,
+the Lord Willbewill&rsquo;s servant; and it made me laugh to see how
+old Mr. Prejudice was kicked and tumbled about in the dirt; for though,
+a while since, he was made captain of a company of the Diabolonians,
+to the hurt and damage of the town, yet now they had got him under their
+feet, and, I&rsquo;ll assure you, he had, by some of the Lord Understanding&rsquo;s
+party, his crown cracked to boot.&nbsp; Mr. Anything also, he became
+a brisk man in the broil; but both sides were against him, because he
+was true to none.&nbsp; Yet he had, for his malapertness, one of his
+legs broken, and he that did it wished it had been his neck.&nbsp; Much
+more harm was done on both sides, but this must not be forgotten; it
+was now a wonder to see my Lord Willbewill so indifferent as he was:
+he did not seem to take one side more than another, only it was perceived
+that he smiled to see how old Prejudice was tumbled up and down in the
+dirt.&nbsp; Also, when Captain Anything came halting up before him,
+he seemed to take but little notice of him.<br>
+<br>
+Now, when the uproar was over, Diabolus sends for my Lord Understanding
+and Mr. Conscience, and claps them both up in prison as the ringleaders
+and managers of this most heavy, riotous rout in Mansoul.&nbsp; So now
+the town began to be quiet again, and the prisoners were used hardly;
+yea, he thought to have made them away, but that the present juncture
+did not serve for that purpose, for that war was in all their gates.<br>
+<br>
+But let us return again to our story.&nbsp; The captains, when they
+were gone back from the gate, and were come into the camp again, called
+a council of war, to consult what was further for them to do.&nbsp;
+Now, some said, &lsquo;Let us go up presently, and fall upon the town;&rsquo;
+but the greatest part thought rather better it would be to give them
+another summons to yield; and the reason why they thought this to be
+best was, because that, so far as could be perceived, the town of Mansoul
+now was more inclinable than heretofore.&nbsp; &lsquo;And if,&rsquo;
+said they, &lsquo;while some of them are in a way of inclination, we
+should by ruggedness give them distaste, we may set them further from
+closing with our summons than we would be willing they should.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Wherefore to this advice they agreed, and called a trumpeter, put words
+into his mouth, set him his time, and bid him God speed.&nbsp; Well,
+many hours were not expired before the trumpeter addressed himself to
+his journey.&nbsp; Wherefore, coming up to the wall of the town, he
+steereth his course to Ear-gate, and there sounded, as he was commanded.&nbsp;
+They then that were within came out to see what was the matter, and
+the trumpeter made them this speech following:<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;O hard-hearted and deplorable town of Mansoul, how long wilt
+thou love thy sinful, sinful simplicity, and, ye fools, delight in your
+scorning?&nbsp; As yet despise you the offers of peace and deliverance?&nbsp;
+As yet will ye refuse the golden offers of Shaddai, and trust to the
+lies and falsehoods of Diabolus?&nbsp; Think you, when Shaddai shall
+have conquered you, that the remembrance of these your carriages towards
+him will yield you peace and comfort, or that by ruffling language you
+can make him afraid as a grasshopper?&nbsp; Doth he entreat you for
+fear of you?&nbsp; Do you think that you are stronger than he?&nbsp;
+Look to the heavens, and behold and consider the stars, how high are
+they?&nbsp; Can you stop the sun from running his course, and hinder
+the moon from giving her light?&nbsp; Can you count the number of the
+stars, or stay the bottles of heaven?&nbsp; Can you call for the waters
+of the sea, and cause them to cover the face of the ground?&nbsp; Can
+you behold every one that is proud, and abase him, and bind their faces
+in secret?&nbsp; Yet these are some of the works of our King, in whose
+name this day we come up unto you, that you may be brought under his
+authority.&nbsp; In his name, therefore, I summon you again to yield
+up yourselves to his captains.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+At this summons the Mansoulians seemed to be at a stand, and knew not
+what answer to make.&nbsp; Wherefore Diabolus forthwith appeared, and
+took upon him to do it himself; and thus he begins, but turns his speech
+to them of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Gentlemen,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;and my faithful subjects,
+if it is true that this summoner hath said concerning the greatness
+of their King, by his terror you will always be kept in bondage, and
+so be made to sneak.&nbsp; Yea, how can you now, though he is at a distance,
+endure to think of such a mighty one?&nbsp; And if not to think of him
+while at a distance, how can you endure to be in his presence?&nbsp;
+I, your prince, am familiar with you, and you may play with me as you
+would with a grasshopper.&nbsp; Consider, therefore, what is for your
+profit, and remember the immunities that I have granted you.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Farther, if all be true that this man hath said, how comes it
+to pass that the subjects of Shaddai are so enslaved in all places where
+they come?&nbsp; None in the universe so unhappy as they, none so trampled
+upon as they.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Consider, my Mansoul: would thou wert as loath to leave me as
+I am loath to leave thee.&nbsp; But consider, I say, the ball is yet
+at thy foot; liberty you have, if you know how to use it; yea, a king
+you have too, if you can tell how to love and obey him.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Upon this speech, the town of Mansoul did again harden their hearts
+yet more against the captains of Shaddai.&nbsp; The thoughts of his
+greatness did quite quash them, and the thoughts of his holiness sunk
+them in despair.&nbsp; Wherefore, after a short consult, they (of the
+Diabolonian party they were) sent back this word by the trumpeter, That,
+for their parts, they were resolved to stick to their king, but never
+to yield to Shaddai; so it was but in vain to give them any further
+summons, for they had rather die upon the place than yield.&nbsp; And
+now things seemed to be gone quite back, and Mansoul to be out of reach
+or call, yet the captains who knew what their Lord could do, would not
+yet be beat out of heart; they therefore sent them another summons,
+more sharp and severe than the last; but the oftener they were sent
+to, to reconcile to Shaddai, the further off they were.&nbsp; &lsquo;As
+they called them, so they went from them - yea, though they called them
+to the Most High.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+So they ceased that way to deal with them any more, and inclined to
+think of another way.&nbsp; The captains, therefore, did gather themselves
+together, to have free conference among themselves, to know what was
+yet to be done to gain the town, and to deliver it from the tyranny
+of Diabolus; and one said after this manner, and another after that.&nbsp;
+Then stood up the right noble the Captain Conviction, and said, &lsquo;My
+brethren, mine opinion is this:<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;First, that we continually play our slings into the town, and
+keep it in a continual alarm, molesting them day and night.&nbsp; By
+thus doing, we shall stop the growth of their rampant spirit; for a
+lion may be tamed by continual molestation.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Secondly, this done, I advise that, in the next place, we with
+one consent draw up a petition to our Lord Shaddai, by which, after
+we have showed our King the condition of Mansoul and of affairs here,
+and have begged his pardon for our no better success, we will earnestly
+implore his Majesty&rsquo;s help, and that he will please to send us
+more force and power, and some gallant and well-spoken commander to
+head them, that so his Majesty may not lose the benefit of these his
+good beginnings, but may complete his conquest upon the town of Mansoul.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+To this speech of the noble Captain Conviction they as one man consented,
+and agreed that a petition should forthwith be drawn up, and sent by
+a fit man away to Shaddai with speed.&nbsp; The contents of the petition
+were thus:-<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Most gracious and glorious King, the Lord of the best world,
+and the builder of the town of Mansoul, we have, dread Sovereign, at
+thy commandment, put our lives in jeopardy, and at thy bidding made
+a war upon the famous town of Mansoul.&nbsp; When we went up against
+it, we did, according to our commission, first offer conditions of peace
+unto it.&nbsp; But they, great King, set light by our counsel, and would
+none of our reproof.&nbsp; They were for shutting their gates, and for
+keeping us out of the town.&nbsp; They also mounted their guns, they
+sallied out upon us, and have done us what damage they could; but we
+pursued them with alarm upon alarm, requiting them with such retribution
+as was meet, and have done some execution upon the town.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Diabolus, Incredulity, and Willbewill are the great doers against
+us: now we are in our winter quarters, but so as that we do yet with
+an high hand molest and distress the town.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Once, as we think, had we had but one substantial friend in the
+town, such as would but have seconded the sound of our summons as they
+ought, the people might have yielded themselves; but there were none
+but enemies there, nor any to speak in behalf of our Lord to the town.&nbsp;
+Wherefore, though we have done as we could, yet Mansoul abides in a
+state of rebellion against thee.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Now, King of kings, let it please thee to pardon the unsuccessfulness
+of thy servants, who have been no more advantageous in so desirable
+a work as the conquering of Mansoul is.&nbsp; And send, Lord, as we
+now desire, more forces to Mansoul, that it may be subdued; and a man
+to head them, that the town may both love and fear.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;We do not thus speak because we are willing to relinquish the
+wars, (for we are for laying of our bones against the place,) but that
+the town of Mansoul may be won for thy Majesty.&nbsp; We also pray thy
+Majesty, for expedition in this matter, that, after their conquest,
+we may be at liberty to be sent about other thy gracious designs.&nbsp;
+Amen.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+The petition, thus drawn up, was sent away with haste to the King by
+the hand of that good man, Mr. Love-to-Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+When this petition was come to the palace of the King, who should it
+be delivered to but to the King&rsquo;s Son?&nbsp; So he took it and
+read it, and because the contents of it pleased him well, he mended,
+and also in some things added to the petition himself.&nbsp; So, after
+he had made such amendments and additions as he thought convenient,
+with his own hand, he carried it in to the King; to whom, when he had
+with obeisance delivered it, he put on authority, and spake to it himself.<br>
+<br>
+Now the King, at the sight of the petition, was glad; but how much more,
+think you, when it was seconded by his Son!&nbsp; It pleased him also
+to hear that his servants who camped against Mansoul were so hearty
+in the work, and so steadfast in their resolves, and that they had already
+got some ground upon the famous town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+Wherefore the King called to him Emmanuel, his Son, who said, &lsquo;Here
+am I, my Father.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then said the King, &lsquo;Thou knowest,
+as I do myself, the condition of the town of Mansoul, and what we have
+purposed, and what thou hast done to redeem it.&nbsp; Come now, therefore,
+my Son, and prepare thyself for the war, for thou shalt go to my camp
+at Mansoul.&nbsp; Thou shalt also there prosper and prevail, and conquer
+the town of Mansoul.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said the King&rsquo;s Son, &lsquo;Thy law is within my heart: I
+delight to do thy will.&nbsp; This is the day that I have longed for,
+and the work that I have waited for all this while.&nbsp; Grant me,
+therefore, what force thou shalt in thy wisdom think meet; and I will
+go and will deliver from Diabolus, and from his power, thy perishing
+town of Mansoul.&nbsp; My heart has been often pained within me for
+the miserable town of Mansoul; but now it is rejoiced, but now it is
+glad,&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+And with that he leaped over the mountains for joy, saying, &lsquo;I
+have not, in my heart, thought anything too dear for Mansoul: the day
+of vengeance is in mine heart for thee, my Mansoul: and glad am I that
+thou, my Father, hast made me the Captain of their salvation.&nbsp;
+And I will now begin to plague all those that have been a plague to
+my town of Mansoul, and will deliver it from their hand.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+When the King&rsquo;s Son had said thus to his Father, it presently
+flew like lightning round about at court; yea, it there became the only
+talk what Emmanuel was to go to do for the famous town of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+But you cannot think how the courtiers, too, were taken with this design
+of the Prince; yea, so affected were they with this work, and with the
+justness of the war, that the highest lord and greatest peer of the
+kingdom did covet to have commissions under Emmanuel, to go to help
+to recover again to Shaddai the miserable town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+Then was it concluded that some should go and carry tidings to the camp,
+that Emmanuel was to come to recover Mansoul, and that he would bring
+along with him so mighty, so impregnable a force, that he could not
+be resisted.&nbsp; But, oh! how ready were the high ones at court to
+run like lackeys to carry these tidings to the camp that was at Mansoul.&nbsp;
+Now, when the captains perceived that the King would send Emmanuel his
+Son, and that it also delighted the Son to be sent on this errand by
+the great Shaddai his Father, they also, to show how they were pleased
+at the thoughts of his coming gave a shout that made the earth rend
+at the sound thereof.&nbsp; Yea, the mountains did answer again by echo,
+and Diabolus himself did totter and shake.<br>
+<br>
+For you must know, that though the town of Mansoul itself was not much,
+if at all concerned with the project, (for, alas for them! they were
+wofully besotted, for they chiefly regarded their pleasure and their
+lusts,) yet Diabolus their governor was; for he had his spies continually
+abroad, who brought him intelligence of all things, and they told him
+what was doing at court against him, and that Emmanuel would shortly
+certainly come with a power to invade him.&nbsp; Nor was there any man
+at court, nor peer of the kingdom, that Diabolus so feared as he feared
+this Prince; for, if you remember, I showed you before that Diabolus
+had felt the weight of his hand already; so that, since it was he that
+was to come, this made him the more afraid.<br>
+<br>
+Well, you see how I have told you that the King&rsquo;s Son was engaged
+to come from the court to save Mansoul, and that his Father had made
+him the Captain of the forces.&nbsp; The time, therefore, of his setting
+forth being now expired, he addressed himself for his march, and taketh
+with him, for his power, five noble captains and their forces.<br>
+<br>
+1. The first was that famous captain, the noble Captain Credence.&nbsp;
+His were the red colours, and Mr. Promise bare them; and for a scutcheon
+he had the holy lamb and golden shield; and he had ten thousand men
+at his feet.<br>
+<br>
+2. The second was that famous captain, the Captain Good-Hope.&nbsp;
+His were the blue colours; his standard-bearer was Mr. Expectation,
+and for his scutcheon he had the three golden anchors; and he had ten
+thousand men at his feet.<br>
+<br>
+3. The third was that valiant captain, the Captain Charity.&nbsp; His
+standard-bearer was Mr. Pitiful: his were the green colours, and for
+his scutcheon he had three naked orphans embraced in the bosom; and
+he had ten thousand men at his feet.<br>
+<br>
+4. The fourth was that gallant commander, the Captain Innocent.&nbsp;
+His standard-bearer was Mr. Harmless: his were the white colours, and
+for his scutcheon he had the three golden doves.<br>
+<br>
+5. The fifth was the truly loyal and well-beloved captain, the Captain
+Patience.&nbsp; His standard-bearer was Mr. Suffer-Long: his were the
+black colours, and for a scutcheon he had three arrows through the golden
+heart.<br>
+<br>
+These were Emmanuel&rsquo;s captains; these their standard-bearers,
+their colours, and their scutcheons; and these the men under their command.&nbsp;
+So, as was said, the brave Prince took his march to go to the town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; Captain Credence led the van, and Captain Patience brought
+up the rear; so the other three, with their men, made up the main body,
+the Prince himself riding in his chariot at the head of them.<br>
+<br>
+But when they set out for their march, oh, how the trumpets sounded,
+their armour glittered, and how the colours waved in the wind!&nbsp;
+The Prince&rsquo;s armour was all of gold, and it shone like the sun
+in the firmament; the captains&rsquo; armour was of proof, and was in
+appearance like the glittering stars.&nbsp; There were also some from
+the court that rode reformades for the love that they had to the King
+Shaddai, and for the happy deliverance of the town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+Emmanuel also, when he had thus set forwards to go to recover the town
+of Mansoul, took with him, at the commandment of his Father, fifty-four
+battering-rams, and twelve slings to whirl stones withal.&nbsp; Every
+one of these was made of pure gold, and these they carried with them,
+in the heart and body of their army, all along as they went to Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+So they marched till they came within less than a league of the town;
+there they lay till the first four captains came thither to acquaint
+them with matters.&nbsp; Then they took their journey to go to the town
+of Mansoul, and unto Mansoul they came; but when the old soldiers that
+were in the camp saw that they had new forces to join with, they again
+gave such a shout before the walls of the town of Mansoul, that it put
+Diabolus into another fright.&nbsp; So they sat down before the town,
+not now as the other four captains did, to wit, against the gates of
+Mansoul only; but they environed it round on every side, and beset it
+behind and before; so that now, let Mansoul look which way it will,
+it saw force and power lie in siege against it.&nbsp; Besides, there
+were mounts cast up against it.&nbsp; The Mount Gracious was on the
+one side, and Mount Justice was on the other.&nbsp; Further, there were
+several small banks and advance-grounds, as Plain-Truth Hill and No-Sin
+Banks, where many of the slings were placed against the town.&nbsp;
+Upon Mount Gracious were planted four, and upon Mount Justice were placed
+as many, and the rest were conveniently placed in several parts round
+about the town.&nbsp; Five of the best battering-rams, that is, of the
+biggest of them, were placed upon Mount Hearken, a mount cast up hard
+by Ear-gate, with intent to break that open.<br>
+<br>
+Now when the men of the town saw the multitude of the soldiers that
+were come up against the place, and the rams and slings, and the mounts
+on which they were planted, together with the glittering of the armour
+and the waving of their colours, they were forced to shift, and shift,
+and again to shift their thoughts; but they hardly changed for thoughts
+more stout, but rather for thoughts more faint; for though before they
+thought themselves sufficiently guarded, yet now they began to think
+that no man knew what would be their hap or lot.<br>
+<br>
+When the good Prince Emmanuel had thus beleaguered Mansoul, in the first
+place he hangs out the white flag, which he caused to be set up among
+the golden slings that were planted upon Mount Gracious.&nbsp; And this
+he did for two reasons: 1. To give notice to Mansoul that he could and
+would yet be gracious if they turned to him.&nbsp; 2. And that he might
+leave them the more without excuse, should he destroy them, they continuing
+in their rebellion.<br>
+<br>
+So the white flag, with the three golden doves in it, was hung out for
+two days together, to give them time and space to consider; but they,
+as was hinted before, as if they were unconcerned, made no reply to
+the favourable signal of the Prince.<br>
+<br>
+Then he commanded, and they set the red flag upon that mount called
+Mount Justice.&nbsp; It was the red flag of Captain Judgment, whose
+scutcheon was the burning fiery furnace; and this also stood waving
+before them in the wind for several days together.&nbsp; But look how
+they carried it under the white flag, when that was hung out, so did
+they also when the red one was; and yet he took no advantage of them.<br>
+<br>
+Then he commanded again that his servants should hang out the black
+flag of defiance against them, whose scutcheon was the three burning
+thunderbolts; but as unconcerned was Mansoul at this as at those that
+went before.&nbsp; But when the Prince saw that neither mercy nor judgment,
+nor execution of judgment, would or could come near the heart of Mansoul,
+he was touched with much compunction, and said, &lsquo;Surely this strange
+carriage of the town of Mansoul doth rather arise from ignorance of
+the manner and feats of war, than from a secret defiance of us, and
+abhorrence of their own lives; or if they know the manner of the war
+of their own, yet not the rites and ceremonies of the wars in which
+we are concerned, when I make wars upon mine enemy Diabolus.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Therefore he sent to the town of Mansoul, to let them know what he meant
+by those signs and ceremonies of the flag; and also to know of them
+which of the things they would choose, whether grace and mercy, or judgment
+and the execution of judgment.&nbsp; All this while they kept their
+gates shut with locks, bolts, and bars, as fast as they could.&nbsp;
+Their guards also were doubled, and their watch made as strong as they
+could.&nbsp; Diabolus also did pluck up what heart he could, to encourage
+the town to make resistance.<br>
+<br>
+The townsmen also made answer to the Prince&rsquo;s messenger, in substance
+according to that which follows:-<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Great Sir, - As to what, by your messenger, you have signified
+to us, whether we will accept of your mercy, or fall by your justice,
+we are bound by the law and custom of this place, and can give you no
+positive answer; for it is against the law, government, and the prerogative
+royal of our king, to make either peace or war without him.&nbsp; But
+this we will do, - we will petition that our prince will come down to
+the wall, and there give you such treatment as he shall think fit and
+profitable for us.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+When the good Prince Emmanuel heard this answer, and saw the slavery
+and bondage of the people, and how much content they were to abide in
+the chains of the tyrant Diabolus, it grieved him at the heart; and,
+indeed, when at any time he perceived that any were contented under
+the slavery of the giant, he would be affected with it.<br>
+<br>
+But to return again to our purpose.&nbsp; After the town had carried
+this news to Diabolus, and had told him, moreover, that the Prince,
+that lay in the leaguer without the wall, waited upon them for an answer,
+he refused, and huffed as well as he could; but in heart he was afraid.<br>
+<br>
+Then said he, &lsquo;I will go down to the gates myself, and give him
+such an answer as I think fit.&rsquo;&nbsp; So he went down to Mouth-gate,
+and there addressed himself to speak to Emmanuel, (but in such language
+as the town understood not,) the contents whereof were as follows:-<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;O thou great Emmanuel, Lord of all the world, I know thee, that
+thou art the Son of the great Shaddai!&nbsp; Wherefore art thou come
+to torment me, and to cast me out of my possession?&nbsp; This town
+of Mansoul, as thou very well knowest, is mine, and that by a twofold
+right. 1. It is mine by right of conquest; I won it in the open field;
+and shall the prey be taken from the mighty, or the lawful captive be
+delivered?&nbsp; 2. This town of Mansoul is mine also by their subjection.&nbsp;
+They have opened the gates of their town unto me; they have sworn fidelity
+to me, and have openly chosen me to be their king; they have also given
+their castle into my hands; yea, they have put the whole strength of
+Mansoul under me.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Moreover, this town of Mansoul hath disavowed thee, yea, they
+have cast thy law, thy name, thy image, and all that is thine, behind
+their back, and have accepted and set up in their room my law, my name,
+my image, and all that ever is mine.&nbsp; Ask else thy captains, and
+they will tell thee that Mansoul hath, in answer to all their summonses,
+shown love and loyalty to me, but always disdain, despite, contempt,
+and scorn to thee and thine.&nbsp; Now, thou art the Just One and the
+Holy, and shouldest do no iniquity.&nbsp; Depart, then, I pray thee,
+therefore, from me, and leave me to my just inheritance peaceably.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+This oration was made in the language of Diabolus himself; for although
+he can, to every man, speak in their own language, (else he could not
+tempt them all as he does,) yet he has a language proper to himself,
+and it is the language of the infernal cave, or black pit.<br>
+<br>
+Wherefore the town of Mansoul (poor hearts!) understood him not; nor
+did they see how he crouched and cringed while he stood before Emmanuel,
+their Prince.<br>
+<br>
+Yea, they all this while took him to be one of that power and force
+that by no means could be resisted.&nbsp; Wherefore, while he was thus
+entreating that he might have yet his residence there, and that Emmanuel
+would not take it from him by force, the inhabitants boasted even of
+his valour, saying, &lsquo;Who is able to make war with him?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Well, when this pretended king had made an end of what he would say,
+Emmanuel, the golden Prince, stood up and spake; the contents of whose
+words follow:-<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Thou deceiving one,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;I have, in my Father&rsquo;s
+name, in mine own name, and on the behalf and for the good of this wretched
+town of Mansoul, somewhat to say unto thee.&nbsp; Thou pretendest a
+right, a lawful right, to the deplorable town of Mansoul, when it is
+most apparent to all my Father&rsquo;s court that the entrance which
+thou hast obtained in at the gates of Mansoul was through thy lie and
+falsehood; thou beliedst my Father, thou beliedst his law, and so deceivedst
+the people of Mansoul.&nbsp; Thou pretendest that the people have accepted
+thee for their king, their captain, and right liege lord; but that also
+was by the exercise of deceit and guile.&nbsp; Now, if lying, wiliness,
+sinful craft, and all manner of horrible hypocrisy, will go in my Father&rsquo;s
+court (in which court thou must be tried) for equity and right, then
+will I confess unto thee that thou hast made a lawful conquest.&nbsp;
+But, alas! what thief, what tyrant, what devil is there that may not
+conquer after this sort?&nbsp; But I can make it appear, O Diabolus,
+that thou, in all thy pretences to a conquest of Mansoul, hast nothing
+of truth to say.&nbsp; Thinkest thou this to be right, that that didst
+put the lie upon my Father, and madest him (to Mansoul) the greatest
+deluder in the world?&nbsp; And what sayest thou to thy perverting knowingly
+the right purport and intent of the law?&nbsp; Was it good also that
+thou madest a prey of the innocency and simplicity of the now miserable
+town of Mansoul?&nbsp; Yea, thou didst overcome Mansoul by promising
+to them happiness in their transgressions against my Father&rsquo;s
+law, when thou knewest, and couldest not but know, hadst thou consulted
+nothing but thine own experience, that that was the way to undo them.&nbsp;
+Thou hast also thyself, O thou master of enmity, of spite defaced my
+Father&rsquo;s image in Mansoul, and set up thy own in its place, to
+the great contempt of my Father, the heightening of thy sin, and to
+the intolerable damage of the perishing town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Thou hast, moreover, (as if all these were but little things
+with thee,) not only deluded and undone this place, but, by thy lies
+and fradulent carriage, hast set them against their own deliverance.&nbsp;
+How hast thou stirred them up against my Father&rsquo;s captains, and
+made them to fight against those that were sent of him to deliver them
+from their bondage!&nbsp; All these things, and very many more, thou
+hast done against thy light, and in contempt of my Father and of his
+law, yea, and with design to bring under his displeasure for ever the
+miserable town of Mansoul.&nbsp; I am therefore come to avenge the wrong
+that thou hast done to my Father, and to deal with thee for the blasphemies
+wherewith thou hast made poor Mansoul blaspheme his name.&nbsp; Yea,
+upon thy head, thou prince of the infernal cave, will I requite it.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;As for myself, O Diabolus, I am come against thee by lawful power,
+and to take, by strength of hand, this town of Mansoul out of thy burning
+fingers; for this town of Mansoul is mine, O Diabolus, and that by undoubted
+right, as all shall see that will diligently search the most ancient
+and most authentic records, and I will plead my title to it, to the
+confusion of thy face.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;First, for the town of Mansoul, my Father built and did fashion
+it with his hand.&nbsp; The palace also that is in the midst of that
+town, he built it for his own delight.&nbsp; This town of Mansoul, therefore,
+is my Father&rsquo;s, and that by the best of titles, and he that gainsays
+the truth of this must lie against his soul.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Secondly, O thou master of the lie, this town of Mansoul is mine.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;1. For that I am my Father&rsquo;s heir, his firstborn, and the
+only delight of his heart.&nbsp; I am therefore come up against thee
+in mine own right, even to recover mine own inheritance out of thine
+hand.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;2. But further, as I have a right and title to Mansoul by being
+my Father&rsquo;s heir, so I have also by my Father&rsquo;s donation.&nbsp;
+His it was, and he gave it me; nor have I at any time offended my Father,
+that he should take it from me, and give it to thee.&nbsp; Nor have
+I been forced, by playing the bankrupt, to sell or set to sale to thee
+my beloved town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Mansoul is my desire, my delight,
+and the joy of my heart.&nbsp; But,<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;3. Mansoul is mine by right of purchase.&nbsp; I have bought
+it, O Diabolus, I have bought it to myself.&nbsp; Now, since it was
+my Father&rsquo;s and mine, as I was his heir, and since also I have
+made it mine by virtue of a great purchase, it followeth that, by all
+lawful right, the town of Mansoul is mine, and that thou art an usurper,
+a tyrant, and traitor, in thy holding possession thereof.&nbsp; Now,
+the cause of my purchasing of it was this: Mansoul had trespassed against
+my Father; now my Father had said, that in the day that they broke his
+law they should die.&nbsp; Now, it is more possible for heaven and earth
+to pass away than for my Father to break his word.&nbsp; Wherefore when
+Mansoul had sinned indeed by hearkening to thy lie, I put in and became
+a surety to my Father, body for body, and soul for soul, that I would
+make amends for Mansoul&rsquo;s transgressions, and my Father did accept
+thereof.&nbsp; So, when the time appointed was come, I gave body for
+body, soul for soul, life for life, blood for blood, and so redeemed
+my beloved Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;4. Nor did I do this by halves: my Father&rsquo;s law and justice,
+that were both concerned in the threatening upon transgression, are
+both now satisfied, and very well content that Mansoul should be delivered.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;5. Nor am I come out this day against thee, but by commandment
+of my Father; it was he that said unto me, &ldquo;Go down and deliver
+Mansoul.&rdquo;<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Wherefore be it known unto thee, O thou fountain of deceit, and
+be it also known to the foolish town of Mansoul, that I am not come
+against thee this day without my Father.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;And now,&rsquo; said the golden-headed Prince, &lsquo;I have
+a word to the town of Mansoul.&rsquo;&nbsp; But so soon as mention was
+made that he had a word to speak to the besotted town of Mansoul, the
+gates were double-guarded, and all men commanded not to give him audience.&nbsp;
+So he proceeded and said, &lsquo;O unhappy town of Mansoul, I cannot
+but be touched with pity and compassion for thee.&nbsp; Thou hast accepted
+of Diabolus for thy king, and art become a nurse and minister of Diabolonians
+against thy sovereign Lord.&nbsp; Thy gates thou hast opened to him,
+but hast shut them fast against me; thou hast given him an hearing,
+but hast stopped thine ears at my cry.&nbsp; He brought to thee thy
+destruction, and thou didst receive both him and it: I am come to thee
+bringing salvation, but thou regardest me not.&nbsp; Besides, thou hast,
+as with sacrilegious hands, taken thyself, with all that was mine in
+thee, and hast given all to my foe, and to the greatest enemy my Father
+has.&nbsp; You have bowed and subjected yourselves to him, you have
+vowed and sworn yourselves to be his.&nbsp; Poor Mansoul! what shall
+I do unto thee?&nbsp; Shall I save thee? - shall I destroy thee?&nbsp;
+What shall I do unto thee?&nbsp; Shall I fall upon thee, and grind thee
+to powder, or make thee a monument of the richest grace?&nbsp; What
+shall I do unto thee?&nbsp; Hearken, therefore, thou town of Mansoul,
+hearken to my word, and thou shalt live.&nbsp; I am merciful, Mansoul,
+and thou shalt find me so: shut me not out of thy gates.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;O Mansoul, neither is my commission nor inclination at all to
+do thee hurt.&nbsp; Why fliest thou so fast from thy friend, and stickest
+so close to thine enemy?&nbsp; Indeed, I would have thee, because it
+becomes thee to be sorry for thy sin, but do not despair of life; this
+great force is not to hurt thee, but to deliver thee from thy bondage,
+and to reduce thee to thy obedience.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;My commission, indeed, is to make a war upon Diabolus thy king,
+and upon all Diabolonians with him; for he is the strong man armed that
+keeps the house, and I will have him out: his spoils I must divide,
+his armour I must take from him, his hold I must cast him out of, and
+must make it a habitation for myself.&nbsp; And this, O Mansoul, shall
+Diabolus know when he shall be made to follow me in chains, and when
+Mansoul shall rejoice to see it so.<br>
+<br>
+&nbsp;&lsquo;I could, would I now put forth my might, cause that forthwith
+he should leave you and depart; but I have it in my heart so to deal
+with him, as that the justice of the war that I shall make upon him
+may be seen and acknowledged by all.&nbsp; He hath taken Mansoul by
+fraud, and keeps it by violence and deceit, and I will make him bare
+and naked in the eyes of all observers.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;All my words are true.&nbsp; I am mighty to save, and will deliver
+my Mansoul out of his hand.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+This speech was intended chiefly for Mansoul, but Mansoul would not
+have the hearing of it.&nbsp; They shut up Ear-gate, they barricaded
+it up, they kept it locked and bolted, they set a guard thereat, and
+commanded that no Mansoulonian should go out to him, nor that any from
+the camp should be admitted into the town.&nbsp; All this they did,
+so horribly had Diabolus enchanted them to do, and seek to do for him,
+against their rightful Lord and Prince; wherefore no man, nor voice,
+nor sound of man that belonged to the glorious host, was to come into
+the town.<br>
+<br>
+So when Emmanuel saw that Mansoul was thus involved in sin, he calls
+his army together, (since now also his words were despised,) and gave
+out a commandment throughout all his host to be ready against the time
+appointed.&nbsp; Now, forasmuch as there was no way lawfully to take
+the town of Mansoul but to get in by the gates, and at Ear-gate as the
+chief, therefore he commanded his captains and commanders to bring their
+rams, their slings and their men, and place them at Eye-gate and Ear-gate,
+in order to his taking the town.<br>
+<br>
+When Emmanuel had put all things in a readiness to give Diabolus battle,
+he sent again to know of the town of Mansoul, if in peaceable manner
+they would yield themselves, or whether they were yet resolved to put
+him to try the utmost extremity?&nbsp; They then, together with Diabolus
+their king, called a council of war, and resolved upon certain propositions
+that should be offered to Emmanuel, if he will accept thereof, so they
+agreed; and then the next was, who should be sent on this errand.&nbsp;
+Now, there was in the town of Mansoul an old man, a Diabolonian, and
+his name was Mr. Loth-to-stoop, a stiff man in his way, and a great
+doer for Diabolus; him, therefore, they sent, and put into his mouth
+what he should say.&nbsp; So he went and came to the camp to Emmanuel,
+and when he was come, a time was appointed to give him audience.&nbsp;
+So at the time he came, and after a Diabolonian ceremony or two, he
+thus began and said, &lsquo;Great sir, that it may be known unto all
+men how good-natured a prince my master is, he has sent me to tell your
+lordship that he is very willing, rather than go to war, to deliver
+up into your hands one half of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; I am therefore
+to know if your Mightiness will accept of this proposition.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said Emmanuel, &lsquo;The whole is mine by gift and purchase, wherefore
+I will never lose one half.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said Mr. Loth-to-stoop, &lsquo;Sir, my master hath said that he
+will be content that you shall be the nominal and titular Lord of all,
+if he may possess but a part.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then Emmanuel answered, &lsquo;The whole is mine really, not in name
+and word only; wherefore I will be the sole lord and possessor of all,
+or of none at all, of Mansoul.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then Mr. Loth-to-stoop said again, &lsquo;Sir, behold the condescension
+of my master!&nbsp; He says, that he will be content, if he may but
+have assigned to him some place in Mansoul as a place to live privately
+in, and you shall be Lord of all the rest.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said the golden Prince, &lsquo;All that the Father giveth me shall
+come to me; and of all that he giveth me I will lose nothing - no, not
+a hoof nor a hair.&nbsp; I will not, therefore, grant him, no, not the
+least corner of Mansoul to dwell in; I will have all to myself.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then Loth-to-stoop said again, &lsquo;But, sir, suppose that my Lord
+should resign the whole town to you, only with this proviso, that he
+sometimes, when he comes into this country, may, for old acquaintance&rsquo;
+sake, be entertained as a wayfaring man for two days, or ten days or
+a month, or so.&nbsp; May not this small matter be granted?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said Emmanuel, &lsquo;No.&nbsp; He came as a wayfaring man to David,
+nor did he stay long with him, and yet it had like to have cost David
+his soul.&nbsp; I will not consent that he ever should have any harbour
+more there.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said Mr. Loth-to-stoop, &lsquo;Sir, you seem to be very hard.&nbsp;
+Suppose my master should yield to all that your lordship hath said,
+provided that his friends and kindred in Mansoul may have liberty to
+trade in the town, and to enjoy their present dwellings.&nbsp; May not
+that be granted, sir?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said Emmanuel, &lsquo;No; that is contrary to my Father&rsquo;s
+will; for all, and all manner of Diabolonians that now are, or that
+at any time shall be found in Mansoul, shall not only lose their lands
+and liberties, but also their lives.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said Mr. Loth-to-stoop again, &lsquo;But, sir, may not my master
+and great lord, by letters, by passengers, by accidental opportunities,
+and the like, maintain, if he shall deliver up all unto thee, some kind
+of old friendship with Mansoul?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Emmanuel answered, &lsquo;No, by no means; forasmuch as any such fellowship,
+friendship, intimacy, or acquaintance, in what way, sort, or mode soever
+maintained, will tend to the corrupting of Mansoul, the alienating of
+their affections from me, and the endangering of their peace with my
+Father.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Mr. Loth-to-stoop yet added further, saying, &lsquo;But, great sir,
+since my master hath many friends, and those that are dear to him, in
+Mansoul, may he not, if he shall depart from them, even of his bounty
+and good-nature, bestow upon them, as he sees fit, some tokens of his
+love and kindness that he had for them, to the end that Mansoul, when
+he is gone, may look upon such tokens of kindness once received from
+their old friend, and remember him who was once their king, and the
+merry times that they sometimes enjoyed one with another, while he and
+they lived in peace together?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said Emmanuel, &lsquo;No; for if Mansoul come to be mine, I shall
+not admit of nor consent that there should be the least scrap, shred,
+or dust of Diabolus left behind, as tokens of gifts bestowed upon any
+in Mansoul, thereby to call to remembrance the horrible communion that
+was betwixt them and him.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Well, sir,&rsquo; said Mr. Loth-to-stoop, &lsquo;I have one thing
+more to propound, and then I am got to the end of my commission.&nbsp;
+Suppose that, when my master is gone from Mansoul, any that shall yet
+live in the town should have such business of high concerns to do, that
+if they be neglected the party shall be undone; and suppose, sir, that
+nobody can help in that case so well as my master and lord, may not
+now my master be sent for upon so urgent an occasion as this?&nbsp;
+Or if he may not be admitted into the town, may not he and the person
+concerned meet in some of the villages near Mansoul, and there lay their
+heads together, and there consult of matters?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+This was the last of those ensnaring propositions that Mr. Loth-to-stoop
+had to propound to Emmanuel on behalf of his master Diabolus; but Emmanuel
+would not grant it; for he said, &lsquo;There can be no case, or thing,
+or matter fall out in Mansoul, when thy master shall be gone, that may
+not be solved by my Father; besides, it will be a great disparagement
+to my Father&rsquo;s wisdom and skill to admit any from Mansoul to go
+out to Diabolus for advice, when they are bid before, in everything,
+by prayer and supplication to let their requests be made known to my
+Father.&nbsp; Further, this, should it be granted, would be to grant
+that a door should be set open for Diabolus, and the Diabolonians in
+Mansoul, to hatch, and plot, and bring to pass treasonable designs,
+to the grief of my Father and me, and to the utter destruction of Mansoul.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+When Mr. Loth-to-stoop had heard this answer, he took his leave of Emmanuel,
+and departed, saying that he would carry word to his master concerning
+this whole affair.&nbsp; So he departed, and came to Diabolus to Mansoul,
+and told him the whole of the matter, and how Emmanuel would not admit,
+no, not by any means, that he, when he was once gone out, should for
+ever have anything more to do either in, or with any that are of the
+town of Mansoul.&nbsp; When Mansoul and Diabolus had heard this relation
+of things, they with one consent concluded to use their best endeavour
+to keep Emmanuel out of Mansoul, and sent old Ill-Pause, of whom you
+have heard before, to tell the Prince and his captains so.&nbsp; So
+the old gentleman came up to the top of Ear-gate, and called to the
+camp for a hearing, who when they gave audience, he said, &lsquo;I have
+in commandment from my high lord to bid you tell it to your Prince Emmanuel,
+that Mansoul and their king are resolved to stand and fall together;
+and that it is in vain for your Prince to think of ever having Mansoul
+in his hand, unless he can take it by force.&rsquo;&nbsp; So some went
+and told to Emmanuel what old Ill-Pause, a Diabolonian in Mansoul, had
+said.&nbsp; Then said the Prince, &lsquo;I must try the power of my
+sword, for I will not (for all the rebellions and repulses that Mansoul
+has made against me) raise my siege and depart, but will assuredly take
+my Mansoul, and deliver it from the hand of her enemy.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+And with that he gave out a commandment that Captain Boanerges, Captain
+Conviction, Captain Judgment, and Captain Execution should forthwith
+march up to Ear-gate with trumpets sounding, colours flying, and with
+shouting for the battle.&nbsp; Also he would that Captain Credence should
+join himself with them.&nbsp; Emmanuel, moreover, gave order that Captain
+Good-Hope and Captain Charity should draw themselves up before Eye-gate.&nbsp;
+He bid also that the rest of his captains and their men should place
+themselves for the best of their advantage against the enemy round about
+the town; and all was done as he had commanded.<br>
+<br>
+Then he bid that the word should be given forth, and the word was at
+that time, &lsquo;EMMANUEL.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then was an alarm sounded,
+and the battering-rams were played, and the slings did whirl stones
+into the town amain, and thus the battle began.&nbsp; Now Diabolus himself
+did manage the townsmen in the war, and that at every gate; wherefore
+their resistance was the more forcible, hellish, and offensive to Emmanuel.&nbsp;
+Thus was the good Prince engaged and entertained by Diabolus and Mansoul
+for several days together; and a sight worth seeing it was to behold
+how the captains of Shaddai behaved themselves in this war.<br>
+<br>
+And first for Captain Boanerges, (not to under-value the rest,) he made
+three most fierce assaults, one after another, upon Ear-gate, to the
+shaking of the posts thereof.&nbsp; Captain Conviction, he also made
+up as fast with Boanerges as possibly he could, and both discerning
+that the gate began to yield, they commanded that the rams should still
+be played against it.&nbsp; Now, Captain Conviction, going up very near
+to the gate, was with great force driven back, and received three wounds
+in the mouth.&nbsp; And those that rode reformades, they went about
+to encourage the captains.<br>
+<br>
+For the valour of the two captains, made mention of before, the Prince
+sent for them to his pavilion, and commanded that a while they should
+rest themselves, and that with somewhat they should be refreshed.&nbsp;
+Care also was taken for Captain Conviction, that he should be healed
+of his wounds.&nbsp; The Prince also gave to each of them a chain of
+gold, and bid them yet be of good courage.<br>
+<br>
+Nor did Captain Good-Hope nor Captain Charity come behind in this most
+desperate fight, for they so well did behave themselves at Eye-gate,
+that they had almost broken it quite open.&nbsp; These also had a reward
+from their Prince, as also had the rest of the captains, because they
+did valiantly round about the town.<br>
+<br>
+In this engagement several of the officers of Diabolus were slain, and
+some of the townsmen wounded.&nbsp; For the officers, there was one
+Captain Boasting slain.&nbsp; This Boasting thought that nobody could
+have shaken the posts of Ear-gate, nor have shaken the heart of Diabolus.&nbsp;
+Next to him there was one Captain Secure slain: this Secure used to
+say that the blind and lame in Mansoul were able to keep the gates of
+the town against Emmanuel&rsquo;s army.&nbsp; This Captain Secure did
+Captain Conviction cleave down the head with a two-handed sword, when
+he received himself three wounds in his mouth.<br>
+<br>
+Besides these there was one Captain Bragman, a very desperate fellow,
+and he was captain over a band of those that threw firebrands, arrows,
+and death: he also received, by the hand of Captain Good-Hope at Eye-gate,
+a mortal wound in the breast.<br>
+<br>
+There was, moreover, one Mr. Feeling; but he was no captain, but a great
+stickler to encourage Mansoul to rebellion.&nbsp; He received a wound
+in the eye by the hand of one of Boanerges&rsquo; soldiers, and had
+by the captain himself been slain, but that he made a sudden retreat.<br>
+<br>
+But I never saw Willbewill so daunted in all my life; he was not able
+to do as he was wont, and some say that he also received a wound in
+the leg, and that some of the men in the Prince&rsquo;s army have certainly
+seen him limp as he afterwards walked on the wall.<br>
+<br>
+I shall not give you a particular account of the names of the soldiers
+that were slain in the town, for many were maimed, and wounded, and
+slain; for when they saw that the posts of Ear-gate did shake, and Eye-gate
+was well-nigh broken quite open, and also that their captains were slain,
+this took away the hearts of many of the Diabolonians; they fell also
+by the force of the shot that were sent by the golden slings into the
+midst of the town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+Of the townsmen, there was one Love-no-Good; he was a townsman, but
+a Diabolonian; he also received his mortal wound in Mansoul, but he
+died not very soon.<br>
+<br>
+Mr. Ill-Pause also, who was the man that came along with Diabolus when
+at first he attempted the taking of Mansoul, he also received a grievous
+wound in the head; some say that his brain-pan was cracked.&nbsp; This
+I have taken notice of, that he was never after this able to do that
+mischief to Mansoul as he had done in times past.&nbsp; Also old Prejudice
+and Mr. Anything fled.<br>
+<br>
+Now, when the battle was over, the Prince commanded that yet once more
+the white flag should be set upon Mount Gracious in sight of the town
+of Mansoul, to show that yet Emmanuel had grace for the wretched town
+of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+When Diabolus saw the white flag hung out again, and knowing that it
+was not for him, but Mansoul, he cast in his mind to play another prank,
+to wit, to see if Emmanuel would raise his siege and begone, upon promise
+of reformation.&nbsp; So he comes down to the gate one evening, a good
+while after the sun was gone down, and calls to speak with Emmanuel,
+who presently came down to the gate, and Diabolus saith unto him:<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Forasmuch as thou makest it appear by thy white flag that thou
+art wholly given to peace and quiet, I thought meet to acquaint thee
+that we are ready to accept thereof upon terms which thou mayest admit.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;I know that thou art given to devotion, and that holiness pleaseth
+thee; yea, that thy great end in making a war upon Mansoul is, that
+it may be a holy habitation.&nbsp; Well, draw off thy forces from the
+town, and I will bend Mansoul to thy bow.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;First, I will lay down all acts of hostility against thee, and
+will be willing to become thy deputy, and will, as I have formerly been
+against thee, now serve thee in the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; And more
+particularly,<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;1. I will persuade Mansoul to receive thee for their Lord; and
+I know that they will do it the sooner when they shall understand that
+I am thy deputy.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;2. I will show them wherein they have erred, and that transgression
+stands in the way to life.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;3. I will show them the holy law unto which they must conform,
+even that which they have broken.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;4. I will press upon them the necessity of a reformation according
+to thy law.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;5. And, moreover, that none of these things may fail, I myself,
+at my own proper cost and charge, will set up and maintain a sufficient
+ministry, besides lectures, in Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;6. Thou shalt receive, as a token of our subjection to thee,
+year by year, what thou shalt think fit to lay and levy upon us in token
+of our subjection to thee.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said Emmanuel to him, &lsquo;O full of deceit, how movable are
+thy ways!&nbsp; How often hast thou changed and rechanged, if so be
+thou mightest still keep possession of my Mansoul, though, as has been
+plainly declared before, I am the right heir thereof!&nbsp; Often hast
+thou made thy proposals already, nor is this last a whit better than
+they.&nbsp; And failing to deceive when thou showedst thyself in thy
+black, thou hast now transformed thyself into an angel of light, and
+wouldst, to deceive, be now as a minister of righteousness.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;But know thou, O Diabolus, that nothing must be regarded that
+thou canst propound, for nothing is done by thee but to deceive.&nbsp;
+Thou neither hast conscience to God, nor love to the town of Mansoul;
+whence, then, should these thy sayings arise but from sinful craft and
+deceit?&nbsp; He that can of list and will propound what he pleases,
+and that wherewith he may destroy them that believe him, is to be abandoned,
+with all that he shall say.&nbsp; But if righteousness be such a beauty-spot
+in thine eyes now, how is it that wickedness was so closely stuck to
+by thee before?&nbsp; But this is by-the-bye.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Thou talkest now of a reformation in Mansoul, and that thou thyself,
+if I will please, wilt be at the head of that reformation; all the while
+knowing that the greatest proficiency that man can make in the law,
+and the righteousness thereof, will amount to no more, for the taking
+away of the curse from Mansoul, than just nothing at all; for a law
+being broken by Mansoul, that had before, upon a supposition of the
+breach thereof, a curse pronounced against him for it of God, can never,
+by his obeying of the law, deliver himself therefrom (to say nothing
+of what a reformation is like to be set up in Mansoul when the devil
+is become corrector of vice).&nbsp; Thou knowest that all that thou
+hast now said in this matter is nothing but guile and deceit; and is,
+as it was the first, so is it the last card that thou hast to play.&nbsp;
+Many there be that do soon discern thee when thou showest them thy cloven
+foot; but in thy white, thy light, and in thy transformation, thou art
+seen but of a few.&nbsp; But thou shalt not do thus with my Mansoul,
+O Diabolus; for I do still love my Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Besides, I am not come to put Mansoul upon works to live thereby;
+should I do so, I should be like unto thee: but I am come that by me,
+and by what I have and shall do for Mansoul, they may to my Father be
+reconciled, though by their sin they have provoked him to anger, and
+though by the law they cannot obtain mercy.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Thou talkest of subjecting of this town to good, when none desireth
+it at thy hands.&nbsp; I am sent by my Father to possess it myself,
+and to guide it by the skilfulness of my hands into such a conformity
+to him as shall be pleasing in his sight.&nbsp; I will therefore possess
+it myself; I will dispossess and cast thee out; I will set up mine own
+standard in the midst of them; I will also govern them by new laws,
+new officers, new motives, and new ways; yea, I will pull down this
+town, and build it again; and it shall be as though it had not been,
+and it shall then be the glory of the whole universe.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+When Diabolus heard this, and perceived that he was discovered in all
+his deceits, he was confounded, and utterly put to a nonplus; but having
+in himself the fountain of iniquity, rage, and malice against both Shaddai
+and his Son, and the beloved town of Mansoul, what doth he but strengthen
+himself what he could to give fresh battle to the noble Prince Emmanuel?&nbsp;
+So, then, now we must have another fight before the town of Mansoul
+is taken.&nbsp; Come up, then, to the mountains, you that love to see
+military actions, and behold by both sides how the fatal blow is given,
+while one seeks to hold, and the other seeks to make himself master
+of the famous town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+Diabolus, therefore, having withdrawn himself from the wall to his force
+that was in the heart of the town of Mansoul, Emmanuel also returned
+to the camp; and both of them, after their divers ways, put themselves
+into a posture fit to give battle one to another.<br>
+<br>
+Diabolus, as filled with despair of retaining in his hands the famous
+town of Mansoul, resolved to do what mischief he could (if, indeed,
+he could do any) to the army of the Prince and to the famous town of
+Mansoul; for, alas! it was not the happiness of the silly town of Mansoul
+that was designed by Diabolus, but the utter ruin and overthrow thereof,
+as now is enough in view.&nbsp; Wherefore, he commands his officers
+that they should then, when they see that they could hold the town no
+longer, do it what harm and mischief they could, rendering and tearing
+men, women, and children.&nbsp; &lsquo;For,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;we
+had better quite demolish the place, and leave it like a ruinous heap,
+than so leave it that it may be an habitation for Emmanuel.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Emmanuel again, knowing that the next battle would issue in his being
+made master of the place, gave out a royal commandment to all his officers,
+high captains, and men of war, to be sure to show themselves men of
+war against Diabolus and all Diabolonians; but favourable, merciful,
+and meek to the old inhabitants of Mansoul.&nbsp; &lsquo;Bend, therefore,&rsquo;
+said the noble Prince, &lsquo;the hottest front of the battle against
+Diabolus and his men.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+So the day being come, the command was given, and the Prince&rsquo;s
+men did bravely stand to their arms, and did, as before, bend their
+main force against Ear-gate and Eye-gate.&nbsp; The word was then, &lsquo;Mansoul
+is won!&rsquo; so they made their assault upon the town.&nbsp; Diabolus
+also, as fast as he could, with the main of his power, made resistance
+from within; and his high lords and chief captains for a time fought
+very cruelly against the Prince&rsquo;s army.<br>
+<br>
+But after three or four notable charges by the Prince and his noble
+captains, Ear-gate was broken open, and the bars and bolts wherewith
+it was used to be fast shut up against the Prince, were broken into
+a thousand pieces.&nbsp; Then did the Prince&rsquo;s trumpets sound,
+the captains shout, the town shake, and Diabolus retreat to his hold.&nbsp;
+Well, when the Prince&rsquo;s forces had broken open the gate, himself
+came up and did set his throne in it; also he set his standard thereby,
+upon a mount that before by his men was cast up to place the mighty
+slings thereon.&nbsp; The mount was called Mount Hear-well.&nbsp; There,
+therefore, the Prince abode, to wit, hard by the going in at the gate.&nbsp;
+He commanded also that the golden slings should yet be played upon the
+town, especially against the castle, because for shelter thither was
+Diabolus retreated.&nbsp; Now, from Ear-gate the street was straight
+even to the house of Mr. Recorder that so was before Diabolus took the
+town; and hard by his house stood the castle, which Diabolus for a long
+time had made his irksome den.&nbsp; The captains, therefore, did quickly
+clear that street by the use of their slings, so that way was made up
+to the heart of the town.&nbsp; Then did the Prince command that Captain
+Boanerges, Captain Conviction, and Captain Judgment, should forthwith
+march up the town to the old gentleman&rsquo;s gate.&nbsp; Then did
+the captains in the most warlike manner enter into the town of Mansoul,
+and marching in with flying colours, they came up to the Recorder&rsquo;s
+house, and that was almost as strong as was the castle.&nbsp; Battering-rams
+they took also with them, to plant against the castle gates.&nbsp; When
+they were come to the house of Mr. Conscience, they knocked, and demanded
+entrance.&nbsp; Now, the old gentleman, not knowing as yet fully their
+design, kept his gates shut all the time of this fight.&nbsp; Wherefore
+Boanerges demanded entrance at his gates; and no man making answer,
+he gave it one stroke with the head of a ram, and this made the old
+gentleman shake, and his house to tremble and totter.&nbsp; Then came
+Mr. Recorder down to the gates, and, as he could, with quivering lips
+he asked who was there?&nbsp; Boanerges answered, &lsquo;We are the
+captains and commanders of the great Shaddai and of the blessed Emmanuel,
+his Son, and we demand possession of your house for the use of our noble
+Prince.&rsquo;&nbsp; And with that the battering-ram gave the gate another
+shake.&nbsp; This made the old gentleman tremble the more, yet durst
+he not but open the gate: then the King&rsquo;s forces marched in, namely,
+the three brave captains mentioned before.&nbsp; Now, the Recorder&rsquo;s
+house was a place of much convenience for Emmanuel, not only because
+it was near to the castle and strong, but also because it was large,
+and fronted the castle, the den where now Diabolus was, for he was now
+afraid to come out of his hold.&nbsp; As for Mr. Recorder, the captains
+carried it very reservedly to him; as yet he knew nothing of the great
+designs of Emmanuel, so that he did not know what judgment to make,
+nor what would be the end of such thundering beginnings.&nbsp; It was
+also presently noised in the town how the Recorder&rsquo;s house was
+possessed, his rooms taken up, and his palace made the seat of the war;
+and no sooner was it noised abroad, but they took the alarm as warmly,
+and gave it out to others of his friends, and you know, as a snowball
+loses nothing by rolling, so in little time the whole town was possessed
+that they must expect nothing from the Prince but destruction; and the
+ground of the business was this, the Recorder was afraid, the Recorder
+trembled, and the captains carried it strangely to the Recorder.&nbsp;
+So many came to see, but when they with their own eyes did behold the
+captains in the palace, and their battering-rams ever playing at the
+castle gates to beat them down, they were riveted in their fears, and
+it made them all in amaze.&nbsp; And, as I said, the man of the house
+would increase all this; for whoever came to him, or discoursed with
+him, nothing would he talk of, tell them, or hear, but that death and
+destruction now attended Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;For,&rsquo; quoth the old gentleman, &lsquo;you are all of you
+sensible that we all have been traitors to that once despised, but now
+famously victorious and glorious Prince Emmanuel; for he now, as you
+see, doth not only lie in close siege about us, but hath forced his
+entrance in at our gates.&nbsp; Moreover, Diabolus flees before him;
+and he hath, as you behold, made of my house a garrison against the
+castle where he is.&nbsp; I, for my part, have transgressed greatly,
+and he that is clean, it is well for him.&nbsp; But I say I have transgressed
+greatly in keeping silence when I should have spoken, and in perverting
+justice when I should have executed the same.&nbsp; True, I have suffered
+something at the hand of Diabolus for taking part with the laws of King
+Shaddai; but that, alas! what will that do? Will that make compensation
+for the rebellions and treasons that I have done, and have suffered
+without gainsaying to be committed in the town of Mansoul? Oh! I tremble
+to think what will be the end of this so dreadful and so ireful a beginning!&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Now, while these brave captains were thus busy in the house of the old
+Recorder, Captain Execution was as busy in other parts of the town,
+in securing the back streets and the walls.&nbsp; He also hunted the
+Lord Willbewill sorely; he suffered him not to rest in any corner; he
+pursued him so hard that he drove his men from him, and made him glad
+to thrust his head into a hole.&nbsp; Also this mighty warrior did cut
+three of the Lord Willbewill&rsquo;s officers down to the ground: one
+was old Mr. Prejudice, he that had his crown cracked in the mutiny.&nbsp;
+This man was made by Lord Willbewill keeper of the Ear-gate, and fell
+by the hand of Captain Execution.&nbsp; There was also one Mr. Backward-to-all-but-naught,
+and he also was one of Lord Willbewill&rsquo;s officers, and was the
+captain of the two guns that once were mounted on the top of Ear-gate;
+he also was cut down to the ground by the hands of Captain Execution.&nbsp;
+Besides these two there was another, a third, and his name was Captain
+Treacherous; a vile man this was, but one that Willbewill did put a
+great deal of confidence in; but him also did this Captain Execution
+cut down to the ground with the rest.<br>
+<br>
+He also made a very great slaughter among my Lord Willbewill&rsquo;s
+soldiers, killing many that were stout and sturdy, and wounding many
+that for Diabolus were nimble and active.&nbsp; But all these were Diabolonians;
+there was not a man, a native of Mansoul, hurt.<br>
+<br>
+Other feats of war were also likewise performed by other of the captains,
+as at Eye-gate, where Captain Good-Hope and Captain Charity had a charge,
+was great execution done; for the Captain Good-Hope, with his own hands,
+slew one Captain Blindfold, the keeper of that gate.&nbsp; This Blindfold
+was captain of a thousand men, and they were they that fought with mauls;
+he also pursued his men, slew many, and wounded more, and made the rest
+hide their heads in corners.<br>
+<br>
+There was also at that gate Mr. Ill-Pause, of whom you have heard before.&nbsp;
+He was an old man, and had a beard that reached down to his girdle:
+the same was he that was orator to Diabolus: he did much mischief in
+the town of Mansoul, and fell by the hand of Captain Good-Hope.<br>
+<br>
+What shall I say?&nbsp; The Diabolonians in these days lay dead in every
+corner, though too many yet were alive in Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+Now, the old Recorder and my Lord Understanding, with some others of
+the chief of the town, to wit, such as knew they must stand and fall
+with the famous town of Mansoul, came together upon a day, and after
+consultation had, did jointly agree to draw up a petition, and to send
+it to Emmanuel, now while he sat in the gate of Mansoul.&nbsp; So they
+drew up their petition to Emmanuel, the contents whereof were these:
+That they, the old inhabitants of the now deplorable town of Mansoul,
+confessed their sin, and were sorry that they had offended his princely
+Majesty, and prayed that he would spare their lives.<br>
+<br>
+Unto this petition he gave no answer at all, and that did trouble them
+yet so much the more.&nbsp; Now, all this while the captains that were
+in the Recorder&rsquo;s house were playing with the battering-rams at
+the gates of the castle, to beat them down.&nbsp; So after some time,
+labour, and travail, the gate of the castle that was called Impregnable
+was beaten open, and broken into several splinters, and so a way made
+to go up to the hold in which Diabolus had hid himself.&nbsp; Then were
+tidings sent down to Ear-gate, for Emmanuel still abode there, to let
+him know that a way was made in at the gates of the castle of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+But, oh! how the trumpets at the tidings sounded throughout the Prince&rsquo;s
+camp, for that now the war was so near an end, and Mansoul itself of
+being set free.<br>
+<br>
+Then the Prince arose from the place where he was, and took with him
+such of his men of war as were fittest for that expedition, and marched
+up the street of Mansoul to the old Recorder&rsquo;s house.<br>
+<br>
+Now, the Prince himself was clad all in armour of gold, and so he marched
+up the town with his standard borne before him; but he kept his countenance
+much reserved all the way as he went, so that the people could not tell
+how to gather to themselves love or hatred by his looks.&nbsp; Now,
+as he marched up the street, the townsfolk came out at every door to
+see, and could not but be taken with his person and the glory thereof,
+but wondered at the reservedness of his countenance; for as yet he spake
+more to them by his actions and works than he did by words or smiles.&nbsp;
+But also poor Mansoul, (as in such cases all are apt to do,) they interpreted
+the carriage of Emmanuel to them as did Joseph&rsquo;s brethren his
+to them, even all the quite contrary way.&nbsp; &lsquo;For,&rsquo; thought
+they, &lsquo;if Emmanuel loved us, he would show it to us by word of
+carriage; but none of these he doth, therefore Emmanuel hates us.&nbsp;
+Now, if Emmanuel hates us, then Mansoul shall be slain, then Mansoul
+shall become a dunghill.&rsquo;&nbsp; They knew that they had transgressed
+his Father&rsquo;s law, and that against him they had been in with Diabolus,
+his enemy.&nbsp; They also knew that the Prince Emmanuel knew all this;
+for they were convinced that he was an angel of God, to know all things
+that are done in the earth; and this made them think that their condition
+was miserable, and that the good Prince would make them desolate.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;And,&rsquo; thought they, &lsquo;what time so fit to do this
+in as now, when he has the bridle of Mansoul in his hand?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+And this I took special notice of, that the inhabitants, notwithstanding
+all this, could not - no, they could not, when they see him march through
+the town, but cringe, bow, bend, and were ready to lick the dust of
+his feet.&nbsp; They also wished a thousand times over that he would
+become their Prince and Captain, and would become their protection.&nbsp;
+They would also one to another talk of the comeliness of his person,
+and how much for glory and valour he outstripped the great ones of the
+world.&nbsp; But, poor hearts, as to themselves, their thoughts would
+chance, and go upon all manner of extremes.&nbsp; Yea, through the working
+of them backward and forward, Mansoul became as a ball tossed, and as
+a rolling thing before the whirlwind.<br>
+<br>
+Now, when he was come to the castle gates, he commanded Diabolus to
+appear, and to surrender himself into his hands.&nbsp; But, oh! how
+loath was the beast to appear! how he stuck at it! how he shrank! how
+he cringed! yet out he came to the Prince.&nbsp; Then Emmanuel commanded,
+and they took Diabolus and bound him fast in chains, the better to reserve
+him to the judgment that he had appointed for him.&nbsp; But Diabolus
+stood up to entreat for himself that Emmanuel would not send him into
+the deep, but suffer him to depart out of Mansoul in peace.<br>
+<br>
+When Emmanuel had taken him and bound him in chains, he led him into
+the marketplace, and there, before Mansoul, stripped him of his armour
+in which he boasted so much before.&nbsp; This now was one of the acts
+of triumph of Emmanuel over his enemy; and all the while that the giant
+was stripping, the trumpets of the golden Prince did sound amain; the
+captains also shouted, and the soldiers did sing for joy.<br>
+<br>
+Then was Mansoul called upon to behold the beginning of Emmanuel&rsquo;s
+triumph over him in whom they so much had trusted, and of whom they
+so much had boasted in the days when he flattered them.<br>
+<br>
+Thus having made Diabolus naked in the eyes of Mansoul, and before the
+commanders of the Prince, in the next place, he commands that Diabolus
+should be bound with chains to his chariot wheels.&nbsp; Then leaving
+some of his forces, to wit, Captain Boanerges and Captain Conviction,
+as a guard for the castle-gates, that resistance might be made on his
+behalf, (if any that heretofore followed Diabolus should make an attempt
+to possess it,) he did ride in triumph over him quite through the town
+of Mansoul, and so out at and before the gate called Eye-gate, to the
+plain where his camp did lie.<br>
+<br>
+But you cannot think, unless you had been there, as I was, what a shout
+there was in Emmanuel&rsquo;s camp when they saw the tyrant bound by
+the hand of their noble Prince, and tied to his chariot wheels!<br>
+<br>
+And they said, &lsquo;He hath led captivity captive, he hath spoiled
+principalities and powers.&nbsp; Diabolus is subjected to the power
+of his sword, and made the object of all derision.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Those also that rode reformades, and that came down to see the battle,
+they shouted with that greatness of voice, and sung with such melodious
+notes, that they caused them that dwell in the highest orbs to open
+their windows, put out their heads, and look to see the cause of that
+glory.<br>
+<br>
+The townsmen also, so many of them as saw this sight, were, as it were,
+while they looked, betwixt the earth and the heavens.&nbsp; True, they
+could not tell what would be the issue of things as to them; but all
+things were done in such excellent methods, and I cannot tell how, but
+things in the management of them seemed to cast a smile towards the
+town, so that their eyes, their heads, their hearts, and their minds,
+and all that they had, were taken and held while they observed Emmanuel&rsquo;s
+order.<br>
+<br>
+So, when the brave Prince had finished this part of his triumph over
+Diabolus his foe, he turned him up in the midst of his contempt and
+shame, having given him a charge no more to be a possessor of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+Then went he from Emmanuel, and out of the midst of his camp, to inherit
+the parched places in a salt land, seeking rest, but finding none.<br>
+<br>
+Now, Captain Boanerges and Captain Conviction were, both of them, men
+of very great majesty; their faces were like the faces of lions, and
+their words like the roaring of the sea; and they still quartered in
+Mr. Conscience&rsquo;s house, of whom mention was made before.&nbsp;
+When, therefore, the high and mighty Prince had thus far finished his
+triumph over Diabolus, the townsmen had more leisure to view and to
+behold the actions of these noble captains.&nbsp; But the captains carried
+it with that terror and dread in all that they did, (and you may be
+sure that they had private instructions so to do,) that they kept the
+town under continual heart-aching, and caused (in their apprehension)
+the well-being of Mansoul for the future to hang in doubt before them,
+so that for some considerable time they neither knew what rest, or ease,
+or peace, or hope meant.<br>
+<br>
+Nor did the Prince himself as yet abide in the town of Mansoul, but
+in his royal pavilion in the camp, and in the midst of his Father&rsquo;s
+forces.&nbsp; So, at a time convenient, he sent special orders to Captain
+Boanerges to summons Mansoul, the whole of the townsmen, into the castle-yard,
+and then and there, before their faces, to take my Lord Understanding,
+Mr. Conscience, and that notable one, the Lord Willbewill, and put them
+all three in ward, and that they should set a strong guard upon them
+there, until his pleasure concerning them was further known: the which
+orders, when the captains had put them in execution, made no small addition
+to the fears of the town of Mansoul; for now, to their thinking, were
+their former fears of the ruin of Mansoul confirmed.&nbsp; Now, what
+death they should die, and how long they should be in dying, was that
+which most perplexed their heads and hearts; yea, they were afraid that
+Emmanuel would command them all into the deep, the place that the prince
+Diabolus was afraid of, for they knew that they had deserved it.&nbsp;
+Also to die by the sword in the face of the town, and in the open way
+of disgrace, from the hand of so good and so holy a prince, that, too,
+troubled them sore.&nbsp; The town was also greatly troubled for the
+men that were committed to ward, for that they were their stay and their
+guide, and for that they believed that, if those men were cut off, their
+execution would be but the beginning of the ruin of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+Wherefore, what do they, but, together with the men in prison, draw
+up a petition to the Prince, and sent it to Emmanuel by the hand of
+Mr. Would-live.&nbsp; So he went, and came to the Prince&rsquo;s quarters,
+and presented the petition, the sum of which was this:<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Great and wonderful Potentate, victor over Diabolus, and conqueror
+of the town of Mansoul, We, the miserable inhabitants of that most woful
+corporation, do humbly beg that we may find favour in thy sight, and
+remember not against us former transgressions, nor yet the sins of the
+chief of our town: but spare us according to the greatness of thy mercy,
+and let us not die, but live in thy sight.&nbsp; So shall we be willing
+to be thy servants, and, if thou shalt think fit, to gather our meat
+under thy table.&nbsp; Amen.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+So the petitioner went, as was said, with his petition to the Prince;
+and the Prince took it at his hand, but sent him away with silence.&nbsp;
+This still afflicted the town of Mansoul; but yet, considering that
+now they must either petition or die, for now they could not do anything
+else, therefore they consulted again, and sent another petition; and
+this petition was much after the form and method of the former.<br>
+<br>
+But when the petition was drawn up, By whom should they send it? was
+the next question; for they would not send this by him by whom they
+sent the first, for they thought that the Prince had taken some offence
+at the manner of his deportment before him: so they attempted to make
+Captain Conviction their messenger with it; but he said that he neither
+durst nor would petition Emmanuel for traitors, nor be to the Prince
+an advocate for rebels.&nbsp; &lsquo;Yet withal,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;our
+Prince is good, and you may adventure to send it by the hand of one
+of your town, provided he went with a rope about his head, and pleaded
+nothing but mercy.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Well, they made, through fear, their delays as long as they could, and
+longer than delays were good; but fearing at last the dangerousness
+of them, they thought, but with many a fainting in their minds, to send
+their petition by Mr. Desires-awake; so they sent for Mr. Desires-awake.&nbsp;
+Now he dwelt in a very mean cottage in Mansoul, and he came at his neighbour&rsquo;s
+request.&nbsp; So they told him what they had done, and what they would
+do, concerning petitioning, and that they did desire of him that he
+would go therewith to the Prince.<br>
+<br>
+Then said Mr. Desires-awake, &lsquo;Why should not I do the best I can
+to save so famous a town as Mansoul from deserved destruction?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+They therefore delivered the petition to him, and told him how he must
+address himself to the Prince, and wished him ten thousand good speeds.&nbsp;
+So he comes to the Prince&rsquo;s pavilion, as the first, and asked
+to speak with his Majesty.&nbsp; So word was carried to Emmanuel, and
+the Prince came out to the man.&nbsp; When Mr. Desires-awake saw the
+Prince, he fell flat with his face to the ground, and cried out, &lsquo;Oh
+that Mansoul might live before thee!&rsquo; and with that he presented
+the petition; the which when the Prince had read, he turned away for
+a while and wept; but refraining himself, he turned again to the man,
+who all this while lay crying at his feet, as at the first, and said
+to him, &lsquo;Go thy way to thy place, and I will consider of thy requests.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Now, you may think that they of Mansoul that had sent him, what with
+guilt, and what with fear lest their petition should be rejected, could
+not but look with many a long look, and that, too, with strange workings
+of heart, to see what would become of their petition.&nbsp; At last
+they saw their messenger coming back.&nbsp; So, when he was come, they
+asked him how he fared, what Emmanuel said, and what was become of the
+petition.&nbsp; But he told them that he would be silent till he came
+to the prison to my Lord Mayor, my Lord Willbewill, and Mr. Recorder.&nbsp;
+So he went forwards towards the prison-house, where the men of Mansoul
+lay bound.&nbsp; But, oh! what a multitude flocked after, to hear what
+the messenger said.&nbsp; So, when he was come, and had shown himself
+at the gate of the prison, my Lord Mayor himself looked as white as
+a clout; the Recorder also did quake.&nbsp; But they asked and said,
+&lsquo;Come, good sir, what did the great Prince say to you?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Then said Mr. Desires-awake, &lsquo;When I came to my Lord&rsquo;s pavilion,
+I called, and he came forth.&nbsp; So I fell prostrate at his feet,
+and delivered to him my petition; for the greatness of his person, and
+the glory of his countenance, would not suffer me to stand upon my legs.&nbsp;
+Now, as he received the petition, I cried, &ldquo;Oh that Mansoul might
+live before thee!&rdquo;&nbsp; So, when for a while he had looked thereon,
+he turned him about, and said to his servant, &ldquo;Go thy way to thy
+place again, and I will consider of thy requests.&rdquo;&rsquo;&nbsp;
+The messenger added, moreover, and said, &lsquo;The Prince to whom you
+sent me is such a one for beauty and glory, that whoso sees him must
+both love and fear him.&nbsp; I, for my part, can do no less; but I
+know not what will be the end of these things.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+At this answer they were all at a stand, both they in prison, and they
+that followed the messenger thither to hear the news; nor knew they
+what, or what manner of interpretation to put upon what the Prince had
+said.&nbsp; Now, when the prison was cleared of the throng, the prisoners
+among themselves began to comment upon Emmanuel&rsquo;s words.&nbsp;
+My Lord Mayor said, that the answer did not look with a rugged face;
+but Willbewill said that it betokened evil; and the Recorder, that it
+was a messenger of death.&nbsp; Now, they that were left, and that stood
+behind, and so could not so well hear what the prisoners said, some
+of them catched hold of one piece of a sentence, and some on a bit of
+another; some took hold of what the messenger said, and some of the
+prisoners&rsquo; judgment thereon; so none had the right understanding
+of things.&nbsp; But you cannot imagine what work these people made,
+and what a confusion there was in Mansoul now.<br>
+<br>
+For presently they that had heard what was said flew about the town,
+one crying one thing, and another the quite contrary; and both were
+sure enough they told true; for they did hear, they said, with their
+ears what was said, and therefore could not be deceived.&nbsp; One would
+say, &lsquo;We must all be killed;&rsquo; another would say, &lsquo;We
+must all be saved;&rsquo; and a third would say that the Prince would
+not be concerned with Mansoul; and a fourth, that the prisoners must
+be suddenly put to death.&nbsp; And, as I said, every one stood to it
+that he told his tale the rightest, and that all others but he were
+out.&nbsp; Wherefore Mansoul had now molestation upon molestation, nor
+could any man know on what to rest the sole of his foot; for one would
+go by now, and as he went, if he heard his neighbour tell his tale,
+to be sure he would tell the quite contrary, and both would stand in
+it that he told the truth.&nbsp; Nay, some of them had got this story
+by the end, that the Prince did intend to put Mansoul to the sword.&nbsp;
+And now it began to be dark, wherefore poor Mansoul was in sad perplexity
+all that night until the morning.<br>
+<br>
+But, so far as I could gather by the best information that I could get,
+all this hubbub came through the words that the Recorder said when he
+told them that, in his judgment, the Prince&rsquo;s answer was a messenger
+of death.&nbsp; It was this that fired the town, and that began the
+fright in Mansoul; for Mansoul in former times did use to count that
+Mr. Recorder was a seer, and that his sentence was equal to the best
+of orators; and thus was Mansoul a terror to itself.<br>
+<br>
+And now did they begin to feel what were the effects of stubborn rebellion,
+and unlawful resistance against their Prince.&nbsp; I say, they now
+began to feel the effects thereof by guilt and fear, that now had swallowed
+them up; and who more involved in the one but they that were most in
+the other, to wit, the chief of the town of Mansoul?<br>
+<br>
+To be brief: when the fame of the fright was out of the town, and the
+prisoners had a little recovered themselves, they take to themselves
+some heart, and think to petition the Prince for life again.&nbsp; So
+they did draw up a third petition, the contents whereof were these:-<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Prince Emmanuel the Great, Lord of all worlds, and Master of
+mercy, we, thy poor, wretched, miserable, dying town of Mansoul, do
+confess unto thy great and glorious Majesty that we have sinned against
+thy Father and thee, and are no more worthy to be called thy Mansoul,
+but rather to be cast into the pit.&nbsp; If thou wilt slay us, we have
+deserved it.&nbsp; If thou wilt condemn us to the deep, we cannot but
+say thou art righteous.&nbsp; We cannot complain whatever thou dost,
+or however thou carriest it towards us.&nbsp; But, oh! let mercy reign,
+and let it be extended to us!&nbsp; Oh! let mercy take hold upon us,
+and free us from our transgressions, and we will sing of thy mercy and
+of thy judgment.&nbsp; Amen.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+This petition, when drawn up, was designed to be sent to the Prince
+as the first.&nbsp; But who should carry it? - that was the question.&nbsp;
+Some said, &lsquo;Let him do it that went with the first,&rsquo; but
+others thought not good to do that, and that because he sped no better.&nbsp;
+Now, there was an old man in the town, and his name was Mr. Good-Deed;
+a man that bare only the name, but had nothing of the nature of the
+thing.&nbsp; Now, some were for sending him; but the Recorder was by
+no means for that.&nbsp; &lsquo;For,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;we now stand
+in need of, and are pleading for mercy: wherefore, to send our petition
+by a man of this name, will seem to cross the petition itself.&nbsp;
+Should we make Mr. Good-Deed our messenger, when our petition cries
+for mercy?<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Besides,&rsquo; quoth the old gentleman, &lsquo;should the Prince
+now, as he receives the petition, ask him, and say, &ldquo;What is thy
+name?&rdquo; as nobody knows but he will, and he should say, &ldquo;Old
+Good-Deed,&rdquo; what, think you, would Emmanuel say but this?&nbsp;
+&ldquo;Ay! is old Good-Deed yet alive in Mansoul? then let old Good-Deed
+save you from your distresses.&rdquo;&nbsp; And if he says so, I am
+sure we are lost; nor can a thousand of old Good-Deeds save Mansoul.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+After the Recorder had given in his reasons why old Good-Deed should
+not go with this petition to Emmanuel, the rest of the prisoners and
+chief of Mansoul opposed it also, and so old Good-Deed was laid aside,
+and they agreed to send Mr. Desires-awake again.&nbsp; So they sent
+for him, and desired him that he would a second time go with their petition
+to the Prince, and he readily told them he would.&nbsp; But they bid
+him that in anywise he should take heed that in no word or carriage
+he gave offence to the Prince; &lsquo;For by doing so, for ought we
+can tell, you may bring Mansoul into utter destruction,&rsquo; said
+they.<br>
+<br>
+Now Mr. Desires-awake, when he saw that he must go on this errand, besought
+that they would grant that Mr. Wet-Eyes might go with him.&nbsp; Now
+this Mr. Wet-Eyes was a near neighbour of Mr. Desires, a poor man, a
+man of a broken spirit, yet one that could speak well to a petition;
+so they granted that he should go with him.&nbsp; Wherefore, they address
+themselves to their business: Mr. Desires put a rope upon his head,
+and Mr. Wet-Eyes went with his hands wringing together.&nbsp; Thus they
+went to the Prince&rsquo;s pavilion.<br>
+<br>
+Now, when they went to petition this third time, they were not without
+thoughts that, by often coming, they might be a burden to the Prince.&nbsp;
+Wherefore, when they were come to the door of his pavilion, they first
+made their apology for themselves, and for their coming to trouble Emmanuel
+so often; and they said, that they came not hither to-day for that they
+delighted in being troublesome, or for that they delighted to hear themselves
+talk, but for that necessity caused them to come to his Majesty.&nbsp;
+They could, they said, have no rest day nor night because of their transgressions
+against Shaddai and against Emmanuel, his Son.&nbsp; They also thought
+that some misbehaviour of Mr. Desires-awake the last time might give
+distaste to his Highness, and so cause that he returned from so merciful
+a Prince empty, and without countenance.&nbsp; So, when they had made
+this apology, Mr. Desires-awake cast himself prostrate upon the ground,
+as at the first, at the feet of the mighty Prince, saying, &lsquo;Oh!
+that Mansoul might live before thee!&rsquo; and so he delivered his
+petition.&nbsp; The Prince then, having read the petition, turned aside
+awhile as before, and coming again to the place where the petitioner
+lay on the ground, he demanded what his name was, and of what esteem
+in the account of Mansoul, for that he, above all the multitude in Mansoul,
+should be sent to him upon such an errand.&nbsp; Then said the man to
+the Prince, &lsquo;Oh let not my Lord be angry; and why inquirest thou
+after the name of such a dead do - as I am?&nbsp; Pass by, I pray thee,
+and take not notice of who I am, because there is, as thou very well
+knowest, so great a disproportion between me and thee.&nbsp; Why the
+townsmen chose to send me on this errand to my Lord is best known to
+themselves, but it could not be for that they thought that I had favour
+with my Lord.&nbsp; For my part, I am out of charity with myself; who,
+then, should be in love with me?&nbsp; Yet live I would, and so would
+I that my townsmen should; and because both they and myself are guilty
+of great transgressions, therefore they have sent me, and I am come
+in their names to beg of my Lord for mercy.&nbsp; Let it please thee,
+therefore, to incline to mercy; but ask not what thy servants are.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said the Prince, &lsquo;And what is he that is become thy companion
+in this so weighty a matter?&rsquo;&nbsp; So Mr. Desires told Emmanuel
+that he was a poor neighbour of his, and one of his most intimate associates.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;And his name,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;may it please your most
+excellent Majesty, is Wet-Eyes, of the town of Mansoul, I know that
+there are many of that name that are naught; but I hope it will be no
+offence to my Lord that I have brought my poor neighbour with me.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then Mr. Wet-Eyes fell on his face to the ground, and made this apology
+for his coming with his neighbour to his Lord:-<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;O, my Lord,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;what I am I know not myself,
+nor whether my name be feigned or true, especially when I begin to think
+what some have said, namely, That this name was given me because Mr.
+Repentance was my father.&nbsp; Good men have bad children, and the
+sincere do oftentimes beget hypocrites.&nbsp; My mother also called
+me by this name from the cradle; but whether because of the moistness
+of my brain, or because of the softness of my heart, I cannot tell.&nbsp;
+I see dirt in mine own tears, and filthiness in the bottom of my prayers.&nbsp;
+But I pray thee (and all this while the gentleman wept) that thou wouldest
+not remember against us our transgressions, nor take offence at the
+unqualifiedness of thy servants, but mercifully pass by the sin of Mansoul,
+and refrain from the glorifying of thy grace no longer.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+So at his bidding they arose, and both stood trembling before him, and
+he spake to them to this purpose:-<br>
+<br>
+&ldquo;The town of Mansoul hath grievously rebelled against my Father,
+in that they have rejected him from being their King, and did choose
+to themselves for their captain a liar, a murderer, and a runagate slave.&nbsp;
+For this Diabolus, your pretended prince, though once so highly accounted
+of by you, made rebellion against my Father and me, even in our palace
+and highest court there, thinking to become a prince and king.&nbsp;
+But being there timely discovered and apprehended, and for his wickedness
+bound in chains, and separated to the pit with those that were his companions,
+he offered himself to you, and you have received him.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Now this is, and for a long time hath been, a high affront to
+my Father; wherefore my Father sent to you a powerful army to reduce
+you to your obedience.&nbsp; But you know how these men, their captains
+and their counsels, were esteemed of you, and what they received at
+your hand.&nbsp; You rebelled against them, you shut your gates upon
+them, you bid them battle, you fought them, and fought for Diabolus
+against them.&nbsp; So they sent to my Father for more power, and I,
+with my men, are come to subdue you.&nbsp; But as you treated the servants,
+so you treated their Lord.&nbsp; You stood up in hostile manner against
+me, you shut up your gates against me, you turned the deaf ear to me,
+and resisted as long as you could; but now I have made a conquest of
+you.&nbsp; Did you cry me mercy so long as you had hopes that you might
+prevail against me?&nbsp; But now I have taken the town, you cry; but
+why did you not cry before, when the white flag of my mercy, the red
+flag of justice, and the black flag that threatened execution, were
+set up to cite you to it?&nbsp; Now I have conquered your Diabolus,
+you come to me for favour; but why did you not help me against the mighty?&nbsp;
+Yet I will consider your petition, and will answer it so as will be
+for my glory.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Go, bid Captain Boanerges and Captain Conviction bring the prisoners
+out to me into the camp to-morrow, and say you to Captain Judgment and
+Captain Execution, &ldquo;Stay you in the castle, and take good heed
+to yourselves that you keep all quiet in Mansoul until you shall hear
+further from me.&rdquo;&rsquo;&nbsp; And with that he turned himself
+from them, and went into his royal pavilion again.<br>
+<br>
+So the petitioners, having received this answer from the Prince, returned,
+as at the first, to go to their companions again.&nbsp; But they had
+not gone far, but thoughts began to work in their minds that no mercy
+as yet was intended by the Prince to Mansoul.&nbsp; So they went to
+the place where the prisoners lay bound; but these workings of mind
+about what would become of Mansoul had such strong power over them,
+that by that they were come unto them that sent them, they were scarce
+able to deliver their message.<br>
+<br>
+But they came at length to the gates of the town, (now the townsmen
+with earnestness were waiting for their return,) where many met them,
+to know what answer was made to the petition.&nbsp; Then they cried
+out to those that were sent, &lsquo;What news from the Prince? and what
+hath Emmanuel said?&rsquo;&nbsp; But they said that they must, as afore,
+go up to the prison, and there deliver their message.&nbsp; So away
+they went to the prison, with a multitude at their heels.&nbsp; Now,
+when they were come to the gates of the prison, they told the first
+part of Emmanuel&rsquo;s speech to the prisoners, to wit, how he reflected
+upon their disloyalty to his Father and himself, and how they had chosen
+and closed with Diabolus, had fought for him, hearkened to him, and
+been ruled by him; but had despised him and his men.&nbsp; This made
+the prisoners look pale; but the messengers proceeded and said, &lsquo;He,
+the Prince, said, moreover, that yet he would consider your petition,
+and give such answer thereto as would stand with his glory.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+And as these words were spoken, Mr. Wet-Eyes gave a great sigh.&nbsp;
+At this they were all of them struck into their dumps, and could not
+tell what to say: fear also possessed them in a marvellous manner, and
+death seemed to sit upon some of their eyebrows.&nbsp; Now, there was
+in the company a notable, sharp-witted fellow, a mean man of estate,
+and his name was old Inquisitive.&nbsp; This man asked the petitioners
+if they had told out every whit of what Emmanuel said, and they answered,
+&lsquo;Verily, no.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then said Inquisitive, &lsquo;I thought
+so, indeed.&nbsp; Pray, what was it more that he said unto you?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Then they paused awhile; but at last they brought out all, saying, &lsquo;The
+Prince bade us bid Captain Boanerges and Captain Conviction bring the
+prisoners down to him to-morrow; and that Captain Judgment and Captain
+Execution should take charge of the castle and town till they should
+hear further from him.&nbsp; They said also that when the Prince had
+commanded them thus to do, he immediately turned his back upon them,
+and went into his royal pavilion.<br>
+<br>
+But, oh! how this return, and specially this last clause of it, that
+the prisoners must go out to the Prince into the camp, brake all their
+loins in pieces!&nbsp; Wherefore, with one voice they set up a cry that
+reached up to the heavens.&nbsp; This done, each of the three prepared
+himself to die; (and the Recorder said unto them, &lsquo;This was the
+thing that I feared;&rsquo;) for they concluded that to-morrow, by that
+the sun went down, they should be tumbled out of the world.&nbsp; The
+whole town also counted of no other, but that, in their time and order,
+they must all drink of the same cup.&nbsp; Wherefore the town of Mansoul
+spent that night in mourning, and sackcloth and ashes.&nbsp; The prisoners
+also, when the time was come for them to go down before the Prince,
+dressed themselves in mourning attire, with ropes upon their heads.&nbsp;
+The whole town of Mansoul also showed themselves upon the wall, all
+clad in mourning weeds, if, perhaps, the Prince with the sight thereof
+might be moved with compassion.&nbsp; But, oh! how the busy-bodies that
+were in the town of Mansoul did now concern themselves!&nbsp; They did
+run here and there through the streets of the town by companies, crying
+out as they ran in tumultuous wise, one after one manner, and another
+the quite contrary, to the almost utter distraction of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+Well, the time is come that the prisoners must go down to the camp,
+and appear before the Prince.&nbsp; And thus was the manner of their
+going down: Captain Boanerges went with a guard before them, and Captain
+Conviction came behind, and the prisoners went down, bound in chains,
+in the midst.&nbsp; So I say, the prisoners went in the midst, and the
+guard went with flying colours behind and before, but the prisoners
+went with drooping spirits.<br>
+<br>
+Or, more particularly, thus: The prisoners went down all in mourning:
+they put ropes upon themselves; they went on, smiting themselves on
+the breasts, but durst not lift up their eyes to heaven.&nbsp; Thus
+they went out at the gate of Mansoul, till they came into the midst
+of the Prince&rsquo;s army, the sight and glory of which did greatly
+heighten their affliction.&nbsp; Nor could they now longer forbear,
+but cry out aloud, &lsquo;O unhappy men!&nbsp; O wretched men of Mansoul!&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Their chains, still mixing their dolorous notes with the cries of the
+prisoners, made the noise more lamentable.<br>
+<br>
+So, when they were come to the door of the Prince&rsquo;s pavilion,
+they cast themselves prostrate upon the place; then one went in and
+told his Lord that the prisoners were come down.&nbsp; The Prince then
+ascended a throne of state, and sent for the prisoners in; who, when
+they came, did tremble before him, also they covered their faces with
+shame.&nbsp; Now, as they drew near to the place where he sat, they
+threw themselves down before him.&nbsp; Then said the Prince to the
+Captain Boanerges, &lsquo;Bid the prisoners stand upon their feet.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Then they stood trembling before him, and he said, &lsquo;Are you the
+men that heretofore were the servants of Shaddai?&rsquo;&nbsp; And they
+said, &lsquo;Yes, Lord, yes.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then said the Prince again,
+&lsquo;Are you the men that did suffer yourselves to be corrupted and
+defiled by that abominable one, Diabolus?&rsquo;&nbsp; And they said,
+&lsquo;We did more than suffer it, Lord; for we chose it of our own
+mind.&rsquo;&nbsp; The Prince asked further, saying, &lsquo;Could you
+have been content that your slavery should have continued under his
+tyranny as long as you had lived?&rsquo;&nbsp; Then said the prisoners,
+&lsquo;Yes, Lord, yes; for his ways were pleasing to our flesh, and
+we were grown aliens to a better state.&rsquo; - &lsquo;And did you,&rsquo;
+said he, &lsquo;when I came up against this town of Mansoul, heartily
+wish that I might not have the victory over you?&rsquo; - &lsquo;Yes,
+Lord, yes,&rsquo; said they.&nbsp; Then said the Prince, &lsquo;And
+what punishment is it, think you, that you deserve at my hand, for these
+and other your high and mighty sins?&rsquo; - And they said, &lsquo;Both
+death and the deep, Lord; for we have deserved no less.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+He asked again if they had aught to say for themselves why the sentence,
+that they confessed that they had deserved, should not be passed upon
+them?&nbsp; And they said, &lsquo;We can say nothing, Lord: thou art
+just, for we have sinned.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then said the Prince, &lsquo;And
+for what are those ropes on your heads?&rsquo;&nbsp; The prisoners answered,
+&lsquo;These ropes are to bind us withal to the place of execution,
+if mercy be not pleasing in thy sight.&rsquo;&nbsp; So he further asked
+if all the men in the town of Mansoul were in this confession, as they?&nbsp;
+And they answered, &lsquo;All the natives, Lord; but for the Diabolonians
+that came into our town when the tyrant got possession of us, we can
+say nothing for them.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then the Prince commanded that a herald should be called, and that he
+should, in the midst and throughout the camp of Emmanuel, proclaim,
+and that with sound of trumpet, that the Prince, the Son of Shaddai,
+had, in his Father&rsquo;s name, and for his Father&rsquo;s glory, gotten
+a perfect conquest and victory over Mansoul; and that the prisoners
+should follow him, and say Amen.&nbsp; So, this was done as he had commanded.&nbsp;
+And presently the music that was in the upper region sounded melodiously,
+the captains that were in the camp shouted, and the soldiers did sing
+songs of triumph to the Prince; the colours waved in the wind, and great
+joy was everywhere, only it was wanting as yet in the hearts of the
+men of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+Then the Prince called for the prisoners to come and to stand again
+before him, and they came and stood trembling.&nbsp; And he said unto
+them, &lsquo;The sins, trespasses, iniquities, that you, with the whole
+town of Mansoul, have from time to time committed against my Father
+and me, I have power and commandment from my Father to forgive to the
+town of Mansoul, and do forgive you accordingly.&rsquo;&nbsp; And having
+so said, he gave them, written in parchment, and sealed with seven seals,
+a large and general pardon, commanding my Lord Mayor, my Lord Willbewill,
+and Mr. Recorder, to proclaim and cause it to be proclaimed to-morrow,
+by that the sun is up, throughout the whole town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+Moreover, the Prince stripped the prisoners of their mourning weeds,
+and gave them beauty for ashes, the oil of joy for mourning, and the
+garment of praise for the spirit of heaviness.<br>
+<br>
+Then he gave to each of the three jewels of gold and precious stones,
+and took away their ropes, and put chains of gold about their necks,
+and ear-rings in their ears.&nbsp; Now, the prisoners, when they did
+hear the gracious words of Prince Emmanuel, and had beheld all that
+was done unto them, fainted almost quite away; for the grace, the benefit,
+the pardon, was sudden, glorious, and so big, that they were not able,
+without staggering, to stand up under it.&nbsp; Yea, my Lord Willbewill
+swooned outright; but the Prince stepped to him, put his everlasting
+arms under him, embraced him, kissed him, and bid him be of good cheer,
+for all should be performed according to his word.&nbsp; He also did
+kiss, and embrace, and smile upon the other two that were Willbewill&rsquo;s
+companions, saying, &lsquo;Take these as further tokens of my love,
+favour, and compassions to you; and I charge you that you, Mr. Recorder,
+tell in the town of Mansoul what you have heard and seen.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then were their fetters broken to pieces before their faces, and cast
+into the air, and their steps were enlarged under them.&nbsp; Then they
+fell down at the feet of the Prince, and kissed his feet, and wetted
+them with tears: also they cried out with a mighty strong voice, saying,
+&lsquo;Blessed be the glory of the Lord from this place.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+So they were bid rise up, and go to the town, and tell to Mansoul what
+the Prince had done.&nbsp; He commanded also that one with a pipe and
+tabor should go and play before them all the way into the town of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+Then was fulfilled what they never looked for, and they were made to
+possess that which they never dreamed of.<br>
+<br>
+The Prince also called for the noble Captain Credence, and commanded
+that he and some of his officers should march before the noble men of
+Mansoul with flying colours into the town.&nbsp; He gave also unto Captain
+Credence a charge, that about that time that the Recorder did read the
+general pardon in the town of Mansoul, that at that very time he should
+with flying colours march in at Eye-gate with his ten thousands at his
+feet and that he should so go until he came by the high street of the
+town, up to the castle gates, and that himself should take possession
+thereof against his Lord came thither.&nbsp; He commanded, moreover,
+that he should bid Captain Judgment and Captain Execution to leave the
+stronghold to him, and to withdraw from Mansoul, and to return into
+the camp with speed unto the Prince.<br>
+<br>
+And now was the town of Mansoul also delivered from the terror of the
+first four captains and their men.<br>
+<br>
+Well, I told you before how the prisoners were entertained by the noble
+Prince Emmanuel, and how they behaved themselves before him, and how
+he sent them away to their home with pipe and tabor going before them.&nbsp;
+And now you must think that those of the town that had all this while
+waited to hear of their death, could not but be exercised with sadness
+of mind, and with thoughts that pricked like thorns.&nbsp; Nor could
+their thoughts be kept to any one point; the wind blew with them all
+this while at great uncertainties; yea, their hearts were like a balance
+that had been disquieted with a shaking hand.&nbsp; But at last, as
+they with many a long look looked over the wall of Mansoul, they thought
+that they saw some returning to the town; and thought again, Who should
+they be, too?&nbsp; Who should they be?&nbsp; At last they discerned
+that they were the prisoners: but can you imagine how their hearts were
+surprised with wonder, specially when they perceived also in what equipage
+and with what honour they were sent home.&nbsp; They went down to the
+camp in black, but they came back to the town in white; they went down
+to the camp in ropes, they came back in chains of gold; they went down
+to the camp with their feet in fetters, but came back with their steps
+enlarged under them; they went also to the camp looking for death, but
+they came back from thence with assurance of life; they went down to
+the camp with heavy hearts, but came back again with pipe and tabor
+playing before them.&nbsp; So as soon as they were come to Eye-gate,
+the poor and tottering town of Mansoul adventured to give a shout; and
+they gave such a shout as made the captains in the Prince&rsquo;s army
+leap at the sound thereof.&nbsp; Alas! for them, poor hearts! who could
+blame them? since their dead friends were come to life again; for it
+was to them as life from the dead to see the ancients of the town of
+Mansoul shine in such splendour.&nbsp; They looked for nothing but the
+axe and the block; but, behold, joy and gladness, comfort and consolation,
+and such melodious notes attending them that was sufficient to make
+a sick man well.<br>
+<br>
+So, when they came up, they saluted each other with, &lsquo;Welcome,
+welcome! and blessed be he that has spared you!&rsquo;&nbsp; They added
+also, &lsquo;We see it is well with you; but how must it go with the
+town of Mansoul?&nbsp; And will it go well with the town of Mansoul?&rsquo;
+said they.&nbsp; Then answered them the Recorder and my Lord Mayor,
+&lsquo;Oh! tidings! glad tidings! good tidings of good, and of great
+joy to poor Mansoul!&rsquo;&nbsp; Then they gave another shout, that
+made the earth to ring again.&nbsp; After this, they inquired yet more
+particularly how things went in the camp, and what message they had
+from Emmanuel to the town.&nbsp; So they told them all passages that
+had happened to them at the camp, and everything that the Prince did
+to them.&nbsp; This made Mansoul wonder at the wisdom and grace of the
+Prince Emmanuel.&nbsp; Then they told them what they had received at
+his hands for the whole town of Mansoul, and the Recorder delivered
+it in these words: &lsquo; PARDON, PARDON, PARDON for Mansoul! and this
+shall Mansoul know to-morrow!&rsquo;&nbsp; Then he commanded, and they
+went and summoned Mansoul to meet together in the market-place to-morrow,
+then to hear their general pardon read.<br>
+<br>
+But who can think what a turn, what a change, what an alteration this
+hint of things did make in the countenance of the town of Mansoul!&nbsp;
+No man of Mansoul could sleep that night for joy; in every house there
+was joy and music, singing and making merry: telling and hearing of
+Mansoul&rsquo;s happiness was then all that Mansoul had to do; and this
+was the burden of all their song: &lsquo;Oh! more of this at the rising
+of the sun! more of this to-morrow!&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Who thought
+yesterday,&rsquo; would one say, &lsquo;that this day would have been
+such a day to us?&nbsp; And who thought, that saw our prisoners go down
+in irons, that they would have returned in chains of gold?&nbsp; Yea,
+they that judged themselves as they went to be judged of their judge,
+were by his mouth acquitted, not for that they were innocent, but of
+the Prince&rsquo;s mercy, and sent home with pipe and tabor.&nbsp; But
+is this the common custom of princes? Do they use to show such kind
+of favours to traitors?&nbsp; No; this is only peculiar to Shaddai,
+and unto Emmanuel, his Son!&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Now morning drew on apace; wherefore the Lord Mayor, the Lord Willbewill,
+and Mr. Recorder came down to the market-place at the time that the
+Prince had appointed, where the townsfolk were waiting for them: and
+when they came, they came in that attire, and in that glory that the
+Prince had put them into the day before, and the street was lightened
+with their glory.&nbsp; So the Mayor, Recorder, and my Lord Willbewill
+drew down to Mouth-gate, which was at the lower end of the market-place,
+because that of old time was the place where they used to read public
+matters.&nbsp; Thither, therefore, they came in their robes, and their
+tabrets went before them.&nbsp; Now, the eagerness of the people to
+know the full of the matter was great.<br>
+<br>
+Then the Recorder stood up upon his feet, and, first beckoning with
+his hand for silence, he read out with a loud voice the pardon.&nbsp;
+But when he came to these words: &lsquo;The Lord, the Lord God, merciful
+and gracious, pardoning iniquity, transgressions, and sins, and to them
+all manner of sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven,&rsquo; etc., they
+could not forbear leaping for joy.&nbsp; For this you must know, that
+there was conjoined herewith every man&rsquo;s name in Mansoul; also
+the seals of the pardon made a brave show.<br>
+<br>
+When the Recorder had made an end of reading the pardon, the townsmen
+ran up upon the walls of the town, and leaped and skipped thereon for
+joy, and bowed themselves seven times with their faces toward Emmanuel&rsquo;s
+pavilion, and shouted out aloud for joy, and said, &lsquo;Let Emmanuel
+live for ever!&rsquo;&nbsp; Then order was given to the young men in
+Mansoul that they should ring the bells for joy.&nbsp; So the bells
+did ring, and the people sing, and the music go in every house in Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+When the Prince had sent home the three prisoners of Mansoul with joy,
+and pipe and tabor, he commanded his captains, with all the field officers
+and soldiers throughout his army, to be ready in that morning, that
+the Recorder should read the pardon in Mansoul, to do his further pleasure.&nbsp;
+So the morning, as I have showed, being come, just as the Recorder had
+made an end of reading the pardon, Emmanuel commanded that all the trumpets
+in the camp should sound, that the colours should be displayed, half
+of them upon Mount Gracious, and half of them upon Mount Justice.&nbsp;
+He commanded also that all the captains should show themselves in all
+their harness, and that the soldiers should shout for joy.&nbsp; Nor
+was Captain Credence, though in the castle, silent in such a day; but
+he, from the top of the hold, showed himself with sound of trumpet to
+Mansoul and to the Prince&rsquo;s camp.<br>
+<br>
+Thus have I showed you the manner and way that Emmanuel took to recover
+the town of Mansoul from under the hand and power of the tyrant Diabolus.<br>
+<br>
+Now, when the Prince had completed these, the outward ceremonies of
+his joy, he again commanded that his captains and soldiers should show
+unto Mansoul some feats of war: so they presently addressed themselves
+to this work.&nbsp; But oh! with what agility, nimbleness, dexterity,
+and bravery did these military men discover their skill in feats of
+war to the now gazing town of Mansoul!<br>
+<br>
+They marched, they counter-marched; they opened to the right and left;
+they divided and subdivided; they closed, they wheeled, made good their
+front and rear with their right and left wings, and twenty things more,
+with that aptness, and then were all as the were again, that they took
+- yea, ravished, the hearts that were in Mansoul to behold it.&nbsp;
+But add to this, the handling of their arms, the managing of their weapons
+of war, were marvellously taking to Mansoul and me.<br>
+<br>
+When this action was over, the whole town of Mansoul came out as one
+man to the Prince in the camp to thank him, and praise him for his abundant
+favour, and to beg that it would please his grace to come unto Mansoul
+with his men, and there to take up their quarters for ever: and this
+they did in most humble manner, bowing themselves seven times to the
+ground before him.&nbsp; Then said he, &lsquo;All peace be to you.&rsquo;
+So the town came nigh, and touched with the hand the top of his golden
+sceptre; and they said, &lsquo;Oh! that the Prince Emmanuel, with his
+captains and men of war, would dwell in Mansoul for ever; and that his
+battering-rams and slings might be lodged in her for the use and service
+of the Prince, and for the help and strength of Mansoul.&nbsp; For,&rsquo;
+said they, &lsquo;we have room for thee, we have room for thy men, we
+have also room for thy weapons of war, and a place to make a magazine
+for thy carriages.&nbsp; Do it, Emmanuel, and thou shalt be King and
+Captain in Mansoul for ever.&nbsp; Yea, govern thou also according to
+all the desire of thy soul, and make thou governors and princes under
+thee of thy captains and men of war, and we will become thy servants,
+and thy laws shall be our direction.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+They added, moreover, and prayed his Majesty to consider thereof; &lsquo;for,&rsquo;
+said they, &lsquo;if now, after all this grace bestowed upon us, thy
+miserable town of Mansoul, thou shouldest withdraw, thou and thy captains,
+from us, the town of Mansoul will die.&nbsp; Yea,&rsquo; said they,
+&lsquo;our blessed Emmanuel, if thou shouldest depart from us now, now
+thou hast done so much good for us, and showed so much mercy unto us,
+what will follow but that our joy will be as if it had not been, and
+our enemies will a second time come upon us with more rage than at the
+first?&nbsp; Wherefore, we beseech thee, O thou, the desire of our eyes,
+and the strength and life of our poor town, accept of this motion that
+now we have made unto our Lord, and come and dwell in the midst of us,
+and let us be thy people.&nbsp; Besides, Lord, we do not know but that
+to this day many Diabolonians may be yet lurking in the town of Mansoul,
+and they will betray us, when thou shalt leave us, into the hand of
+Diabolus again; and who knows what designs, plots, or contrivances have
+passed betwixt them about these things already?&nbsp; Loath we are to
+fall again into his horrible hands.&nbsp; Wherefore, let it please thee
+to accept of our palace for thy place of residence, and of the houses
+of the best men in our town for the reception of thy soldiers and their
+furniture.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said the Prince, &lsquo;If I come to your town, will you suffer
+me further to prosecute that which is in mine heart against mine enemies
+and yours? - yea, will you help me in such undertakings?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+They answered, &lsquo;We know not what we shall do; we did not think
+once that we should have been such traitors to Shaddai as we have proved
+to be.&nbsp; What, then, shall we say to our Lord?&nbsp; Let him put
+no trust in his saints; let the Prince dwell in our castle, and make
+of our town a garrison; let him set his noble captains and his warlike
+soldiers over us; yea, let him conquer us with his love, and overcome
+us with his grace, and then surely shall he be but with us, and help
+us, as he was and did that morning that our pardon was read unto us.&nbsp;
+We shall comply with this our Lord, and with his ways, and fall in with
+his word against the mighty.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;One word more, and thy servants have done, and in this will trouble
+our Lord no more.&nbsp; We know not the depth of the wisdom of thee,
+our Prince.&nbsp; Who could have thought, that had been ruled by his
+reason, that so much sweet as we do now enjoy should have come out of
+those bitter trials wherewith we were tried at the first!&nbsp; But,
+Lord, let light go before, and let love come after: yea, take us by
+the hand, and lead us by thy counsels, and let this always abide upon
+us, that all things shall be the best for thy servants, and come to
+our Mansoul, and do as it pleaseth thee.&nbsp; Or, Lord, come to our
+Mansoul, do what thou wilt, so thou keepest us from sinning, and makest
+us serviceable to thy Majesty.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said the Prince to the town of Mansoul again, &lsquo;Go, return
+to your houses in peace.&nbsp; I will willingly in this comply with
+your desires; I will remove my royal pavilion, I will draw up my forces
+before Eye-gate to-morrow, and so will march forwards into the town
+of Mansoul.&nbsp; I will possess myself of your castle of Mansoul, and
+will set my soldiers over you: yea, I will yet do things in Mansoul
+that cannot be paralleled in any nation, country, or kingdom under heaven.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Then did the men of Mansoul give a shout, and returned unto their houses
+in peace; they also told to their kindred and friends the good that
+Emmanuel had promised to Mansoul.&nbsp; &lsquo;And to-morrow,&rsquo;
+said they, &lsquo;he will march into our town, and take up his dwelling,
+he and his men, in Mansoul.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then went out the inhabitants of the town of Mansoul with haste to the
+green trees and to the meadows, to gather boughs and flowers, therewith
+to strew the streets against their Prince, the Son of Shaddai, should
+come; they also made garlands and other fine works to betoken how joyful
+they were, and should be to receive their Emmanuel into Mansoul; yea,
+they strewed the street quite from Eye-gate to the castle-gate, the
+place where the Prince should be.&nbsp; They also prepared for his coming
+what music the town of Mansoul would afford, that they might play before
+him to the palace, his habitation.<br>
+<br>
+So, at the time appointed he makes his approach to Mansoul, and the
+gates were set open for him; there also the ancients and elders of Mansoul
+met him to salute him with a thousand welcomes.&nbsp; Then he arose
+and entered Mansoul, he and all his servants.&nbsp; The elders of Mansoul
+did also go dancing before him till he came to the castle gates.&nbsp;
+And this was the manner of his going up thither:- He was clad in his
+golden armour, he rode in his royal chariot, the trumpets sounded about
+him, the colours were displayed, his ten thousands went up at his feet,
+and the elders of Mansoul danced before him.&nbsp; And now were the
+walls of the famous town of Mansoul filled with the tramplings of the
+inhabitants thereof, who went up thither to view the approach of the
+blessed Prince and his royal army.&nbsp; Also the casements, windows,
+balconies, and tops of the houses, were all now filled with persons
+of all sorts, to behold how their town was to be filled with good.<br>
+<br>
+Now, when he was come so far into the town as to the Recorder&rsquo;s
+house, he commanded that one should go to Captain Credence, to know
+whether the castle of Mansoul was prepared to entertain his royal presence
+(for the preparation of that was left to that captain), and word was
+brought that it was.&nbsp; Then was Captain Credence commanded also
+to come forth with his power to meet the Prince, the which was, as he
+had commanded, done; and he conducted him into the castle.&nbsp; This
+done, the Prince that night did lodge in the castle with his mighty
+captains and men of war, to the joy of the town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+Now, the next care of the townsfolk was, how the captains and soldiers
+of the Prince&rsquo;s army should be quartered among them; and the care
+was not how they should shut their hands of them, but how they should
+fill their houses with them; for every man in Mansoul now had that esteem
+of Emmanuel and his men that nothing grieved them more than because
+they were not enlarged enough, every one of them to receive the whole
+army of the Prince; yea, they counted it their glory to be waiting upon
+them, and would, in those days, run at their bidding like lackeys.<br>
+<br>
+At last they came to this result:-<br>
+<br>
+1. That Captain Innocency should quarter at Mr. Reason&rsquo;s.<br>
+<br>
+2. That Captain Patience should quarter at Mr. Mind&rsquo;s.&nbsp; This
+Mr. Mind was formerly the Lord Willbewill&rsquo;s clerk in time of the
+late rebellion.<br>
+<br>
+3. It was ordered that Captain Charity should quarter at Mr. Affection&rsquo;s
+house.<br>
+<br>
+4. That Captain Good-Hope should quarter at my Lord Mayor&rsquo;s.&nbsp;
+Now, for the house of the Recorder, himself desired, because his house
+was next to the castle, and because from him it was ordered by the Prince
+that, if need be, the alarm should be given to Mansoul, - it was, I
+say, desired by him that Captain Boanerges and Captain Conviction should
+take up their quarters with him, even they and all their men.<br>
+<br>
+5. As for Captain Judgment and Captain Execution, my Lord Willbewill
+took them and their men to him, because he was to rule under the Prince
+for the good of the town of Mansoul now, as he had before under the
+tyrant Diabolus for the hurt and damage thereof.<br>
+<br>
+6. And throughout the rest of the town were quartered Emmanuel&rsquo;s
+forces; but Captain Credence, with his men, abode still in the castle.&nbsp;
+So the Prince, his captains, and his soldiers, were lodged in the town
+of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+Now, the ancients and elders of the town of Mansoul thought that they
+never should have enough of the Prince Emmanuel; his person, his actions,
+his words, and behaviour, were so pleasing, so taking, so desirable
+to them.&nbsp; Wherefore they prayed him, that though the castle of
+Mansoul was his place of residence, (and they desired that he might
+dwell there for ever,) yet that he would often visit the streets, houses,
+and people of Mansoul.&nbsp; &lsquo;For,&rsquo; said they, &lsquo;dread
+Sovereign, thy presence, thy looks, thy smiles, thy words, are the life,
+and strength, and sinews of the town of Mansoul.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Besides this, they craved that they might have, without difficulty or
+interruption, continual access unto him, (so for that very purpose he
+commanded that the gates should stand open,) that they might there see
+the manner of his doings, the fortifications of the place, and the royal
+mansion-house of the Prince.<br>
+<br>
+When he spake, they all stopped their mouths and gave audience; and
+when he walked, it was their delight to imitate him in his goings.<br>
+<br>
+Now, upon a time, Emmanuel made a feast for the town of Mansoul; and
+upon the feasting-day the townsfolk were come to the castle to partake
+of his banquet; and he feasted them with all manner of outlandish food;
+- food that grew not in the fields of Mansoul; nor in all the whole
+Kingdom of Universe; it was food that came from his Father&rsquo;s court.&nbsp;
+And so there was dish after dish set before them, and they were commanded
+freely to eat.&nbsp; But still, when a fresh dish was set before them,
+they would whisperingly say to each other, &lsquo;What is it?&rsquo;
+for they wist not what to call it.&nbsp; They drank also of the water
+that was made wine, and were very merry with him.&nbsp; There was music
+also all the while at the table; and man did eat angels&rsquo; food,
+and had honey given him out of the rock.&nbsp; So Mansoul did eat the
+food that was peculiar to the court; yea, they had now thereof to the
+full.<br>
+<br>
+I must not forget to tell you, that as at this table there were musicians,
+so they were not those of the country, nor yet of the town of Mansoul;
+but they were the masters of the songs that were sung at the court of
+Shaddai.<br>
+<br>
+Now, after the feast was over, Emmanuel was for entertaining the town
+of Mansoul with some curious riddles of secrets drawn up by his Father&rsquo;s
+secretary, by the skill and wisdom of Shaddai; the like to these there
+is not in any kingdom.&nbsp; These riddles were made upon the King Shaddai
+himself, and upon Emmanuel his Son, and upon his wars and doings with
+Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+Emmanuel also expounded unto them some of those riddles himself; but,
+oh! how they were lightened!&nbsp; They saw what they never saw; they
+could not have thought that such rarities could have been couched in
+so few and such ordinary words.&nbsp; I told you before, whom these
+riddles did concern; and as they were opened, the people did evidently
+see it was so.&nbsp; Yea, they did gather that the things themselves
+were a kind of a portraiture, and that of Emmanuel himself; for when
+they read in the scheme where the riddles were writ, and looked in the
+face of the Prince, things looked so like the one to the other, that
+Mansoul could not forbear but say, &lsquo;This is the lamb! this is
+the sacrifice! this is the rock! this is the red cow! this is the door!
+and this is the way!&rsquo; with a great many other things more.<br>
+<br>
+And thus he dismissed the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; But can you imagine
+how the people of the corporation were taken with this entertainment!&nbsp;
+Oh! they were transported with joy, they were drowned with wonderment,
+while they saw and understood, and considered what their Emmanuel entertained
+them withal, and what mysteries he opened to them.&nbsp; And when they
+were at home in their houses, and in their most retired places, they
+could not but sing of him and of his actions.&nbsp; Yea, so taken were
+the townsmen now with their Prince, that they would sing of him in their
+sleep.<br>
+<br>
+Now, it was in the heart of the Prince Emmanuel to new-model the town
+of Mansoul, and to put it into such a condition as might be most pleasing
+to him, and that might best stand with the profit and security of the
+now flourishing town of Mansoul.&nbsp; He provided also against insurrections
+at home, and invasions from abroad, such love had he for the famous
+town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+Wherefore he first of all commanded that the great slings that were
+brought from his Father&rsquo;s court, when he came to the war of Mansoul,
+should be mounted, some upon the battlements of the castle, some upon
+the towers; for there were towers in the town of Mansoul, towers, new-built
+by Emmanuel since he came hither.&nbsp; There was also an instrument,
+invented by Emmanuel, that was to throw stones from the castle of Mansoul,
+out at Mouth-gate; an instrument that could not be resisted, nor that
+would miss of execution.&nbsp; Wherefore, for the wonderful exploits
+that it did when used, it went without a name; and it was committed
+to the care of, and to be managed by the brave captain, the Captain
+Credence, in case of war.<br>
+<br>
+This done, Emmanuel called the Lord Willbewill to him, and gave him
+in commandment to take care of the gates, the wall, and towers in Mansoul;
+also the Prince gave him the militia into his hand, and a special charge
+to withstand all insurrections and tumults that might be made in Mansoul
+against the peace of our Lord the King, and the peace and tranquillity
+of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; He also gave him in commission, that if
+he found any of the Diabolonians lurking in any corner of the famous
+town of Mansoul, he should forthwith apprehend them, and stay them,
+or commit them to safe custody, that they may be proceeded against according
+to law.<br>
+<br>
+Then he called unto him the Lord Understanding, who was the old Lord
+Mayor, he that was put out of place when Diabolus took the town, and
+put him into his former office again, and it became his place for his
+lifetime.&nbsp; He bid him also that he should build him a palace near
+Eye-gate; and that he should build it in fashion like a tower for defence.&nbsp;
+He bid him also that he should read in the Revelation of Mysteries all
+the days of his life, that he might know how to perform his office aright.<br>
+<br>
+He also made Mr. Knowledge the Recorder, not of contempt to old Mr.
+Conscience, who had been Recorder before, but for that it was in his
+princely mind to confer upon Mr. Conscience another employ, of which
+he told the old gentleman he should know more hereafter.<br>
+<br>
+Then he commanded that the image of Diabolus should be taken down from
+the place where it was set up, and that they should destroy it utterly,
+beating it into powder, and casting it into the wind without the town
+wall; and that the image of Shaddai, his Father, should be set up again,
+with his own, upon the castle gates; and that it should be more fairly
+drawn than ever, forasmuch as both his Father and himself were come
+to Mansoul in more grace and mercy than heretofore.&nbsp; He would also
+that his name should be fairly engraven upon the front of the town,
+and that it should be done in the best of gold, for the honour of the
+town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+After this was done, Emmanuel gave out a commandment that those three
+great Diabolonians should be apprehended, namely, the two late Lord
+Mayors, to wit, Mr. Incredulity, Mr. Lustings, and Mr. Forget-Good,
+the Recorder.&nbsp; Besides these, there were some of them that Diabolus
+made burgesses and aldermen in Mansoul, that were committed to ward
+by the hand of the now valiant and now right noble, the brave Lord Willbewill.<br>
+<br>
+And these were their names: Alderman Atheism, Alderman Hard-Heart, and
+Alderman False-Peace.&nbsp; The burgesses were, Mr. No-Truth, Mr. Pitiless,
+Mr. Haughty, with the like.&nbsp; These were committed to close custody,
+and the gaoler&rsquo;s name was Mr. True-Man.&nbsp; This True-Man was
+one of those that Emmanuel brought with him from his Father&rsquo;s
+court when at the first he made a war upon Diabolus in the town or Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+After this, the Prince gave a charge that the three strongholds that,
+at the command of Diabolus, the Diabolonians built in Mansoul, should
+be demolished and utterly pulled down; of which holds and their names,
+with their captains and governors, you read a little before.&nbsp; But
+this was long in doing, because of the largeness of the places, and
+because the stones, the timber, the iron, and all rubbish, was to be
+carried without the town.<br>
+<br>
+When this was done, the Prince gave order that the Lord Mayor and aldermen
+of Mansoul should call a court of judicature for the trial and execution
+of the Diabolonians in the corporation now under the charge of Mr. True-Man,
+the gaoler.<br>
+<br>
+Now, when the time was come, and the court set, commandment was sent
+to Mr. True-Man, the gaoler, to bring the prisoners down to the bar.&nbsp;
+Then were the prisoners brought down, pinioned and chained together,
+as the custom of the town of Mansoul was.&nbsp; So, when they were presented
+before the Lord Mayor, the Recorder, and the rest of the honourable
+bench, first, the jury was empannelled, and then the witnesses sworn.&nbsp;
+The names of the jury were these: Mr. Belief, Mr. True-Heart, Mr. Upright,
+Mr. Hate-Bad, Mr. Love-God, Mr. See-Truth, Mr. Heavenly-Mind, Mr. Moderate,
+Mr. Thankful, Mr. Good-Work, Mr. Zeal-for-God, and Mr. Humble.<br>
+<br>
+The names of the witnesses were - Mr. Know-All, Mr. Tell-True, Mr. Hate-Lies,
+with my Lord Willbewill and his man, if need were.<br>
+<br>
+So the prisoners were set to the bar.&nbsp; Then said Mr. Do-Right,
+(for he was the Town-Clerk,) &lsquo;Set Atheism to the bar, gaoler.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+So he was set to the bar.&nbsp; Then said the Clerk, &lsquo;Atheism,
+hold up thy hand.&nbsp; Thou art here indicted by the name of Atheism,
+(an intruder upon the town of Mansoul,) for that thou hast perniciously
+and doltishly taught and maintained that there is no God, and so no
+heed to be taken to religion.&nbsp; This thou hast done against the
+being, honour, and glory of the King, and against the peace and safety
+of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; What sayest thou?&nbsp; Art thou guilty
+of this indictment, or not?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Atheism</i>.&nbsp; Not guilty.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Crier</i>.&nbsp; Call Mr. Know-All, Mr. Tell-True, and Mr. Hate-Lies
+into the court.<br>
+<br>
+So they were called, and they appeared.<br>
+<br>
+Then said the Clerk, &lsquo;You, the witnesses for the King, look upon
+the prisoner at the bar; do you know him?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said Mr. Know-All, &lsquo;Yes, my lord, we know him; his name is
+Atheism; he has been a very pestilent fellow for many years in the miserable
+town of Mansoul.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; You are sure you know him?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Know</i>.&nbsp; Know him!&nbsp; Yes my lord; I have heretofore too
+often been in his company to be at this time ignorant of him.&nbsp;
+He is a Diabolonian, the son of a Diabolonian: I knew his grandfather
+and his father.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Well said.&nbsp; He standeth here indicted by the
+name of Atheism, etc., and is charged that he hath maintained and taught
+that there is no God, and so no heed need be taken to any religion.&nbsp;
+What say you, the King&rsquo;s witnesses, to this?&nbsp; Is he guilty
+or not?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Know</i>.&nbsp; My lord, I and he were once in Villain&rsquo;s Lane
+together, and he at that time did briskly talk of divers opinions; and
+then and there I heard him say, that, for his part, he did believe that
+there was no God.&nbsp; &lsquo;But,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;I can profess
+one, and be as religious too, if the company I am in, and the circumstances
+of other things,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;shall put me upon it.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; You are sure you heard him say thus?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Know</i>.&nbsp; Upon mine oath, I heard him say thus.<br>
+<br>
+Then said the Clerk, &lsquo;Mr. Tell-True, what say you to the King&rsquo;s
+judges touching the prisoner at the bar?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+<i>Tell</i>.&nbsp; My lord, I formerly was a great companion of his,
+for the which I now repent me, and I have often heard him say, and that
+with very great stomachfulness, that he believed there was neither God,
+angel, nor spirit.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Where did you hear him say so?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Tell</i>.&nbsp; In Blackmouth Lane and in Blasphemer&rsquo;s Row,
+and in many other places besides.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Have you much knowledge of him?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Tell</i>.&nbsp; I know him to be a Diabolonian, the son of a Diabolonian,
+and a horrible man to deny a Deity.&nbsp; His father&rsquo;s name was
+Never-be-good, and he had more children than this Atheism.&nbsp; I have
+no more to say,<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Mr. Hate-Lies, look upon the prisoner at the bar;
+do you know him?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Hate</i>.&nbsp; My lord, this Atheism is one of the vilest wretches
+that ever I came near, or had to do with in my life.&nbsp; I have heard
+him say that there is no God; I have heard him say that there is no
+world to come, no sin, nor punishment hereafter, and, moreover, I have
+heard him say that it was as good to go to a whore-house as to go to
+hear a sermon.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Where did you hear him say these things?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Hate</i>.&nbsp; In Drunkard&rsquo;s Row, just at Rascal-Lane&rsquo;s
+End, at a house in which Mr. Impiety lived.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Set him by, gaoler, and set Mr. Lustings to the
+bar.&nbsp; Mr. Lustings, thou art here indicted by the name of Lustings,
+(an intruder upon the town of Mansoul,) for that thou hast devilishly
+and traitorously taught, by practice and filthy words, that it is lawful
+and profitable to man to give way to his carnal desires; and that thou,
+for thy part, hast not, nor never wilt, deny thyself of any sinful delight
+as long as thy name is Lustings.&nbsp; How sayest thou?&nbsp; Art thou
+guilty of this indictment, or not?<br>
+<br>
+Then said Mr. Lustings, &lsquo;My lord, I am a man of high birth, and
+have been used to pleasures and pastimes of greatness.&nbsp; I have
+not been wont to be snubbed for my doings, but have been left to follow
+my will as if it were law.&nbsp; And it seems strange to me that I should
+this day be called into question for that, that not only I, but almost
+all men, do either secretly or openly countenance, love, and approve
+of.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Sir, we concern not ourselves with your greatness;
+(though the higher, the better you should have been;) but we are concerned,
+and so are you now, about an indictment preferred against you.&nbsp;
+How say you?&nbsp; Are you guilty of it, or not?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Lust</i>.&nbsp; Not guilty.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Crier, call upon the witnesses to stand forth and
+give their evidence.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Crier</i>.&nbsp; Gentlemen, you, the witnesses for the King, come
+in and give in your evidence for our Lord the King against the prisoner
+at the bar.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Come, Mr. Know-All, look upon the prisoner at the
+bar; do you know him?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Know</i>.&nbsp; Yes, my lord, I know him.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; What is his name?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Know</i>.&nbsp; His name is Lustings; he was the son of one Beastly,
+and his mother bare him in Flesh Street: she was one Evil-Concupiscence&rsquo;s
+daughter.&nbsp; I knew all the generation of them.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Well said.&nbsp; You have heard his indictment;
+what say you to it?&nbsp; Is he guilty of the things charged against
+him, or not?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Know</i>.&nbsp; My lord, he has, as he saith, been a great man indeed,
+and greater in wickedness than by pedigree more than a thousandfold.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; But what do you know of his particular actions,
+and especially with reference to his indictment?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Know</i>.&nbsp; I know him to be a swearer, a liar, a Sabbath-breaker;
+I know him to be a fornicator and an unclean person; I know him to be
+guilty of abundance of evils.&nbsp; He has been, to my knowledge, a
+very filthy man.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; But where did he use to commit his wickedness? in
+some private corners, or more open and shamelessly?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Know</i>.&nbsp; All the town over, my lord.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Come, Mr. Tell-True, what have you to say for our
+Lord the King against the prisoner at the bar?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Tell</i>.&nbsp; My lord, all that the first witness has said I know
+to be true, and a great deal more besides.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Mr. Lustings, do you hear what these gentlemen say?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Lust</i>.&nbsp; I was ever of opinion that the happiest life that
+a man could live on earth was to keep himself back from nothing that
+he desired in the world; nor have I been false at any time to this opinion
+of mine, but have lived in the love of my notions all my days.&nbsp;
+Nor was I ever so churlish, having found such sweetness in them myself,
+as to keep the commendations of them from others.<br>
+<br>
+Then said the Court, &lsquo;There hath proceeded enough from his own
+mouth to lay him open to condemnation; wherefore, set him by, gaoler,
+and set Mr. Incredulity to the bar.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Incredulity set to the bar.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Mr. Incredulity, thou art here indicted by the name
+of Incredulity, (an intruder upon the town of Mansoul,) for that thou
+hast feloniously and wickedly, and that when thou wert an officer in
+the town of Mansoul, made head against the captains of the great King
+Shaddai when they came and demanded possession of Mansoul; yea, thou
+didst bid defiance to the name, forces, and cause of the King, and didst
+also, as did Diabolus thy captain, stir up and encourage the town of
+Mansoul to make head against and resist the said force of the King.&nbsp;
+What sayest thou to this indictment?&nbsp; Art thou guilty of it, or
+not?<br>
+<br>
+Then said Incredulity, &lsquo;I know not Shaddai; I love my old prince;
+I thought it my duty to be true to my trust, and to do what I could
+to possess the minds of the men of Mansoul to do their utmost to resist
+strangers and foreigners, and with might to fight against them.&nbsp;
+Nor have I, nor shall I, change mine opinion for fear of trouble, though
+you at present are possessed of place and power.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said the Court, &lsquo;The man, as you see, is incorrigible; he
+is for maintaining his villainies by stoutness of words, and his rebellion
+with impudent confidence; and therefore set him by, gaoler, and set
+Mr. Forget-Good to the bar.<br>
+<br>
+Forget-Good set to the bar.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Mr. Forget-Good, thou art here indicted by the name
+of Forget-Good, (an intruder upon the town of Mansoul,) for that thou,
+when the whole affairs of the town of Mansoul were in thy hand, didst
+utterly forget to serve them in what was good, and didst fall in with
+the tyrant Diabolus against Shaddai the King, against his captains,
+and all his host, to the dishonour of Shaddai, the breach of his law,
+and the endangering of the destruction of the famous town of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+What sayest thou to this indictment?&nbsp; Art thou guilty or not guilty?<br>
+<br>
+Then said Forget-Good: &lsquo;Gentlemen, and at this time my judges,
+as to the indictment by which I stand of several crimes accused before
+you, pray attribute my forgetfulness to mine age, and not to my wilfulness;
+to the craziness of my brain, and not to the carelessness of my mind;
+and then I hope I may be by your charity excused from great punishment,
+though I be guilty.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said the Court, &lsquo;Forget-Good, Forget-Good, thy forgetfulness
+of good was not simply of frailty, but of purpose, and for that thou
+didst loathe to keep virtuous things in thy mind.&nbsp; What was bad
+thou couldst retain, but what was good thou couldst not abide to think
+of; thy age, therefore, and thy pretended craziness, thou makest use
+of to blind the court withal, and as a cloak to cover thy knavery.&nbsp;
+But let us hear what the witnesses have to say for the King against
+the prisoner at the bar.&nbsp; Is he guilty of this indictment, or not?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+<i>Hate</i>.&nbsp; My lord, I have heard this Forget-Good say, that
+he could never abide to think of goodness, no, not for a quarter of
+an hour.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Where did you hear him say so?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Hate</i>.&nbsp; In All-base Lane, at a house next door to the sign
+of the Conscience seared with a hot iron.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Mr. Know-All, what can you say for our Lord the
+King against the prisoner at the bar?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Know</i>.&nbsp; My lord, I know this man well.&nbsp; He is a Diabolonian,
+the son of a Diabolonian: his father&rsquo;s name was Love-Naught; and
+for him, I have often heard him say, that he counted the very thoughts
+of goodness the most burdensome thing in the world.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Where have you heard him say these words?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Know</i>.&nbsp; In Flesh Lane, right opposite to the church.<br>
+<br>
+Then said the Clerk, &lsquo;Come, Mr. Tell-True, give in your evidence
+concerning the prisoner at the bar, about that for which he stands here,
+as you see, indicted by this honourable Court.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+<i>Tell</i>.&nbsp; My lord, I have heard him often say he had rather
+think of the vilest thing than of what is contained in the Holy Scriptures.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Where did you hear him say such grievous words?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Tell</i>.&nbsp; Where? - in a great many places, particularly in
+Nauseous Street, in the house of one Shameless, and in Filth Lane, at
+the sign of the Reprobate, next door to the Descent into the Pit.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Court</i>.&nbsp; Gentlemen, you have heard the indictment, his plea,
+and the testimony of the witnesses.&nbsp; Gaoler, set Mr. Hard-Heart
+to the bar.<br>
+<br>
+He is set to the bar.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Mr. Hard-Heart, thou art here indicted by the name
+of Hard-Heart, (an intruder upon the town of Mansoul,) for that thou
+didst most desperately and wickedly possess the town of Mansoul with
+impenitency and obdurateness; and didst keep them from remorse and sorrow
+for their evils, all the time of their apostacy from and rebellion against
+the blessed King Shaddai.&nbsp; What sayest thou to this indictment?&nbsp;
+Art thou guilty, or not guilty?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Hard</i>.&nbsp; My lord, I never knew what remorse or sorrow meant
+in all my life.&nbsp; I am impenetrable.&nbsp; I care for no man; nor
+can I be pierced with men&rsquo;s griefs; their groans will not enter
+into my heart.&nbsp; Whomsoever I mischief, whomsoever I wrong, to me
+it is music, when to others mourning.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Court</i>.&nbsp; You see the man is a right Diabolonian, and has
+convicted himself.&nbsp; Set him by, gaoler, and set Mr. False-Peace
+to the bar.<br>
+<br>
+False-Peace set to the bar.<br>
+<br>
+&ldquo;Mr. False-Peace, thou art here indicted by the name of False-Peace,
+(an intruder upon the town of Mansoul,) for that thou didst most wickedly
+and satanically bring, hold, and keep the town of Mansoul, both in her
+apostacy and in her hellish rebellion, in a false, groundless, and dangerous
+peace, and damnable security, to the dishonour of the King, the transgression
+of his law, and the great damage of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; What
+sayest thou?&nbsp; Art thou guilty of this indictment, or not?<br>
+<br>
+Then said Mr. False-Peace: &lsquo;Gentlemen, and you now appointed to
+be my judges, I acknowledge that my name is Mr. Peace; but that my name
+is False-Peace I utterly deny.&nbsp; If your honours shall please to
+send for any that do intimately know me, or for the midwife that laid
+my mother of me, or for the gossips that were at my christening, they
+will, any or all of them, prove that my name is not False-Peace, but
+Peace.&nbsp; Wherefore I cannot plead to this indictment, forasmuch
+as my name is not inserted therein; and as is my true name, so are also
+my conditions.&nbsp; I was always a man that loved to live at quiet,
+and what I loved myself, that I thought others might love also.&nbsp;
+Wherefore, when I saw any of my neighbours to labour under a disquieted
+mind, I endeavoured to help them what I could; and instances of this
+good temper of mine many I could give; as,<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;1. When, at the beginning, our town of Mansoul did decline the
+ways of Shaddai, they, some of them, afterwards began to have disquieting
+reflections upon themselves for what they had done; but I, as one troubled
+to see them disquieted, presently sought out means to get them quiet
+again.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;2. When the ways of the old world, and of Sodom, were in fashion,
+if anything happened to molest those that were for the customs of the
+present times, I laboured to make them quiet again, and to cause them
+to act without molestation.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;3. To come nearer home: when the wars fell out between Shaddai
+and Diabolus, if at any time I saw any of the town of Mansoul afraid
+of destruction, I often used, by some way, device, invention, or other,
+to labour to bring them to peace again.&nbsp; Wherefore, since I have
+been always a man of so virtuous a temper as some say a peace-maker
+is, and if a peace-maker be so deserving a man as some have been bold
+to attest he is, then let me, gentlemen, be accounted by you, who have
+a great name for justice and equity in Mansoul, for a man that deserveth
+not this inhuman way of treatment, but liberty, and also a license to
+seek damage of those that have been my accusers.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said the clerk, &lsquo;Crier, make a proclamation.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+<i>Crier</i>.&nbsp; Oyes!&nbsp; Forasmuch as the prisoner at the bar
+hath denied his name to be that which is mentioned in the indictment,
+the Court requireth that if there be any in this place that can give
+information to the Court of the original and right name of the prisoner,
+they would come forth and give in their evidence; for the prisoner stands
+upon his own innocency.<br>
+<br>
+Then came two into the court, and desired that they might have leave
+to speak what they knew concerning the prisoner at the bar: the name
+of the one was Search-Truth, and the name of the other Vouch-Truth.&nbsp;
+So the Court demanded of these men if they knew the prisoner, and what
+they could say concerning him, &lsquo;for he stands,&rsquo; said they,
+&lsquo;upon his own vindication.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said Mr. Search-Truth, &lsquo;My Lord, I - &rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+<i>Court</i>.&nbsp; Hold! give him his oath.<br>
+<br>
+Then they sware him.&nbsp; So he proceeded.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Search</i>.&nbsp; My lord, I know and have known this man from a
+child, and can attest that his name is False-Peace.&nbsp; I know his
+father; his name was Mr. Flatter: and his mother, before she was married,
+was called by the name of Mrs. Sooth-Up: and these two, when they came
+together, lived not long without this son; and when he was born, they
+called his name False-Peace.&nbsp; I was his play-fellow, only I was
+somewhat older than he; and when his mother did use to call him home
+from his play, she used to say, &lsquo;False-Peace, False-Peace, come
+home quick, or I&rsquo;ll fetch you.&rsquo;&nbsp; Yea, I knew him when
+he sucked; and though I was then but little, yet I can remember that
+when his mother did use to sit at the door with him, or did play with
+him in her arms, she would call him, twenty times together, &lsquo;My
+little False-Peace! my pretty False-Peace!&rsquo; and, &lsquo;Oh! my
+sweet rogue, False-Peace!&rsquo; and again, &lsquo;Oh! my little bird,
+False-Peace!&rsquo; and &lsquo;How do I love my child!&rsquo;&nbsp;
+The gossips also know it is thus, though he has had the face to deny
+it in open court.<br>
+<br>
+Then Mr. Vouch-Truth was called upon to speak what he knew of him.&nbsp;
+So they sware him.<br>
+<br>
+Then said Mr. Vouch-Truth, &lsquo;My lord, all that the former witness
+hath said is true.&nbsp; His name is False-Peace, the son of Mr. Flatter,
+and of Mrs. Sooth-Up, his mother: and I have in former times seen him
+angry with those that have called him anything else but False-Peace,
+for he would say that all such did mock and nickname him; but this was
+in the time when Mr. False-Peace was a great man, and when the Diabolonians
+were the brave men in Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Court</i>.&nbsp; Gentlemen, you have heard what these two men have
+sworn against the prisoner at the bar.&nbsp; And now, Mr. False-Peace,
+to you: you have denied your name to be False-Peace, yet you see that
+these honest men have sworn that that is your name.&nbsp; As to your
+plea, in that you are quite besides the matter of your indictment, you
+are not by it charged for evil-doing because you are a man of peace,
+or a peace-maker among your neighbours; but for that you did wickedly
+and satanically bring, keep, and hold the town of Mansoul, both under
+its apostasy from, and in its rebellion against its King, in a false,
+lying, and damnable peace, contrary to the law of Shaddai, and to the
+hazard of the destruction of the then miserable town of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+All that you have pleaded for yourself is, that you have denied your
+name, etc.; but here, you see, we have witnesses to prove that you are
+the man.&nbsp; For the peace that you so much boast of making among
+your neighbours, know that peace that is not a companion of truth and
+holiness, but that which is without this foundation, is grounded upon
+a lie, and is both deceitful and damnable, as also the great Shaddai
+hath said.&nbsp; Thy plea, therefore, has not delivered thee from what
+by the indictment thou art charged with, but rather it doth fasten all
+upon thee.&nbsp; But thou shalt have very fair play.&nbsp; Let us call
+the witnesses that are to testify as to matter of fact, and see what
+they have to say for our Lord the King against the prisoner at the bar.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Mr. Know-All, what say you for our Lord the King
+against the prisoner at the bar?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Know</i>.&nbsp; My lord, this man hath of a long time made it, to
+my knowledge, his business to keep the town of Mansoul in a sinful quietness
+in the midst of all her lewdness, filthiness, and turmoils, and hath
+said, and that in my hearing, Come, come, let us fly from all trouble,
+on what ground soever it comes, and let us be for a quiet and peaceable
+life, though it wanteth a good foundation.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Come, Mr. Hate-Lies, what have you to say?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Hate</i>.&nbsp; My lord, I have heard him say, that peace, though
+in a way of unrighteousness, is better than trouble with truth.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Where did you hear him say this?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Hate</i>.&nbsp; I heard him say it in Folly-yard, at the house of
+one Mr. Simple, next door to the sign of the Self-deceiver.&nbsp; Yea,
+he hath said this to my knowledge twenty times in that place.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; We may spare further witness; this evidence is plain
+and full.&nbsp; Set him by, gaoler, and set Mr. No-Truth to the bar.&nbsp;
+Mr. No-Truth, thou art here indicted by the name of No-Truth, (an intruder
+upon the town of Mansoul,) for that thou hast always, to the dishonour
+of Shaddai, and the endangering of the utter ruin of the famous town
+of Mansoul, set thyself to deface, and utterly to spoil, all the remainders
+of the law and image of Shaddai that have been found in Mansoul after
+her deep apostasy from her king to Diabolus, the envious tyrant.&nbsp;
+What sayest thou, art thou guilty of this indictment, or not?<br>
+<br>
+<i>No</i>.&nbsp; Not guilty, my lord.<br>
+<br>
+Then the witnesses were called, and Mr. Know-All did first give in his
+evidence against him.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Know</i>.&nbsp; My lord, this man was at the pulling down of the
+image of Shaddai; yea, this is he that did it with his own hands.&nbsp;
+I myself stood by and saw him do it, and he did it at the commandment
+of Diabolus.&nbsp; Yea, this Mr. No-Truth did more than this, he did
+also set up the horned image of the beast Diabolus in the same place.&nbsp;
+This also is he that, at the bidding of Diabolus, did rend and tear,
+and cause to be consumed, all that he could of the remainders of the
+law of the King, even whatever he could lay his hands on in Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Who saw him do this besides yourself?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Hate</i>.&nbsp; I did, my lord, and so did many more besides; for
+this was not done by stealth, or in a corner, but in the open view of
+all; yea, he chose himself to do it publicly, for he delighted in the
+doing of it.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Mr. No-Truth, how could you have the face to plead
+not guilty, when you were so manifestly the doer of all this wickedness?<br>
+<br>
+<i>No</i>.&nbsp; Sir, I thought I must say something, and as my name
+is, so I speak.&nbsp; I have been advantaged thereby before now, and
+did not know but by speaking no truth, I might have reaped the same
+benefit now.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Set him by, gaoler, and set Mr. Pitiless to the
+bar.&nbsp; Mr. Pitiless, thou art here indicted by the name of Pitiless,
+(an intruder upon the town of Mansoul,) for that thou didst most traitorously
+and wickedly shut up all bowels of compassion, and wouldest not suffer
+poor Mansoul to condole her own misery when she had apostatised from
+her rightful King, but didst evade, and at all times turn her mind awry
+from those thoughts that had in them a tendency to lead her to repentance.&nbsp;
+What sayest thou to this indictment?&nbsp; Guilty or not guilty?<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Not guilty of pitilessness: all I did was to cheer up, according
+to my name, for my name is not Pitiless, but Cheer-up; and I could not
+abide to see Mansoul inclined to melancholy.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; How! do you deny your name, and say it is not Pitiless,
+but Cheer-up? Call for the witnesses.&nbsp; What say you, the witnesses,
+to this plea?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Know</i>.&nbsp; My lord, his name is Pitiless; so he hath written
+himself in all papers of concern wherein he has had to do.&nbsp; But
+these Diabolonians love to counterfeit their names: Mr. Covetousness
+covers himself with the name of Good-Husbandry, or the like; Mr. Pride
+can, when need is, call himself Mr. Neat, Mr. Handsome, or the like;
+and so of all the rest of them.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Mr. Tell-True, what say you?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Tell</i>.&nbsp; His name is Pitiless, my lord.&nbsp; I have known
+him from a child, and he hath done all that wickedness whereof he stands
+charged in the indictment; but there is a company of them that are not
+acquainted with the danger of damning, therefore they call all those
+melancholy that have serious thoughts how that state should be shunned
+by them.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Set Mr. Haughty to the bar, gaoler.&nbsp; Mr. Haughty,
+thou art here indicted by the name of Haughty, (an intruder upon the
+town of Mansoul,) for that thou didst most traitorously and devilishly
+teach the town of Mansoul to carry it loftily and stoutly against the
+summons that was given them by the captains of the King Shaddai.&nbsp;
+Thou didst also teach the town of Mansoul to speak contemptuously and
+vilifyingly of their great King Shaddai; and didst moreover encourage,
+both by words and examples, Mansoul, to take up arms both against the
+King and his son Emmanuel.&nbsp; How sayest thou, art thou guilty of
+this indictment, or not?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Haughty</i>.&nbsp; Gentlemen, I have always been a man of courage
+and valour, and have not used, when under the greatest clouds, to sneak
+or hang down the head like a bulrush; nor did it at all at any time
+please me to see men veil their bonnets to those that have opposed them;
+yea, though their adversaries seemed to have ten times the advantage
+of them.&nbsp; I did not use to consider who was my foe, nor what the
+cause was in which I was engaged.&nbsp; It was enough to me if I carried
+it bravely, fought like a man, and came off a victor.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Court</i>.&nbsp; Mr. Haughty, you are not here indicted for that
+you have been a valiant man, nor for your courage and stoutness in times
+of distress, but for that you have made use of this your pretended valour
+to draw the town of Mansoul into acts of rebellion both against the
+great King, and Emmanuel his Son.&nbsp; This is the crime and the thing
+wherewith thou art charged in and by the indictment.<br>
+<br>
+But he made no answer to that.<br>
+<br>
+Now when the Court had thus far proceeded against the prisoners at the
+bar, then they put them over to the verdict of their jury, to whom they
+did apply themselves after this manner:<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Gentlemen of the jury, you have been here, and have seen these
+men; you have heard their indictments, their pleas, and what the witnesses
+have testified against them: now what remains, is, that you do forthwith
+withdraw yourselves to some place, where without confusion you may consider
+of what verdict, in a way of truth and righteousness, you ought to bring
+in for the King against them, and so bring it in accordingly.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then the jury, to wit, Mr. Belief, Mr. True-Heart, Mr. Upright, Mr.
+Hate-bad, Mr. Love-God, Mr. See-Truth, Mr. Heavenly-Mind, Mr. Moderate,
+Mr. Thankful, Mr. Humble, Mr. Good-Work, and Mr. Zeal-for-God, withdrew
+themselves in order to their work.&nbsp; Now when they were shut up
+by themselves, they fell to discourse among themselves in order to the
+drawing up of their verdict.<br>
+<br>
+And thus Mr. Belief (for he was the foreman) began: &lsquo;Gentlemen,&rsquo;
+quoth he, &lsquo;for the men, the prisoners at the bar, for my part
+I believe that they all deserve death.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Very right,&rsquo;
+said Mr. True-Heart; &lsquo;I am wholly of your opinion.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Oh what a mercy is it,&rsquo; said Mr. Hate-Bad, &lsquo;that
+such villains as these are apprehended!&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Ay! ay!&rsquo;
+said Mr. Love-God, &lsquo;this is one of the joyfullest days that ever
+I saw in my life.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then said Mr. See-Truth, &lsquo;I know
+that if we judge them to death, our verdict shall stand before Shaddai
+himself&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Nor do I at all question it,&rsquo; said
+Mr. Heavenly-Mind; he said, moreover, &lsquo;When all such beasts as
+these are cast out of Mansoul, what a goodly town will it be then!&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Then,&rsquo; said Mr. Moderate, &lsquo;it is not my manner to
+pass my judgment with rashness; but for these their crimes are so notorious,
+and the witness so palpable, that that man must be wilfully blind who
+saith the prisoners ought not to die.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Blessed be
+God,&rsquo; said Mr. Thankful, &lsquo;that the traitors are in safe
+custody.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;And I join with you in this upon my bare
+knees,&rsquo; said Mr. Humble.&nbsp; &lsquo;I am glad also,&rsquo; said
+Mr. Good-Work.&nbsp; Then said the warm man, and true-hearted Mr. Zeal-for-God,
+&lsquo;Cut them off; they have been the plague, and have sought the
+destruction of Mansoul.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Thus, therefore, being all agreed in their verdict, they come instantly
+into the Court.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Gentlemen of the jury, answer all to your names:
+Mr. Belief, one; Mr. True-Heart, two; Mr. Upright, three; Mr. Hate-Bad,
+four; Mr. Love-God, five; Mr. See-Truth, six; Mr. Heavenly-mind, seven;
+Mr. Moderate, eight; Mr. Thankful, nine; Mr. Humble, ten; Mr. Good-Work,
+eleven; and Mr. Zeal-for-God, twelve.&nbsp; Good men and true, stand
+together in your verdict: are you all agreed?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Jury</i>.&nbsp; Yes, my lord.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Who shall speak for you?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Jury</i>.&nbsp; Our foreman.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; You, the gentlemen of the jury, being empannelled
+for our Lord the King, to serve here in a matter of life and death,
+have heard the trials of each of these men, the prisoners at the bar:
+what say you? are they guilty of that, and those crimes for which they
+stand here indicted, or are they not guilty?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Foreman</i>.&nbsp; Guilty, my lord.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Clerk</i>.&nbsp; Look to your prisoners, gaoler.<br>
+<br>
+This was done in the morning, and in the afternoon they received the
+sentence of death according to the law.<br>
+<br>
+The gaoler, therefore, having received such a charge, put them all in
+the inward prison, to preserve them there till the day of execution,
+which was to be the next day in the morning.<br>
+<br>
+But now to see how it happened, one of the prisoners, Incredulity by
+name, in the interim betwixt the sentence and the time of execution,
+brake prison and made his escape, and gets him away quite out of the
+town of Mansoul, and lay lurking in such places and holes as he might,
+until he should again have opportunity to do the town of Mansoul a mischief
+for their thus handling of him as they did.<br>
+<br>
+Now when Mr. Trueman, the gaoler, perceived that he had lost his prisoner,
+he was in a heavy taking, because that prisoner was, to speak on, the
+very worst of all the gang: wherefore first he goes and acquaints my
+Lord Mayor, Mr. Recorder, and my Lord Willbewill, with the matter, and
+to get of them an order to make search for him throughout the town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; So an order he got, and search was made, but no such
+man could now be found in all the town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+All that could be gathered was, that he had lurked a while about the
+outside of the town, and that here and there one or other had a glimpse
+of him as he did make his escape out of Mansoul; one or two also did
+affirm that they saw him without the town, going apace quite over the
+plain.&nbsp; Now when he was quite gone, it was affirmed by one Mr.
+Did-see, that he ranged all over dry places, till he met with Diabolus,
+his friend, and where should they meet one another but just upon Hell-gate
+hill.<br>
+<br>
+But oh! what a lamentable story did the old gentleman tell to Diabolus
+concerning what sad alteration Emmanuel had made in Mansoul!<br>
+<br>
+As, first, how Mansoul had, after some delays, received a general pardon
+at the hands of Emmanuel, and that they had invited him into the town,
+and that they had given him the castle for his possession.&nbsp; He
+said, moreover, that they had called his soldiers into the town, coveted
+who should quarter the most of them; they also entertained him with
+the timbrel, song, and dance.&nbsp; &lsquo;But that,&rsquo; said Incredulity,
+&lsquo;which is the sorest vexation to me is, that he hath pulled down,
+O father, thy image, and set up his own; pulled down thy officers and
+set up his own.&nbsp; Yea, and Willbewill, that rebel, who, one would
+have thought, should never have turned from us, he is now in as great
+favour with Emmanuel as ever he was with thee.&nbsp; But, besides all
+this, this Willbewill has received a special commission from his master
+to search for, to apprehend, and to put to death all, and all manner
+of Diabolonians that he shall find in Mansoul: yea, and this Willbewill
+has taken and committed to prison already eight of my Lord&rsquo;s most
+trusty friends in Mansoul.&nbsp; Nay, further, my Lord, with grief I
+speak it, they have been all arraigned, condemned, and, I doubt, before
+this executed in Mansoul.&nbsp; I told my Lord of eight, and myself
+was the ninth, who should assuredly have drunk of the same cup, but
+that through craft, I, as thou seest, have made mine escape from them.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+When Diabolus had heard this lamentable story, he yelled and snuffed
+up the wind like a dragon, and made the sky to look dark with his roaring;
+he also sware that he would try to be revenged on Mansoul for this.&nbsp;
+So they, both he and his old friend Incredulity, concluded to enter
+into great consultation, how they might get the town of Mansoul again.<br>
+<br>
+Now, before this time, the day was come in which the prisoners in Mansoul
+were to be executed.&nbsp; So they were brought to the cross, and that
+by Mansoul, in most solemn manner; for the Prince said that this should
+be done by the hand of the town of Mansoul, &lsquo;that I may see,&rsquo;
+said he, &lsquo;the forwardness of my now redeemed Mansoul to keep my
+word, and to do my commandments; and that I may bless Mansoul in doing
+this deed.&nbsp; Proof of sincerity pleases me well; let Mansoul therefore
+first lay their hands upon these Diabolonians to destroy them.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+So the town of Mansoul slew them, according to the word of their Prince;
+but when the prisoners were brought to the cross to die, you can hardly
+believe what troublesome work Mansoul had of it to put the Diabolonians
+to death; for the men, knowing that they must die, and every of them
+having implacable enmity in their hearts to Mansoul, what did they but
+took courage at the cross, and there resisted the men of the town of
+Mansoul?&nbsp; Wherefore the men of Mansoul were forced to cry out for
+help to the captains and men of war.&nbsp; Now the great Shaddai had
+a secretary in the town, and he was a great lover of the men of Mansoul,
+and he was at the place of execution also; so he, hearing the men of
+Mansoul cry out against the strugglings and unruliness of the prisoners,
+rose up from his place, and came and put his hands upon the hands of
+the men of Mansoul.&nbsp; So they crucified the Diabolonians that had
+been a plague, a grief, and an offence to the town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+Now, when this good work was done, the Prince came down to see, to visit,
+and to speak comfortably to the men of Mansoul, and to strengthen their
+hands in such work.&nbsp; And he said to them that, by this act of theirs
+he had proved them, and found them to be lovers of his person, observers
+of his laws, and such as had also respect to his honour.&nbsp; He said,
+moreover, (to show them that they by this should not be losers, nor
+their town weakened by the loss of them,) that he would make them another
+captain, and that of one of themselves.&nbsp; And that this captain
+should be the ruler of a thousand, for the good and benefit of the now
+flourishing town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+So he called one to him whose name was Waiting, and bid him, &lsquo;Go
+quickly up to the castle gate, and inquire there for one Mr. Experience,
+that waiteth upon that noble captain, the Captain Credence, and bid
+him come hither to me.&rsquo;&nbsp; So the messenger that waited upon
+the good Prince Emmanuel went and said as he was commanded.&nbsp; Now
+the young gentleman was waiting to see the captain train and muster
+his men in the castle yard.&nbsp; Then said Mr. Waiting to him, &lsquo;Sir,
+the Prince would that you should come down to his highness forthwith.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+So he brought him down to Emmanuel, and he came and made obeisance before
+him.&nbsp; Now the men of the town knew Mr. Experience well, for he
+was born and bred in Mansoul; they also knew him to be a man of conduct,
+of valour, and a person prudent in matters; he was also a comely person,
+well-spoken, and very successful in his undertakings.<br>
+<br>
+Wherefore the hearts of the townsmen were transported with joy when
+they saw that the Prince himself was so taken with Mr. Experience, that
+he would needs make him a captain over a band of men.<br>
+<br>
+So with one consent they bowed the knee before Emmanuel, and with a
+shout said, &lsquo;Let Emmanuel live for ever!&rsquo;&nbsp; Then said
+the Prince to the young gentleman, whose name was Mr. Experience, &lsquo;I
+have thought good to confer upon thee a place of trust and honour in
+this my town of Mansoul.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then the young man bowed his head
+and worshipped.&nbsp; &lsquo;It is,&rsquo; said Emmanuel, &lsquo;that
+thou shouldest be a captain, a captain over a thousand men in my beloved
+town of Mansoul.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then said the captain, &lsquo;Let the
+King live!&rsquo;&nbsp; So the Prince gave out orders forthwith to the
+King&rsquo;s secretary, that he should draw up for Mr. Experience a
+commission to make him a captain over a thousand men.&nbsp; &lsquo;And
+let it be brought to me,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;that I may set to my
+seal.&rsquo;&nbsp; So it was done as it was commanded.&nbsp; The commission
+was drawn up, brought to Emmanuel, and he set his seal thereto.&nbsp;
+Then, by the hand of Mr. Waiting, he sent it away to the captain.<br>
+<br>
+Now as soon as the captain had received his commission, he sounded his
+trumpet for volunteers, and young men came to him apace; yea, the greatest
+and chief men in the town sent their sons, to be listed under his command.&nbsp;
+Thus Captain Experience came under command to Emmanuel, for the good
+of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; He had for his lieutenant one Mr. Skilful,
+and for his cornet one Mr. Memory.&nbsp; His under officers I need not
+name.&nbsp; His colours were the white colours for the town of Mansoul;
+and his scutcheon was the dead lion and dead bear.&nbsp; So the Prince
+returned to his royal palace again.<br>
+<br>
+Now when he was returned thither, the elders of the town of Mansoul,
+to wit, the Lord Mayor, the Recorder, and the Lord Willbewill, went
+to congratulate him, and in special way to thank him for his love, care,
+and the tender compassion which he showed to his ever-obliged town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; So after a while, and some sweet communion between them,
+the townsmen having solemnly ended their ceremony, returned to their
+place again.<br>
+<br>
+Emmanuel also at this time appointed them a day wherein he would renew
+their charter, yea, wherein he would renew and enlarge it, mending several
+faults therein, that Mansoul&rsquo;s yoke might be yet more easy.&nbsp;
+And this he did without any desire of theirs, even of his own frankness
+and noble mind.&nbsp; So when he had sent for and seen their old one,
+he laid it by, and said, &lsquo;Now that which decayeth and waxeth old
+is ready to vanish away.&rsquo;&nbsp; He said, moreover, &lsquo;The
+town of Mansoul shall have another, a better, a new one, more steady
+and firm by far.&rsquo;&nbsp; An epitome hereof take as follows:-<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Emmanuel, Prince of Peace, and a great lover of the town of Mansoul,
+I do in the name of my Father, and of mine own clemency, give, grant,
+and bequeath to my beloved town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;First.&nbsp; Free, full, and everlasting forgiveness of all wrongs,
+injuries, and offences done by them against my Father, me, their neighbour,
+or themselves.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Second.&nbsp; I do give them the holy law and my testament, with
+all that therein is contained, for their everlasting comfort and consolation.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Third.&nbsp; I do also give them a portion of the self-same grace
+and goodness that dwells in my Father&rsquo;s heart and mine.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Fourth.&nbsp; I do give, grant, and bestow upon them freely,
+the world and what is therein, for their good; and they shall have that
+power over them, as shall stand with the honour of my Father, my glory,
+and their comfort: yea, I grant them the benefits of life and death,
+and of things present, and things to come.&nbsp; This privilege no other
+city, town, or corporation, shall have, but my Mansoul only.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Fifth.&nbsp; I do give and grant them leave, and free access
+to me in my palace at all seasons - to my palace above or below - there
+to make known their wants to me, and I give them, moreover, a promise
+that I will hear and redress all their grievances.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Sixth.&nbsp; I do give, grant to, and invest the town of Mansoul
+with full power and authority to seek out, take, enslave, and destroy
+all, and all manner of Diabolonians that at any time, from whencesoever,
+shall be found straggling in or about the town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Seventh.&nbsp; I do further grant to my beloved town of Mansoul,
+that they shall have authority not to suffer any foreigner, or stranger,
+or their seed, to be free in, and of the blessed town of Mansoul, nor
+to share in the excellent privileges thereof.&nbsp; But that all the
+grants, privileges, and immunities that I bestow upon the famous town
+of Mansoul, shall be for those the old natives, and true inhabitants
+thereof; to them, I say, and to their right seed after them.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;But all Diabolonians, of what sort, birth, country, or kingdom
+soever, shall be debarred a share therein.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+So when the town of Mansoul had received at the hand of Emmanuel their
+gracious charter, (which in itself is infinitely more large than by
+this lean epitome is set before you,) they carried it to audience, that
+is, to the market place, and there Mr. Recorder read it in the presence
+of all the people.&nbsp; This being done, it was had back to the castle
+gates, and there fairly engraven upon the doors thereof, and laid in
+letters of gold, to the end that the town of Mansoul, with all the people
+thereof, might have it always in their view, or might go where they
+might see what a blessed freedom their Prince had bestowed upon them,
+that their joy might be increased in themselves, and their love renewed
+to their great and good Emmanuel.<br>
+<br>
+But what joy, what comfort, what consolation, think you, did now possess
+the hearts of the men of Mansoul!&nbsp; The bells rung, the minstrels
+played, the people danced, the captains shouted, the colours waved in
+the wind, and the silver trumpets sounded; and the Diabolonians now
+were glad to hide their heads, for they looked like them that had been
+long dead.<br>
+<br>
+When this was over, the Prince sent again for the elders of the town
+of Mansoul, and communed with them about a ministry that he intended
+to establish among them; such a ministry that might open unto them,
+and that might instruct them in the things that did concern their present
+and future state.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;For,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;you, of yourselves, unless you have
+teachers and guides, will not be able to know, and, if not to know,
+to be sure not to do the will of my Father.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+At this news, when the elders of Mansoul brought it to the people, the
+whole town came running together, (for it pleased them well, as whatever
+the Prince now did pleased the people,) and all with one consent implored
+his Majesty that he would forthwith establish such a ministry among
+them as might teach them both law and judgment, statute and commandment;
+that they might be documented in all good and wholesome things.&nbsp;
+So he told them that he would grant them their requests, and would establish
+two among them; one that was of his Father&rsquo;s court, and one that
+was a native of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;He that is from the court,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;is a person
+of no less quality and dignity than my Father and I; and he is the Lord
+Chief Secretary of my Father&rsquo;s house: for he is, and always has
+been, the chief dictator of all my Father&rsquo;s laws, a person altogether
+well skilled in all mysteries, and knowledge of mysteries, as is my
+Father, or as myself is.&nbsp; Indeed he is one with us in nature, and
+also as to loving of, and being faithful to, and in the eternal concerns
+of the town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;And this is he,&rsquo; said the Prince, &lsquo;that must be your
+chief teacher; for it is he, and he only, that can teach you clearly
+in all high and supernatural things.&nbsp; He, and he only, it is that
+knows the ways and methods of my Father at court, nor can any like him
+show how the heart of my Father is at all times, in all things, upon
+all occasions, towards Mansoul; for as no man knows the things of a
+man but that spirit of a man which is in him, so the things of my Father
+knows no man but this his high and mighty Secretary.&nbsp; Nor can any,
+as he, tell Mansoul how and what they shall do to keep themselves in
+the love of my Father.&nbsp; He also it is that can bring lost things
+to your remembrance, and that can tell you things to come.&nbsp; This
+teacher, therefore, must of necessity have the pre-eminence, both in
+your affections and judgment, before your other teacher; his personal
+dignity, the excellency of his teaching, also the great dexterity that
+he hath to help you to make and draw up petitions to my Father for your
+help, and to his pleasing, must lay obligations upon you to love him,
+fear him, and to take heed that you grieve him not.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;This person can put life and vigour into all he says; yea, and
+can also put it into your heart.&nbsp; This person can make seers of
+you, and can make you tell what shall be hereafter.&nbsp; By this person
+you must frame all your petitions to my Father and me; and without his
+advice and counsel first obtained, let nothing enter into the town or
+castle of Mansoul, for that may disgust and grieve this noble person.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Take heed, I say, that you do not grieve this minister; for if
+you do, he may fight against you; and should he once be moved by you
+to set himself against you in battle array, that will distress you more
+than if twelve legions should from my Father&rsquo;s court be sent to
+make war upon you.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;But, as I said, if you shall hearken unto him, and shall love
+him; if you shall devote yourselves to his teaching, and shall seek
+to have converse, and to maintain communion with him, you shall find
+him ten times better than is the whole world to any; yea, he will shed
+abroad the love of my Father in your hearts, and Mansoul will be the
+wisest, and most blessed of all people.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then did the Prince call unto him the old gentleman, who before had
+been the Recorder of Mansoul, Mr. Conscience by name, and told him,
+That, forasmuch as he was well skilled in the law and government of
+the town of Mansoul, and was also well-spoken, and could pertinently
+deliver to them his Master&rsquo;s will in all terrene and domestic
+matters, therefore he would also make him a minister for, in, and to
+the goodly town of Mansoul, in all the laws, statutes, and judgments
+of the famous town of Mansoul.&nbsp; &lsquo;And thou must,&rsquo; said
+the Prince, &lsquo;confine thyself to the teaching of moral virtues,
+to civil and natural duties; but thou must not attempt to presume to
+be a revealer of those high and supernatural mysteries that are kept
+close in the bosom of Shaddai, my Father: for those things knows no
+man, nor can any reveal them but my Father&rsquo;s Secretary only.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Thou art a native of the town of Mansoul, but the Lord Secretary
+is a native with my Father; wherefore, as thou hast knowledge of the
+laws and customs of the corporation, so he of the things and will of
+my Father.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Wherefore, O Mr. Conscience, although I have made thee a minister
+and a preacher to the town of Mansoul, yet as to the things which the
+Lord Secretary knoweth, and shall teach to this people, there thou must
+be his scholar and a learner, even as the rest of Mansoul are.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Thou must therefore, in all high and supernatural things, go
+to him for information and knowledge; for though there be a spirit in
+man, this person&rsquo;s inspiration must give him understanding.&nbsp;
+Wherefore, O thou Mr. Recorder, keep low and be humble, and remember
+that the Diabolonians that kept not their first charge, but left their
+own standing, are now made prisoners in the pit.&nbsp; Be therefore
+content with thy station.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;I have made thee my Father&rsquo;s vicegerent on earth, in such
+things of which I have made mention before: and thou, take thou power
+to teach them to Mansoul, yea, and to impose them with whips and chastisements,
+if they shall not willingly hearken to do thy commandments.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;And, Mr. Recorder, because thou art old, and through many abuses
+made feeble; therefore I give thee leave and license to go when thou
+wilt to my fountain, my conduit, and there to drink freely of the blood
+of my grape, for my conduit doth always run wine.&nbsp; Thus doing,
+thou shalt drive from thine heart and stomach all foul, gross, and hurtful
+humours.&nbsp; It will also lighten thine eyes, and will strengthen
+thy memory for the reception and keeping of all that the King&rsquo;s
+most noble Secretary teacheth.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+When the Prince had thus put Mr. Recorder (that once so was) into the
+place and office of a minister to Mansoul, and the man had thankfully
+accepted thereof, then did Emmanuel address himself in a particular
+speech to the townsmen themselves.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Behold,&rsquo; said the Prince to Mansoul, &lsquo;my love and
+care towards you; I have added to all that is past, this mercy, to appoint
+you preachers; the most noble Secretary to teach you in all high and
+sublime mysteries; and this gentleman,&rsquo; pointing to Mr. Conscience,
+&lsquo;is to teach you in all things human and domestic, for therein
+lieth his work.&nbsp; He is not, by what I have said, debarred of telling
+to Mansoul anything that he hath heard and received at the mouth of
+the lord high Secretary; only he shall not attempt to presume to pretend
+to be a revealer of those high mysteries himself; for the breaking of
+them up, and the discovery of them to Mansoul lieth only in the power,
+authority, and skill of the lord high Secretary himself.&nbsp; Talk
+of them he may, and so may the rest of the town of Mansoul; yea, and
+may, as occasion gives them opportunity, press them upon each other
+for the benefit of the whole.&nbsp; These things, therefore, I would
+have you observe and do, for it is for your life, and the lengthening
+of your days.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;And one thing more to my beloved Mr. Recorder, and to all the
+town of Mansoul: You must not dwell in, nor stay upon, anything of that
+which he hath in commission to teach you, as to your trust and expectation
+of the next world; (of the next world, I say, for I purpose to give
+another to Mansoul, when this with them is worn out;) but for that you
+must wholly and solely have recourse to, and make stay upon his doctrine
+that is your Teacher after the first order.&nbsp; Yea, Mr. Recorder
+himself must not look for life from that which he himself revealeth;
+his dependence for that must be founded in the doctrine of the other
+preacher.&nbsp; Let Mr. Recorder also take heed that he receive not
+any doctrine, or point of doctrine, that is not communicated to him
+by his Superior Teacher, nor yet within the precincts of his own formal
+knowledge.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Now, after the Prince had thus settled things in the famous town of
+Mansoul, he proceeded to give to the elders of the corporation a necessary
+caution, to wit, how they should carry it to the high and noble captains
+that he had, from his Father&rsquo;s court, sent or brought with him,
+to the famous town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;These captains,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;do love the town of Mansoul,
+and they are picked men, picked out of abundance, as men that best suit,
+and that will most faithfully serve in the wars of Shaddai against the
+Diabolonians, for the preservation of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; &lsquo;I
+charge you therefore,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;O ye inhabitants of the
+now flourishing town of Mansoul, that you carry it not ruggedly or untowardly
+to my captains, or their men; since, as I said, they are picked and
+choice men - men chosen out of many for the good of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+I say, I charge you, that you carry it not untowardly to them: for though
+they have the hearts and faces of lions, when at any time they shall
+be called forth to engage and fight with the King&rsquo;s foes, and
+the enemies of the town of Mansoul; yet a little discountenance cast
+upon them from the town of Mansoul will deject and cast down their faces,
+will weaken and take away their courage.&nbsp; Do not, therefore, O
+my beloved, carry it unkindly to my valiant captains and courageous
+men of war, but love them, nourish them, succour them, and lay them
+in your bosoms; and they will not only fight for you, but cause to fly
+from you all those the Diabolonians that seek, and will, if possible,
+be, your utter destruction.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;If, therefore, any of them should at any time be sick or weak,
+and so not able to perform that office of love, which, with all their
+hearts, they are willing to do (and will do also when well and in health),
+slight them not, nor despise them, but rather strengthen them and encourage
+them, though weak and ready to die, for they are your fence, and your
+guard, your wall, your gates, your locks, and your bars.&nbsp; And although,
+when they are weak, they can do but little, but rather need to be helped
+by you, than that you should then expect great things from them, yet,
+when well, you know what exploits, what feats and warlike achievements
+they are able to do, and will perform for you.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Besides, if they be weak, the town of Mansoul cannot be strong;
+if they be strong, then Mansoul cannot be weak; your safety, therefore,
+doth lie in their health, and in your countenancing them.&nbsp; Remember,
+also, that if they be sick, they catch that disease of the town of Mansoul
+itself.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;These things I have said unto you because I love your welfare
+and your honour: observe, therefore, O my Mansoul, to be punctual in
+all things that I have given in charge unto you, and that not only as
+a town corporate, and so to your officers and guard, and guides in chief,
+but to you as you are a people whose well-being, as single persons,
+depends on the observation of the orders and commandments of their Lord.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Next, O my Mansoul, I do warn you of that, of which, notwithstanding
+that reformation that at present is wrought among you, you have need
+to be warned about: wherefore hearken diligently unto me.&nbsp; I am
+now sure, and you will know hereafter, that there are yet of the Diabolonians
+remaining in the town of Mansoul, Diabolonians that are sturdy and implacable,
+and that do already while I am with you, and that will yet more when
+I am from you, study, plot, contrive, invent, and jointly attempt to
+bring you to desolation, and so to a state far worse than that of the
+Egyptian bondage; they are the avowed friends of Diabolus, therefore
+look about you.&nbsp; They used heretofore to lodge with their Prince
+in the Castle, when Incredulity was the Lord Mayor of this town; but
+since my coming hither, they lie more in the outsides and walls, and
+have made themselves dens, and caves, and holes, and strongholds therein.&nbsp;
+Wherefore, O Mansoul! thy work, as to this, will be so much the more
+difficult and hard; that is, to take, mortify, and put them to death
+according to the will of my Father.&nbsp; Nor can you utterly rid yourselves
+of them, unless you should pull down the walls of your town, the which
+I am by no means willing you should.&nbsp; Do you ask me, What shall
+we do then?&nbsp; Why, be you diligent, and quit you like men; observe
+their holes; find out their haunts; assault them, and make no peace
+with them.&nbsp; Wherever they haunt, lurk, or abide, and what terms
+of peace soever they offer you, abhor, and all shall be well betwixt
+you and me.&nbsp; And that you may the better know them from those that
+are the natives of Mansoul, I will give you this brief schedule of the
+names of the chief of them; and they are these that follow:- The Lord
+Fornication, the Lord Adultery, the Lord Murder, the Lord Anger, the
+Lord Lasciviousness, the Lord Deceit, the Lord Evil-Eye, Mr. Drunkenness,
+Mr. Revelling, Mr. Idolatry, Mr. Witch-craft, Mr. Variance, Mr. Emulation,
+Mr. Wrath, Mr. Strife, Mr. Sedition, and Mr. Heresy.&nbsp; These are
+some of the chief, O Mansoul! of those that will seek to overthrow thee
+for ever.&nbsp; These, I say, are the skulkers in Mansoul; but look
+thou well into the law of thy King, and there thou shalt find their
+physiognomy, and such other characteristical notes of them, by which
+they certainly may be known.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;These, O my Mansoul, (and I would gladly that you should certainly
+know it,) if they be suffered to run and range about the town as they
+would, will quickly, like vipers, eat out your bowels; yea, poison your
+captains, cut the sinews of your soldiers, break the bars and bolts
+of your gates, and turn your now most flourishing Mansoul into a barren
+and desolate wilderness, and ruinous heap.&nbsp; Wherefore, that you
+may take courage to yourselves to apprehend these villains wherever
+you find them, I give to you, my Lord Mayor, my Lord Willbewill, and
+Mr. Recorder, with all the inhabitants of the town of Mansoul, full
+power and commission to seek out, to take, and to cause to be put to
+death by the cross, all, and all manner of Diabolonians, when and wherever
+you shall find them to lurk within, or to range without the walls of
+the town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;I told you before that I had placed a standing ministry among
+you; not that you have but these with you, for my first four captains
+who came against the master and lord of the Diabolonians that was in
+Mansoul, they can, and if need be, and if they be required, will not
+only privately inform, but publicly preach to the corporation both good
+and wholesome doctrine, and such as shall lead you in the way.&nbsp;
+Yea, they will set up a weekly, yea, if need be, a daily lecture in
+thee, O Mansoul! and will instruct thee in such profitable lessons,
+that, if heeded, will do thee good at the end.&nbsp; And take good heed
+that you spare not the men that you have a commission to take and crucify.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Now, as I have set before your eyes the vagrants and runagates
+by name, so I will tell you, that among yourselves, some of them shall
+creep in to beguile you, even such as would seem, and that in appearance
+are, very rife and hot for religion.&nbsp; And they, if you watch not,
+will do you a mischief, such an one as at present you cannot think of.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;These, as I said, will show themselves to you in another hue
+than those under description before.&nbsp; Wherefore, Mansoul, watch
+and be sober, and suffer not thyself to be betrayed.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+When the Prince had thus far new modelled the town of Mansoul, and had
+instructed them in such matters as were profitable for them to know,
+then he appointed another day in which he intended, when the townsfolk
+came together, to bestow a further badge of honour upon the town of
+Mansoul, - a badge that should distinguish them from all the people,
+kindreds, and tongues that dwell in the kingdom of Universe.&nbsp; Now
+it was not long before the day appointed was come, and the Prince and
+his people met in the King&rsquo;s palace, where first Emmanuel made
+a short speech unto them, and then did for them as he had said, and
+unto them as he had promised.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;My Mansoul,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;that which I now am about
+to do, is to make you known to the world to be mine, and to distinguish
+you also in your own eyes, from all false traitors that may creep in
+among you.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then he commanded that those that waited upon him should go and bring
+forth out of his treasury those white and glistening robes &lsquo;that
+I,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;have provided and laid up in store for my
+Mansoul.&rsquo;&nbsp; So the white garments were fetched out of his
+treasury, and laid forth to the eyes of the people.&nbsp; Moreover,
+it was granted to them that they should take them and put them on, &lsquo;according,&rsquo;
+said he, &lsquo;to your size and stature.&rsquo;&nbsp; So the people
+were put into white, into fine linen, white and clean.<br>
+<br>
+Then said the Prince unto them, &lsquo;This, O Mansoul, is my livery,
+and the badge by which mine are known from the servants of others.&nbsp;
+Yea, it is that which I grant to all that are mine, and without which
+no man is permitted to see my face.&nbsp; Wear them, therefore, for
+my sake, who gave them unto you; and also if you would be known by the
+world to be mine.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+But now! can you think how Mansoul shone?&nbsp; It was fair as the sun,
+clear as the moon, and terrible as an army with banners.<br>
+<br>
+The Prince added further, and said, &lsquo;No prince, potentate, or
+mighty one of Universe, giveth this livery but myself: behold, therefore,
+as I said before, you shall be known by it to be mine.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;And now,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;I have given you my livery, let
+me give you also in commandment concerning them; and be sure that you
+take good heed to my words.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;First.&nbsp; Wear them daily, day by day, lest you should at
+sometimes appear to others as if you were none of mine.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Second.&nbsp; Keep them always white; for if they be soiled,
+it is dishonour to me.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Third.&nbsp; Wherefore gird them up from the ground, and let
+them not lag with dust and dirt.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Fourth.&nbsp; Take heed that you lose them not, lest you walk
+naked, and they see your shame.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Fifth.&nbsp; But if you should sully them, if you should defile
+them, the which I am greatly unwilling you should, and the prince Diabolus
+will be glad if you would, then speed you to do that which is written
+in my law, that yet you may stand, and befall before me, and before
+my throne.&nbsp; Also, this is the way to cause that I may not leave
+you, nor forsake you while here, but may dwell in this town of Mansoul
+for ever.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+And now was Mansoul, and the inhabitants of it, as the signet upon Emmanuel&rsquo;s
+right hand.&nbsp; Where was there now a town, a city, a corporation,
+that could compare with Mansoul! a town redeemed from the hand, and
+from the power of Diabolus! a town that the King Shaddai loved, and
+that he sent Emmanuel to regain from the Prince of the infernal cave;
+yea, a town that Emmanuel loved to dwell in, and that he chose for his
+royal habitation; a town that he fortified for himself, and made strong
+by the force of his army.&nbsp; What shall I say, Mansoul has now a
+most excellent Prince, golden captains and men of war, weapons proved,
+and garments as white as snow.&nbsp; Nor are these benefits to be counted
+little, but great; can the town of Mansoul esteem them so, and improve
+them to that end and purpose for which they are bestowed upon them?<br>
+<br>
+When the Prince had thus completed the modelling of the town, to show
+that he had great delight in the work of his hands and took pleasure
+in the good that he had wrought for the famous and flourishing Mansoul,
+he commanded, and they set his standard upon the battlements of the
+castle.&nbsp; And then,<br>
+<br>
+First.&nbsp; He gave them frequent visits; not a day now but the elders
+of Mansoul must come to him, or he to them, into his palace.&nbsp; Now
+they must walk and talk together of all the great things that he had
+done, and yet further promised to do, for the town of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+Thus would he often do with the Lord Mayor, my Lord Willbewill, and
+the honest subordinate preacher Mr. Conscience, and Mr. Recorder.&nbsp;
+But oh, how graciously, how lovingly, how courteously, and tenderly
+did this blessed Prince now carry it towards the town of Mansoul!&nbsp;
+In all the streets, gardens, orchards, and other places where he came,
+to be sure the poor should have his blessing and benediction; yea, he
+would kiss them, and if they were ill he would lay hands on them, and
+make them well.&nbsp; The captains, also, he would daily, yea, sometimes
+hourly, encourage with his presence and goodly words.&nbsp; For you
+must know that a smile from him upon them would put more vigour, more
+life, and stoutness into them, than would anything else under heaven.<br>
+<br>
+The Prince would now also feast them, and be with them continually:
+hardly a week would pass but a banquet must be had betwixt him and them.&nbsp;
+You may remember that, some pages before, we make mention of one feast
+that they had together; but now to feast them was a thing more common:
+every day with Mansoul was a feast-day now.&nbsp; Nor did he, when they
+returned to their places, send them empty away, either they must have
+a ring, a gold chain, a bracelet, a white stone, or something; so dear
+was Mansoul to him now; so lovely was Mansoul in his eyes.<br>
+<br>
+Second.&nbsp; When the elders and townsmen did not come to him, he would
+send in much plenty of provision unto them; meat that came from court,
+wine and bread that were prepared for his Father&rsquo;s table; yea,
+such delicates would he send unto them, and therewith would so cover
+their table, that whoever saw it confessed that the like could not be
+seen in any kingdom.<br>
+<br>
+Third.&nbsp; If Mansoul did not frequently visit him as he desired they
+should, he would walk out to them, knock at their doors, and desire
+entrance, that amity might be maintained betwixt them and him; if they
+did hear and open to him, as commonly they would, if they were at home,
+then would he renew his former love, and confirm it too with some new
+tokens, and signs of continued favour.<br>
+<br>
+And was it not now amazing to behold, that in that very place where
+sometimes Diabolus had his abode, and entertained his Diabolonians to
+the almost utter destruction of Mansoul, the Prince of princes should
+sit eating and drinking with them, while all his mighty captains, men
+of war, trumpeters, with the singing-men and singing-women of his Father,
+stood round about to wait upon them!&nbsp; Now did Mansoul&rsquo;s cup
+run over, now did her conduits run sweet wine, now did she eat the finest
+of the wheat, and drink milk and honey out of the rock!&nbsp; Now, she
+said, How great is his goodness! for since I found favour in his eyes,
+how honourable have I been!<br>
+<br>
+The blessed Prince did also ordain a new officer in the town, and a
+goodly person he was; his name was Mr. God&rsquo;s-Peace: this man was
+set over my Lord Willbewill, my Lord Mayor, Mr. Recorder, the subordinate
+preacher, Mr. Mind, and over all the natives of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+Himself was not a native of it, but came with the Prince Emmanuel from
+the court.&nbsp; He was a great acquaintance of Captain Credence and
+Captain Good-Hope; some say they were kin, and I am of that opinion
+too.&nbsp; This man, as I said, was made governor of the town in general,
+especially over the castle, and Captain Credence was to help him there.&nbsp;
+And I made great observation of it, that so long as all things went
+in Mansoul as this sweet-natured gentleman would, the town was in most
+happy condition.&nbsp; Now there were no jars, no chiding, no interferings,
+no unfaithful doings in all the town of Mansoul; every man in Mansoul
+kept close to his own employment.&nbsp; The gentry, the officers, the
+soldiers, and all in place observed their order.&nbsp; And as for the
+women and children of the town, they followed their business joyfully;
+they would work and sing, work and sing, from morning till night: so
+that quite through the town of Mansoul now nothing was to be found but
+harmony, quietness, joy, and health.&nbsp; And this lasted all that
+summer.<br>
+<br>
+But there was a man in the town of Mansoul, and his name was Mr. Carnal-Security;
+this man did, after all this mercy bestowed on this corporation, bring
+the town of Mansoul into great and grievous slavery and bondage.&nbsp;
+A brief account of him and of his doings take as followeth:-<br>
+<br>
+When Diabolus at first took possession of the town of Mansoul, he brought
+thither, with himself, a great number of Diabolonians, men of his own
+conditions.&nbsp; Now among these there was one whose name was Mr. Self-Conceit,
+and a notable brisk man he was, as any that in those days did possess
+the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Diabolus, then, perceiving this man to be
+active and bold, sent him upon many desperate designs, the which he
+managed better, and more to the pleasing of his lord, than most that
+came with him from the dens could do.&nbsp; Wherefore, finding him so
+fit for his purpose, he preferred him, and made him next to the great
+Lord Willbewill, of whom we have written so much before.&nbsp; Now the
+Lord Willbewill being in those days very well pleased with him, and
+with his achievements, gave him his daughter, the Lady Fear-Nothing,
+to wife.&nbsp; Now, of my Lady Fear-nothing, did this Mr. Self-Conceit
+beget this gentleman, Mr. Carnal-Security.&nbsp; Wherefore, there being
+then in Mansoul those strange kinds of mixtures, it was hard for them,
+in some cases, to find out who were natives, who not, for Mr. Carnal-Security
+sprang from my Lord Willbewill by mother&rsquo;s side, though he had
+for his father a Diabolonian by nature.<br>
+<br>
+Well, this Carnal-Security took much after his father and mother; he
+was self-conceited, he feared nothing, he was also a very busy man:
+nothing of news, nothing of doctrine, nothing of alteration, or talk
+of alteration, could at any time be on foot in Mansoul, but be sure
+Mr. Carnal-Security would be at the head or tail of it: but, to be sure,
+he would decline those that he deemed the weakest, and stood always
+with them in his way of standing, that he supposed was the strongest
+side.<br>
+<br>
+Now, when Shaddai the mighty, and Emmanuel his Son, made war upon Mansoul,
+to take it, this Mr. Carnal-Security was then in town, and was a great
+doer among the people, encouraging them in their rebellion, putting
+them upon hardening themselves in their resisting the King&rsquo;s forces:
+but when he saw that the town of Mansoul was taken, and converted to
+the use of the glorious Prince Emmanuel; and when he also saw what was
+become of Diabolus, and how he was unroosted, and made to quit the castle
+in the greatest contempt and scorn; and that the town of Mansoul was
+well lined with captains, engines of war, and men, and also provision;
+what doth he but slyly wheel about also; and as he had served Diabolus
+against the good Prince, so he feigned that he would serve the Prince
+against his foes.<br>
+<br>
+And having got some little smattering of Emmanuel&rsquo;s things by
+the end, being bold, he ventures himself into the company of the townsmen,
+any attempts also to chat among them.&nbsp; Now he knew that the power
+and strength of the town of Mansoul was great, and that it could not
+but be pleasing to the people, if he cried up their might and their
+glory.&nbsp; Wherefore he beginneth his tale with the power and strength
+of Mansoul, and affirmed that it was impregnable; now magnifying their
+captains and their slings, and their rams; then crying up their fortifications
+and strongholds; and, lastly, the assurances that they had from their
+Prince, that Mansoul should be happy for ever.&nbsp; But when he saw
+that some of the men of the town were tickled and taken with his discourse,
+he makes it his business, and walking from street to street, house to
+house, and man to man, he at last brought Mansoul to dance after his
+pipe, and to grow almost as carnally secure as himself; so from talking
+they went to feasting, and from feasting to sporting; and so to some
+other matters.&nbsp; Now Emmanuel was yet in the town of Mansoul, and
+he wisely observed their doings.&nbsp; My Lord Mayor, my Lord Willbewill,
+and Mr. Recorder were also all taken with the words of this tattling
+Diabolonian gentleman, forgetting that their Prince had given them warning
+before to take heed that they were not beguiled with any Diabolonian
+sleight; he had further told them that the security of the now flourishing
+town of Mansoul did not so much lie in her present fortifications and
+force, as in her so using of what she had, as might oblige her Emmanuel
+to abide within her castle.&nbsp; For the right doctrine of Emmanuel
+was, that the town of Mansoul should take heed that they forgot not
+his Father&rsquo;s love and his; also, that they should so demean themselves
+as to continue to keep themselves therein.&nbsp; Now this was not the
+way to do it, namely, to fall in love with one of the Diabolonians,
+and with such an one too as Mr. Carnal-Security was, and to be led up
+and down by the nose by him; they should have heard their Prince, feared
+their Prince, loved their Prince, and have stoned this naughty pack
+to death, and took care to have walked in the ways of their Prince&rsquo;s
+prescribing: for then should their peace have been as a river, when
+their righteousness had been like the waves of the sea.<br>
+<br>
+Now when Emmanuel perceived that through the policy of Mr. Carnal-Security
+the hearts of the men of Mansoul were chilled and abated in their practical
+love to him,<br>
+<br>
+First.&nbsp; He bemoans them, and, condoles their state with the Secretary,
+saying, &lsquo;Oh that my people had hearkened unto me, and that Mansoul
+had walked in my ways!&nbsp; I would have fed them with the finest of
+the wheat; and with honey out of the rock would I have sustained them.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+This done, he said in his heart, &lsquo;I will return to the court,
+and go to my place, till Mansoul shall consider and acknowledge their
+offence.&rsquo;&nbsp; And he did so, and the cause and manner of his
+going away from them was, that Mansoul declined him, as is manifest
+in these particulars.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;1. They left off their former way of visiting him, they came
+not to his royal palace as afore.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;2. They did not regard, nor yet take notice, that he came or
+came not to visit them.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;3. The love-feasts that had wont to be between their Prince and
+them, though he made them still, and called them to them, yet they neglected
+to come to them, or to be delighted with them.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;4. They waited not for his counsels, but began to be headstrong
+and confident in themselves, concluding that now they were strong and
+invincible, and that Mansoul was secure, and beyond all reach of the
+foe, and that her state must needs be unalterable for ever.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Now, as was said, Emmanuel perceiving that by the craft of Mr. Carnal-Security,
+the town of Mansoul was taken off from their dependence upon him, and
+upon his Father by him, and set upon what by them was bestowed upon
+it; he first, as I said, bemoaned their state, then he used means to
+make them understand that the way that they went on in was dangerous:
+for he sent my Lord High Secretary to them, to forbid them such ways;
+but twice when he came to them, he found them at dinner in Mr. Carnal-Security&rsquo;s
+parlour; and perceiving also that they were not willing to reason about
+matters concerning their good, he took grief and went his way; the which
+when he had told to the Prince Emmanuel, he took offence, and was grieved
+also, and so made provision to return to his Father&rsquo;s court.<br>
+<br>
+Now, the methods of his withdrawing, as I was saying before, were thus:-<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;1. Even while he was yet with them in Mansoul, he kept himself
+close, and more retired than formerly.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;2. His speech was not now, if he came in their company, so pleasant
+and familiar as formerly.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;3. Nor did he, as in times past, send to Mansoul, from his table,
+those dainty bits which he was wont to do.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;4. Nor when they came to visit him, as now and then they would,
+would he be so easily spoken with as they found him to be in times past.&nbsp;
+They might now knock once, yea, twice, but he would seem not at all
+to regard them; whereas formerly at the sound of their feet he would
+up and run, and meet them halfway, and take them too, and lay them in
+his bosom.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+But thus Emmanuel carried it now, and by this his carriage he sought
+to make them bethink themselves, and return to him.&nbsp; But, alas!
+they did not consider, they did not know his ways, they regarded not,
+they were not touched with these, nor with the true remembrance of former
+favours.&nbsp; Wherefore what does he but in private manner withdraw
+himself, first from his palace, then to the gate of the town, and so
+away from Mansoul he goes, till they should acknowledge their offence,
+and more earnestly seek his face.&nbsp; Mr. God&rsquo;s-Peace also laid
+down his commission, and would for the present act no longer in the
+town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+Thus they walked contrary to him, and he again, by way of retaliation,
+walked contrary to them.&nbsp; But, alas! by this time they were so
+hardened in their way, and had so drunk in the doctrine of Mr. Carnal-Security,
+that the departing of their Prince touched them not, nor was he remembered
+by them when gone; and so, of consequence, his absence not condoled
+by them.<br>
+<br>
+Now, there was a day wherein this old gentleman, Mr. Carnal-Security,
+did again make a feast for the town of Mansoul; and there was at that
+time in the town one Mr. Godly-Fear, one now but little set by, though
+formerly one of great request.&nbsp; This man, old Carnal-Security,
+had a mind, if possible, to gull, and debauch, and abuse, as he did
+the rest, and therefore he now bids him to the feast with his neighbours.&nbsp;
+So the day being come, they prepare, and he goes and appears with the
+rest of the guests; and being all set at the table, they did eat and
+drink, and were merry, even all but this one man: for Mr. Godly-Fear
+sat like a stranger, and did neither eat nor was merry.&nbsp; The which,
+when Mr. Carnal-Security perceived, he presently addressed himself in
+a speech thus to him:-<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Mr. Godly-Fear, are you not well?&nbsp; You seem to be ill of
+body or mind, or both.&nbsp; I have a cordial of Mr. Forget-Good&rsquo;s
+making, the which, sir, if you will take a dram of, I hope it may make
+you bonny and blithe, and so make you more fit for us, feasting companions.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Unto whom the good old gentleman discreetly replied, &lsquo;Sir, I thank
+you for all things courteous and civil; but for your cordial I have
+no list thereto.&nbsp; But a word to the natives of Mansoul: You, the
+elders and chief of Mansoul, to me it is strange to see you so jocund
+and merry, when the town of Mansoul is in such woeful case.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said Mr. Carnal-Security, &lsquo;You want sleep, good air, I doubt.&nbsp;
+If you please, lie down, and take a nap, and we meanwhile will be merry.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said the good man as follows: &lsquo;Sir, if you were not destitute
+of an honest heart, you could not do as you have done and do.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said Mr. Carnal-Security, &lsquo;Why?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+<i>Godly</i>.&nbsp; Nay, pray interrupt me not.&nbsp; It is true the
+town of Mansoul was strong, and, with a <i>proviso</i>, impregnable;
+but you, the townsmen, have weakened it, and it now lies obnoxious to
+its foes.&nbsp; Nor is it a time to flatter, or be silent; it is you,
+Mr. Carnal-Security, that have wilily stripped Mansoul, and driven her
+glory from her; you have pulled down her towers, you have broken down
+her gates, you have spoiled her locks and bars.<br>
+<br>
+And now, to explain myself: from that time that my lords of Mansoul,
+and you, sir, grew so great, from that time the Strength of Mansoul
+has been offended, and now he is arisen and is gone.&nbsp; If any shall
+question the truth of my words, I will answer him by this, and suchlike
+questions.&nbsp; &lsquo;Where is the Prince Emmanuel?&nbsp; When did
+a man or woman in Mansoul see him?&nbsp; When did you hear from him,
+or taste any of his dainty bits?&rsquo;&nbsp; You are now a feasting
+with this Diabolonian monster, but he is not your Prince.&nbsp; I say,
+therefore, though enemies from without, had you taken heed, could not
+have made a prey of you, yet since you have sinned against your Prince,
+your enemies within have been too hard for you.<br>
+<br>
+Then said Mr. Carnal-Security, &lsquo;Fie! fie!&nbsp; Mr. Godly-Fear,
+fie! - will you never shake off your <i>timorousness</i>?&nbsp; Are
+you afraid of being sparrow-blasted?&nbsp; Who hath hurt you?&nbsp;
+Behold, I am on your side; only you are for doubting, and I am for being
+confident.&nbsp; Besides, is this a time to be sad in?&nbsp; A feast
+is made for mirth; why, then, do you now, to your shame, and our trouble,
+break out into such passionate melancholy language, when you should
+eat and drink, and be merry?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said Mr. Godly-Fear again, &lsquo;I may well be sad, for Emmanuel
+is gone from Mansoul.&nbsp; I say again, he is gone, and you, sir, are
+the man that has driven him away; yea, he is gone without so much as
+acquainting the nobles of Mansoul with his going; and if that is not
+a sign of his anger, I am not acquainted with the methods of godliness.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;And now, my lords and gentlemen, for my speech is still to you,
+your gradual declining from him did provoke him gradually to depart
+from you, the which he did for some time, if perhaps you would have
+been made sensible thereby, and have been renewed by humbling yourselves;
+but when he saw that none would regard, nor lay these fearful beginnings
+of his anger and judgment to heart, he went away from this place; and
+this I saw with mine eye.&nbsp; Wherefore now, while you boast, your
+strength is gone; you are like the man that had lost his locks that
+before did wave about his shoulders.&nbsp; You may, with this lord of
+your feast, shake yourselves, and conclude to do as at other times;
+but since without him you can do nothing, and he is departed from you,
+turn your feast into a sigh, and your mirth into lamentation.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then the subordinate preacher, old Mr. Conscience by name, he that of
+old was Recorder of Mansoul, being startled at what was said, began
+to second it thus:-<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Indeed, my brethren,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;I fear that Mr.
+Godly-Fear tells us true: I, for my part, have not seen my Prince a
+long season.&nbsp; I cannot remember the day, for my part; nor can I
+answer Mr. Godly-Fear&rsquo;s question.&nbsp; I doubt, I am afraid that
+all is nought with Mansoul.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+<i>Godly</i>.&nbsp; Nay, I know that you shall not find him in Mansoul,
+for he is departed and gone; yea, and gone for the faults of the elders,
+and for that they rewarded his grace with unsufferable unkindness.<br>
+<br>
+Then did the subordinate preacher look as if he would fall down dead
+at the table; also all there present, except the man of the house, began
+to look pale and wan.&nbsp; But having a little recovered themselves,
+and jointly agreeing to believe Mr. Godly-Fear and his sayings, they
+began to consult what was best to be done, (now Mr. Carnal-Security
+was gone into his withdrawing-room, for he liked not such dumpish doings,)
+both to the man of the house for drawing them into evil, and also to
+recover Emmanuel&rsquo;s love.<br>
+<br>
+And, with that, that saying of their Prince came very hot into their
+minds, which he had bidden them do to such as were false prophets that
+should arise to delude the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; So they took Mr. Carnal-Security
+(concluding that he must be he) and burned his house upon him with fire;
+for he also was a Diabolonian by nature.<br>
+<br>
+So when this was passed and over, they bespeed themselves to look for
+Emmanuel their Prince; and they sought him, but they found him not.&nbsp;
+Then were they more confirmed in the truth of Mr. Godly-Fear&rsquo;s
+sayings, and began also severely to reflect upon themselves for their
+so vile and ungodly doings; for they concluded now that it was through
+them that their Prince had left them.<br>
+<br>
+Then they agreed and went to my Lord Secretary, (him whom before they
+refused to hear - him whom they had grieved with their doings,) to know
+of him, for he was a seer, and could tell where Emmanuel was, and how
+they might direct a petition to him.&nbsp; But the Lord Secretary would
+not admit them to a conference about this matter, nor would admit them
+to his royal place of abode, nor come out to them to show them his face
+or intelligence.<br>
+<br>
+And now was it a day gloomy and dark, a day of clouds and of thick darkness
+with Mansoul.&nbsp; Now they saw that they had been foolish, and began
+to perceive what the company and prattle of Mr. Carnal-Security had
+done, and what desperate damage his swaggering words had brought poor
+Mansoul into.&nbsp; But what further it was likely to cost them they
+were ignorant of.&nbsp; Now Mr. Godly-Fear began again to be in repute
+with the men of the town; yea, they were ready to look upon him as a
+prophet.<br>
+<br>
+Well, when the Sabbath day was come, they went to hear their subordinate
+preacher; but oh, how he did thunder and lighten this day!&nbsp; His
+text was that in the prophet Jonah: &lsquo;They that observe lying vanities
+forsake their own mercy.&rsquo;&nbsp; But there was then such power
+and authority in that sermon, and such a dejection seen in the countenances
+of the people that day, that the like hath seldom been heard or seen.&nbsp;
+The people, when sermon was done, were scarce able to go to their homes,
+or to betake themselves to their employs the week after; they were so
+sermon-smitten, and also so sermon-sick by being smitten, that they
+knew not what to do.<br>
+<br>
+He did not only show to Mansoul their sin, but did tremble before them,
+under the sense of his own, still crying out of himself, as he preached
+to them, &lsquo;Unhappy man that I am! that I should do so wicked a
+thing!&nbsp; That I, a preacher! whom the Prince did set up to teach
+to Mansoul his law, should myself live senseless and sottishly here,
+and be one of the first found in transgression!&nbsp; This transgression
+also fell within my precincts; I should have cried out against the wickedness;
+but I let Mansoul lie wallowing in it, until it had driven Emmanuel
+from its borders!&rsquo;&nbsp; With these things he also charged all
+the lords and gentry of Mansoul, to the almost distracting of them.<br>
+<br>
+About this time, also, there was a great sickness in the town of Mansoul,
+and most of the inhabitants were greatly afflicted.&nbsp; Yea, the captains
+also, and men of war, were brought thereby to a languishing condition,
+and that for a long time together; so that in case of an invasion, nothing
+could to purpose now have been done, either by the townsmen or field
+officers.&nbsp; Oh, how many pale faces, weak hands, feeble knees, and
+staggering men were now seen to walk the streets of Mansoul!&nbsp; Here
+were groans, there pants, and yonder lay those that were ready to faint.<br>
+<br>
+The garments, too, which Emmanuel had given them were but in a sorry
+case; some were rent, some were torn, and all in a nasty condition;
+some also did hang so loosely upon them, that the next bush they came
+at was ready to pluck them off.<br>
+<br>
+After some time spent in this sad and desolate condition, the subordinate
+preacher called for a day of fasting, and to humble themselves for being
+so wicked against the great Shaddai and his Son.&nbsp; And he desired
+that Captain Boanerges would preach.&nbsp; So he consented to do it;
+and the day being come, and his text was this, &lsquo;Cut it down, why
+cumbereth it the ground?&rsquo;&nbsp; And a very smart sermon he made
+upon the place.&nbsp; First, he showed what was the occasion of the
+words, namely, because the fig-tree was barren; then he showed what
+was contained in the sentence, namely, repentance, or utter desolation.&nbsp;
+He then showed, also, by whose authority this sentence was pronounced,
+and that was by Shaddai himself.&nbsp; And, lastly, he showed the reasons
+of the point, and then concluded his sermon.&nbsp; But he was very pertinent
+in the application, insomuch that he made poor Mansoul tremble.&nbsp;
+For this sermon, as well as the former, wrought much upon the hearts
+of the men of Mansoul; yea, it greatly helped to keep awake those that
+were roused by the preaching that went before.&nbsp; So that now throughout
+the whole town, there was little or nothing to be heard or seen but
+sorrow, and mourning, and woe.<br>
+<br>
+Now, after sermon, they got together and consulted what was best to
+be done.&nbsp; &lsquo;But,&rsquo; said the subordinate preacher, &lsquo;I
+will do nothing of mine own head, without advising with my neighbour
+Mr. Godly-Fear.&nbsp; For if he had aforehand understood more of the
+mind of our Prince than we, I do not know but he also may have it now,
+even now we are turning again to virtue.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+So they called and sent for Mr. Godly-Fear, and he forthwith appeared.&nbsp;
+Then they desired that he would further show his opinion about what
+they had best to do. Then said the old gentleman as followeth: &lsquo;It
+is my opinion that this town of Mansoul should, in this day of her distress,
+draw up and send an humble petition to their offended Prince Emmanuel,
+that he, in his favour and grace, will turn again unto you, and not
+keep anger for ever.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+When the townsmen had heard this speech, they did, with one consent,
+agree to his advice; so they did presently draw up their request, and
+the next was, But who shall carry it?&nbsp; At last they did all agree
+to send it by my Lord Mayor.&nbsp; So he accepted of the service, and
+addressed himself to his journey; and went and came to the court of
+Shaddai, whither Emmanuel the Prince of Mansoul was gone.&nbsp; But
+the gate was shut, and a strict watch kept thereat; so that the petitioner
+was forced to stand without for a great while together.&nbsp; Then he
+desired that some would go into the Prince and tell him who stood at
+the gate, and what his business was.&nbsp; So one went and told to Shaddai,
+and to Emmanuel his Son, that the Lord Mayor of the town of Mansoul
+stood without at the gate of the King&rsquo;s court, desiring to be
+admitted into the presence of the Prince, the King&rsquo;s Son.&nbsp;
+He also told what was the Lord Mayor&rsquo;s errand, both to the King
+and his Son Emmanuel.&nbsp; But the Prince would not come down, nor
+admit that the gate should be opened to him, but sent him an answer
+to this effect: &lsquo;They have turned their back unto me, and not
+their face; but now in the time of their trouble they say to me, Arise,
+and save us.&nbsp; But can they not now go to Mr. Carnal-Security, to
+whom they went when they turned from me, and make him their leader,
+their lord, and their protection now in their trouble; why now in their
+trouble do they visit me, since in their prosperity they went astray?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+The answer made my Lord Mayor look black in the face; it troubled, it
+perplexed, it rent him sore.&nbsp; And now he began again to see what
+it was to be familiar with Diabolonians, such as Mr. Carnal-Security
+was.&nbsp; When he saw that at court, as yet, there was little help
+to be expected, either for himself or friends in Mansoul, he smote upon
+his breast, and returned weeping, and all the way bewailing the lamentable
+state of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+Well, when he was come within sight of the town, the elders and chief
+of the people of Mansoul went out at the gate to meet him, and to salute
+him, and to know how he sped at court.&nbsp; But he told them his tale
+in so doleful a manner, that they all cried out, and mourned, and wept.&nbsp;
+Wherefore they threw ashes and dust upon their heads, and put sackcloth
+upon their loins, and went crying out through the town of Mansoul; the
+which, when the rest of the townsfolk saw, they all mourned and wept.&nbsp;
+This, therefore, was a day of rebuke and trouble, and of anguish to
+the town of Mansoul, and also of great distress.<br>
+<br>
+After some time, when they had somewhat refrained themselves, they came
+together to consult again what by them was yet to be done; and they
+asked advice, as they did before, of that reverend Mr. Godly-Fear, who
+told them that there was no way better than to do as they had done,
+nor would he that they should be discouraged at all with that they had
+met with at court; yea, though several of their petitions should be
+answered with nought but silence or rebuke: &lsquo;For,&rsquo; said
+he, &lsquo;it is the way of the wise Shaddai to make men wait and to
+exercise patience, and it should be the way of them in want, to be willing
+to stay his leisure.<br>
+<br>
+Then they took courage, and sent again and again, and again, and again;
+for there was not now one day, nor an hour that went over Mansoul&rsquo;s
+head, wherein a man might not have met upon the road one or other riding
+post, sounding the horn from Mansoul to the court of the King Shaddai;
+and all with letters petitionary in behalf of, and for the Prince&rsquo;s
+return to Mansoul.&nbsp; The road, I say, was now full of messengers,
+going and returning, and meeting one another; some from the court, and
+some from Mansoul; and this was the work of the miserable town of Mansoul,
+all that long, that sharp, that cold and tedious winter.<br>
+<br>
+Now if you have not forgot, you may yet remember that I told you before,
+that after Emmanuel had taken Mansoul, yea, and after that he had new
+modelled the town, there remained in several lurking places of the corporation
+many of the old Diabolonians, that either came with the tyrant when
+he invaded and took the town, or that had there, by reason of unlawful
+mixtures, their birth and breeding, and bringing up.&nbsp; And their
+holes, dens, and lurking places were in, under, or about the wall of
+the town.&nbsp; Some of their names are the Lord Fornication, the Lord
+Adultery, the Lord Murder, the Lord Anger, the Lord Lasciviousness,
+the Lord Deceit, the Lord Evil-eye, the Lord Blasphemy, and that horrible
+villain, the old and dangerous Lord Covetousness.&nbsp; These, as I
+told you, with many more, had yet their abode in the town of Mansoul,
+and that after that Emmanuel had driven their prince Diabolus out of
+the castle.<br>
+<br>
+Against these the good Prince did grant a commission to the Lord Willbewill
+and others, yea, to the whole town of Mansoul, to seek, take, secure,
+and destroy any or all that they could lay hands of, for that they were
+Diabolonians by nature, enemies to the Prince, and those that sought
+to ruin the blessed town of Mansoul.&nbsp; But the town of Mansoul did
+not pursue this warrant, but neglected to look after, to apprehend,
+to secure, and to destroy these Diabolonians.&nbsp; Wherefore what do
+these villains but by degrees take courage to put forth their heads,
+and to show themselves to the inhabitants of the town.&nbsp; Yea, and
+as I was told, some of the men of Mansoul grew too familiar with some
+of them, to the sorrow of the corporation, as you yet will hear more
+of in time and place.<br>
+<br>
+Well, when the Diabolonian lords that were left perceived that Mansoul
+had, through sinning, offended Emmanuel their Prince, and that he had
+withdrawn himself and was gone, what do they but plot the ruin of the
+town of Mansoul.&nbsp; So upon a time they met together at the hold
+of one Mr. Mischief, who was also a Diabolonian, and there consulted
+how they might deliver up Mansoul into the hands of Diabolus again.&nbsp;
+Now some advised one way, and some another, every man according to his
+own liking.&nbsp; At last my Lord Lasciviousness propounded, whether
+it might not be best, in the first place, for some of those that were
+Diabolonians in Mansoul, to adventure to offer themselves for servants
+to some of the natives of the town; &lsquo;for,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;if
+they so do, and Mansoul shall accept of them, they may for us, and for
+Diabolus our Lord, make the taking of the town of Mansoul more easy
+than otherwise it will be.&rsquo;&nbsp; But then stood up the Lord Murder,
+and said, &lsquo;This may not be done at this time; for Mansoul is now
+in a kind of a rage, because by our friend, Mr. Carnal-Security, she
+hath been once ensnared already, and made to offend against her Prince;
+and how shall she reconcile herself unto her lord again, but by the
+heads of these men?&nbsp; Besides, we know that they have in commission
+to take and slay us wherever they shall find us; let us, therefore,
+be wise as foxes: when we are dead, we can do them no hurt; but while
+we live, we may.&rsquo;&nbsp; Thus, when they had tossed the matter
+to and fro, they jointly agreed that a letter should forthwith be sent
+away to Diabolus in their name, by which the state of the town of Mansoul
+should be showed him, and how much it is under the frowns of their Prince.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;We may also,&rsquo; said some, &lsquo;let him know our intentions,
+and ask of him his advice in the case.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+So a letter was presently framed, the contents of which were these:-<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;To our great lord, the Prince Diabolus, dwelling below in the
+infernal cave:<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;O great father, and mighty Prince Diabolus, we, the true Diabolonians
+yet remaining in the rebellious town of Mansoul, having received our
+beings from thee, and our nourishment at thy hands, cannot with content
+and quiet endure to behold, as we do this day, how thou art dispraised,
+disgraced, and reproached among the inhabitants of this town; nor is
+thy long absence at all delightful to us, because greatly to our detriment.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;The reason of this our writing unto our lord, is for that we
+are not altogether without hope that this town may become thy habitation
+again; for it is greatly declined from its Prince Emmanuel; and he is
+uprisen, and is departed from them: yea, and though they send, and send,
+and send, and send after him to return to them, yet can they not prevail,
+nor get good words from him.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;There has been also of late, and is yet remaining, a very great
+sickness and fainting among them; and that not only upon the poorer
+sort of the town, but upon the lords, captains, and chief gentry of
+the place, (we only who are of the Diabolonians by nature remain well,
+lively, and strong,) so that through their great transgression on the
+one hand, and their dangerous sickness on the other, we judge they lie
+open to thy hand and power.&nbsp; If, therefore, it shall stand with
+thy horrible cunning, and with the cunning of the rest of the princes
+with thee, to come and make an attempt to take Mansoul again, send us
+word, and we shall to our utmost power be ready to deliver it into thy
+hand.&nbsp; Or if what we have said shall not by thy fatherhood be thought
+best and most meet to be done, send us thy mind in a few words, and
+we are all ready to follow thy counsel to the hazarding of our lives,
+and what else we have.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Given under our hands the day and date above-written, after a
+close consultation at the house of Mr. Mischief, who yet is alive and
+hath his place in our desirable town of Mansoul.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+When Mr. Profane (for he was the carrier) was come with his letter to
+Hell-Gate Hill, he knocked at the brazen gates for entrance.&nbsp; Then
+did Cerberus, the porter, for he is the keeper of that gate, open to
+Mr. Profane, to whom he delivered his letter, which he had brought from
+the Diabolonians in Mansoul.&nbsp; So he carried it in, and presented
+it to Diabolus his lord, and said, &lsquo;Tidings, my lord, from Mansoul,
+from our trusty friends in Mansoul.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then came together from all places of the den Beelzebub, Lucifer, Apollyon,
+with the rest of the rabblement there, to hear what news from Mansoul.&nbsp;
+So the letter was broken up and read, and Cerberus he stood by.&nbsp;
+When the letter was openly read, and the contents thereof spread into
+all the corners of the den, command was given that, without let or stop,
+dead-man&rsquo;s bell should be rung for joy.&nbsp; So the bell was
+rung, and the princes rejoiced that Mansoul was likely to come to ruin.&nbsp;
+Now, the clapper of the bell went, &lsquo;The town of Mansoul is coming
+to dwell with us: make room for the town of Mansoul.&rsquo;&nbsp; This
+bell therefore they did ring, because they did hope that they should
+have Mansoul again.<br>
+<br>
+Now, when they had performed this their horrible ceremony, they got
+together again to consult what answer to send to their friends in Mansoul;
+and some advised one thing, and some another: but at length, because
+the business required haste, they left the whole business to the prince
+Diabolus, judging him the most proper lord of the place.&nbsp; So he
+drew up a letter as he thought fit, in answer to what Mr. Profane had
+brought, and sent it to the Diabolonians that did dwell in Mansoul,
+by the same hand that had brought theirs to him; and these were the
+contents thereof:-<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;To our offspring, the high and mighty Diabolonians that yet dwell
+in the town of Mansoul, Diabolus, the great prince of Mansoul, wisheth
+a prosperous issue and conclusion of those many brave enterprises, conspiracies,
+and designs, that you, of your love and respect to our honour, have
+in your hearts to attempt to do against Mansoul.&nbsp; Beloved children
+and disciples, my Lord Fornication, Adultery, and the rest, we have
+here, in our desolate den, received, to our highest joy and content,
+your welcome letter, by the hand of our trusty Mr. Profane; and to show
+how acceptable your tidings were, we rang out our bell for gladness;
+for we rejoiced as much as we could, when we perceived that yet we had
+friends in Mansoul, and such as sought our honour and revenge in the
+ruin of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; We also rejoiced to hear that they
+are in a degenerated condition, and that they have offended their Prince,
+and that he is gone.&nbsp; Their sickness also pleaseth us, as does
+also your health, might, and strength.&nbsp; Glad also would we be,
+right horribly beloved, could we get this town into our clutches again.&nbsp;
+Nor will we be sparing of spending our wit, our cunning, our craft,
+and hellish inventions to bring to a wished conclusion this your brave
+beginning in order thereto.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;And take this for your comfort, (our birth, and our offspring,)
+that shall we again surprise it and take it, we will attempt to put
+all your foes to the sword, and will make you the great lords and captains
+of the place.&nbsp; Nor need you fear, if ever we get it again, that
+we after that shall be cast out any more; for we will come with more
+strength, and so lay far more fast hold than at the first we did.&nbsp;
+Besides, it is the law of that Prince that now they own, that if we
+get them a second time, they shall be ours for ever.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Do you, therefore, our trusty Diabolonians, yet more pry into,
+and endeavour to spy out the weakness of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+We also would that you yourselves do attempt to weaken them more and
+more.&nbsp; Send us word also by what means you think we had best to
+attempt the regaining thereof: namely, whether by persuasion to a vain
+and loose life; or, whether by tempting them to doubt and despair; or,
+whether by blowing up of the town by the gunpowder of pride, and self-conceit.&nbsp;
+Do you also, O ye brave Diabolonians, and true sons of the pit, be always
+in a readiness to make a most hideous assault within, when we shall
+be ready to storm it without.&nbsp; Now speed you in your project, and
+we in our desires, to the utmost power of our gates, which is the wish
+of your great Diabolus, Mansoul&rsquo;s enemy, and him that trembles
+when he thinks of judgment to come.&nbsp; All the blessings of the pit
+be upon you, and so we close up our letter.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Given at the pit&rsquo;s mouth, by the joint consent of all the
+princes of darkness, to be sent, to the force and power that we have
+yet remaining in Mansoul, by the hand of Mr. Profane, by me, Diabolus.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+This letter, as was said, was sent to Mansoul, to the Diabolonians that
+yet remained there, and that yet inhabited the wall, from the dark dungeon
+of Diabolus, by the hand of Mr. Profane, by whom they also in Mansoul
+sent theirs to the pit.&nbsp; Now, when this Mr. Profane had made his
+return, and was come to Mansoul again, he went and came as he was wont
+to the house of Mr. Mischief, for there was the conclave, and the place
+where the contrivers were met.&nbsp; Now, when they saw that their messenger
+was returned safe and sound, they were greatly gladded thereat.&nbsp;
+Then he presented them with his letter which he had brought from Diabolus
+for them; the which, when they had read and considered, did much augment
+their gladness.&nbsp; They asked him after the welfare of their friends,
+as how their Lord Diabolus, Lucifer, and Beelzebub did, with the rest
+of those of the den.&nbsp; To which this Profane made answer, &lsquo;Well,
+well, my lords; they are well, even as well as can be in their place.&nbsp;
+They also,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;did ring for joy at the reading of
+your letter, as you well perceived by this when you read it.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Now, as was said, when they had read their letter, and perceived that
+it encouraged them in their work, they fell to their way of contriving
+again, namely, how they might complete their Diabolonian design upon
+Mansoul.&nbsp; And the first thing that they agreed upon was to keep
+all things from Mansoul as close as they could.&nbsp; &lsquo;Let it
+not be known, let not Mansoul be acquainted with what we design against
+it.&rsquo;&nbsp; The next thing was, how, or by what means, they should
+try to bring to pass the ruin and overthrow of Mansoul; and one said
+after this manner, and another said after that.&nbsp; Then stood up
+Mr. Deceit, and said, &lsquo;My right Diabolonian friends, our lords,
+and the high ones of the deep dungeon, do propound unto us these three
+ways.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;1. Whether we had best to seek its ruin by making Mansoul loose
+and vain.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;2. Or whether by driving them to doubt and despair.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;3. Or whether by endeavouring to blow them up by the gunpowder
+of pride and self-conceit.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Now, I think, if we shall tempt them to pride, that may do something;
+and if we tempt them to wantonness, that may help.&nbsp; But, in my
+mind, if we could drive them into desperation, that would knock the
+nail on the head; for then we should have them, in the first place,
+question the truth of the love of the heart of their Prince towards
+them, and that will disgust him much.&nbsp; This, if it works well,
+will make them leave off quickly their way of sending petitions to him;
+then farewell earnest solicitations for help and supply; for then this
+conclusion lies naturally before them, &ldquo;As good do nothing, as
+do to no purpose.&rdquo;&rsquo;&nbsp; So to Mr. Deceit they unanimously
+did consent.<br>
+<br>
+Then the next question was, But how shall we do to bring this our project
+to pass? and it was answered by the same gentleman - that this might
+be the best way to do it: &lsquo;Even let,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;so
+many of our friends as are willing to venture themselves for the promoting
+of their prince&rsquo;s cause, disguise themselves with apparel, change
+their names, and go into the market like far country-men, and proffer
+to let themselves for servants to the famous town of Mansoul, and let
+them pretend to do for their masters as beneficially as may be; for
+by so doing they may, if Mansoul shall hire them, in little time so
+corrupt and defile the corporation, that her now Prince shall be not
+only further offended with them, but in conclusion shall spue them out
+of his mouth.&nbsp; And when this is done, our prince Diabolus shall
+prey upon them with ease: yea, of themselves they shall fall into the
+mouth of the cater.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+This project was no sooner propounded, but was as highly accepted, and
+forward were all Diabolonians now to engage in so delicate an enterprise:
+but it was not thought fit that all should do thus; wherefore they pitched
+upon two or three, namely, the Lord Covetousness, the Lord Lasciviousness,
+and the Lord Anger.&nbsp; The Lord Covetousness called himself by the
+name of Prudent-Thrifty; the Lord Lasciviousness called himself by the
+name of Harmless-Mirth; and the Lord Anger called himself by the name
+of Good-Zeal.<br>
+<br>
+So upon a market-day they came into the market-place, three lusty fellows
+they were to look on, and they were clothed in sheep&rsquo;s russet,
+which was also now in a manner as white as were the white robes of the
+men of Mansoul.&nbsp; Now the men could speak the language of Mansoul
+well.&nbsp; So when they were come into the market-place, and had offered
+to let themselves to the townsmen, they were presently taken up; for
+they asked but little wages, and promised to do their masters great
+service.<br>
+<br>
+Mr. Mind hired Prudent-Thrifty, and Mr. Godly-Fear hired Good-Zeal.&nbsp;
+True, this fellow Harmless-Mirth did hang a little in hand, and could
+not so soon get him a master as the others did, because the town of
+Mansoul was now in Lent, but after a while, because Lent was almost
+out, the Lord Willbewill hired Harmless-Mirth to be both his waiting
+man and his lackey: and thus they got them masters.<br>
+<br>
+&nbsp;These villains now being got thus far into the houses of the men
+of Mansoul, quickly began to do great mischief therein; for, being filthy,
+arch, and sly, they quickly corrupted the families where they were;
+yea, they tainted their masters much, especially this Prudent-Thrifty,
+and him they call Harmless-Mirth.&nbsp; True, he that went under the
+visor of Good-Zeal, was not so well liked of his master; for he quickly
+found that he was but a counterfeit rascal; the which when the fellow
+perceived, with speed he made his escape from the house, or I doubt
+not but his master had hanged him.<br>
+<br>
+Well, when these vagabonds had thus far carried on their design, and
+had corrupted the town as much as they could, in the next place they
+considered with themselves at what time their prince Diabolus without,
+and themselves within the town, should make an attempt to seize upon
+Mansoul; and they all agreed upon this, that a market-day would be best
+for that work; for why?&nbsp; Then will the townsfolk be busy in their
+ways: and always take this for a rule, when people are most busy in
+the world, they least fear a surprise.&nbsp; &lsquo;We also then,&rsquo;
+said they, &lsquo;shall be able with less suspicion to gather ourselves
+together for the work of our friends and lords; yea, and in such a day,
+if we shall attempt our work, and miss it, we may, when they shall give
+us the rout, the better hide ourselves in the crowd, and escape.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+These things being thus far agreed upon by them, they wrote another
+letter to Diabolus, and sent it by the hand to Mr. Profane, the contents
+of which were these:-<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;The lords of Looseness send to the great and high Diabolus from
+our dens, caves, holes, and strongholds, in and about the wall of the
+town of Mansoul, greeting:<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Our great lord, and the nourisher of our lives, Diabolus - how
+glad we were when we heard of your fatherhood&rsquo;s readiness to comply
+with us, and help forward our design in our attempts to ruin Mansoul,
+none can tell but those who, as we do, set themselves against all appearance
+of good, when and wheresoever we find it.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Touching the encouragement that your greatness is pleased to
+give us to continue to devise, contrive, and study the utter desolation
+of Mansoul, that we are not solicitous about: for we know right well
+that it cannot but be pleasing and profitable to us to see our enemies,
+and them that seek our lives, die at our feet, or fly before us.&nbsp;
+We therefore are still contriving, and that to the best of our cunning,
+to make this work most facile and easy to your lordships, and to us.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;First, we considered of that most hellishly cunning, compacted,
+threefold project, that by you was propounded to us in your last; and
+have concluded, that though to blow them up with the gunpowder of pride
+would do well, and to do it by tempting them to be loose and vain will
+help on, yet to contrive to bring them into the gulf of desperation,
+we think will do best of all.&nbsp; Now we, who are at your beck, have
+thought or two ways to do this: first we, for our parts, will make them
+as vile as we can, and then you with us, at a time appointed, shall
+be ready to fall upon them with the utmost force.&nbsp; And of all the
+nations that are at your whistle, we think that an army of doubters
+may be the most likely to attack and overcome the town of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+Thus shall we overcome these enemies, else the pit shall open her mouth
+upon them, and desperation shall thrust them down into it.&nbsp; We
+have also, to effect this so much by us desired design, sent already
+three of our trusty Diabolonians among them; they are disguised in garb,
+they have changed their names, and are now accepted of them; namely,
+Covetousness, Lasciviousness, and Anger.&nbsp; The name of Covetousness
+is changed to Prudent-Thrifty, and him Mr. Mind has hired, and is almost
+become as bad as our friend.&nbsp; Lasciviousness has changed his name
+to Harmless-Mirth, and he is got to be the Lord Willbewill&rsquo;s lackey;
+but he has made his master very wanton.&nbsp; Anger changed his name
+into Good-Zeal, and was entertained by Mr. Godly-Fear; but the peevish
+old gentleman took pepper in the nose, and turned our companion out
+of his house.&nbsp; Nay, he has informed us since that he ran away from
+him, or else his old master had hanged him up for his labour.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Now these have much helped forward our work and design upon Mansoul;
+for notwithstanding the spite and quarrelsome temper of the old gentleman
+last mentioned, the other two ply their business well, and are likely
+to ripen the work apace.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Our next project is, that it be concluded that you come upon
+the town upon a market-day, and that when they are upon the heat of
+their business; for then, to be sure, they will be most secure, and
+least think that an assault will be made upon them.&nbsp; They will
+also at such a time be less able to defend themselves, and to offend
+you in the prosecution of our design.&nbsp; And we your trusty (and
+we are sure your beloved) ones shall, when you shall make your furious
+assault without, be ready to second the business within.&nbsp; So shall
+we, in all likelihood, be able to put Mansoul to utter confusion, and
+to swallow them up before they can come to themselves.&nbsp; If your
+serpentine heads, most subtile dragons, and our highly esteemed lords
+can find out a better way than this, let us quickly know your minds.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;To the monsters of the infernal cave, from the house of Mr. Mischief
+in Mansoul, by the hand of Mr. Profane.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Now all the while that the raging runagates and hellish Diabolonians
+were thus contriving the ruin of the town of Mansoul, they (namely,
+the poor town itself) was in a sad and woeful case; partly because they
+had so grievously offended Shaddai and his Son, and partly because that
+the enemies thereby got strength within them afresh; and also because,
+though they had by many petitions made suit to the Prince Emmanuel,
+and to his Father Shaddai by him, for their pardon and favour, yet hitherto
+obtained they not one smile; but contrariwise, through the craft and
+subtilty of the domestic Diabolonians, their cloud was made to grow
+blacker and blacker, and their Emmanuel to stand at further distance.<br>
+<br>
+The sickness also did still greatly rage in Mansoul, both among the
+captains and the inhabitants of the town; and their enemies only were
+now lively and strong, and likely to become the head, whilst Mansoul
+was made the tail.<br>
+<br>
+By this time the letter last mentioned, that was written by the Diabolonians
+that yet lurked in the town of Mansoul, was conveyed to Diabolus in
+the black den, by the hand of Mr. Profane.&nbsp; He carried the letter
+by Hell-Gate Hill as afore, and conveyed it by Cerberus to his lord.<br>
+<br>
+But when Cerberus and Mr. Profane did meet, they were presently as great
+as beggars, and thus they fell into discourse about Mansoul, and about
+the project against her.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Ah! old friend,&rsquo; quoth Cerberus, &lsquo;art thou come to
+Hell-Gate Hill again?&nbsp; By St. Mary, I am glad to see thee!&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+<i>Prof</i>.&nbsp; Yes, my lord, I am come again about the concerns
+of the town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Cerb</i>.&nbsp; Prithee, tell me what condition is that town of Mansoul
+in at present?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Prof</i>.&nbsp; In a brave condition, my lord, for us, and for my
+lords, the lords of this place, I trow for they are greatly decayed
+as to godliness, and that is as well as our heart can wish; their Lord
+is greatly out with them, and that doth also please us well.&nbsp; We
+have already also a foot in their dish, for our Diabolonian friends
+are laid in their bosoms, and what do we lack but to be masters of the
+place!&nbsp; Besides, our trusty friends in Mansoul are daily plotting
+to betray it to the lords of this town; also the sickness rages bitterly
+among them; and that which makes up all, we hope at last to prevail.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said the dog of Hell-Gate, &lsquo;No time like this to assault
+them.&nbsp; I wish that the enterprise be followed close, and that the
+success desired may be soon effected: yea, I wish it for the poor Diabolonians&rsquo;
+sakes, that live in the continual fear of their lives in that traitorous
+town of Mansoul.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+<i>Prof</i>.&nbsp; The contrivance is almost finished, the lords in
+Mansoul that are Diabolonians are at it day and night, and the other
+are like silly doves; they want heart to be concerned with their state
+and to consider that ruin is at hand.&nbsp; Besides you may, yea, must
+think, when you put all things together, that there are many reasons
+that prevail with Diabolus to make what haste he can.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Cerb</i>.&nbsp; Thou hast said as it is; I am glad things are at
+this pass.&nbsp; Go in, my brave Profane, to my lords, they will give
+thee for thy welcome as good a <i>coranto</i> as the whole of this kingdom
+will afford.&nbsp; I have sent thy letter in already.<br>
+<br>
+Then Mr. Profane went into the den, and his lord Diabolus met him, and
+saluted him with, &lsquo;Welcome, my trusty servant: I have been made
+glad with thy letter.&rsquo;&nbsp; The rest of the lords of the pit
+gave him also their salutations.&nbsp; Then Profane, after obeisance
+made to them all, said, &lsquo;Let Mansoul be given to my lord Diabolus,
+and let him be her king for ever.&rsquo;&nbsp; And with that, the hollow
+belly and yawning gorge of hell gave so loud and hideous a groan, (for
+that is the music of that place,) that it made the mountains about it
+totter, as if they would fall in pieces.<br>
+<br>
+Now, after they had read and considered the letter, they consulted what
+answer to return; and the first that did speak to it was Lucifer.<br>
+<br>
+Then said he, &lsquo;The first project of the Diabolonians in Mansoul
+is likely to be lucky, and to take; namely, that they will, by all the
+ways and means they can, make Mansoul yet more vile and filthy: no way
+to destroy a soul like this.&nbsp; Our old friend Balaam went this way
+and prospered many years ago; let this therefore stand with us for a
+maxim, and be to Diabolonians for a general rule in all ages; for nothing
+can make this to fail but grace, in which I would hope that this town
+has no share.&nbsp; But whether to fall upon them on a market-day, because
+of their cumber in business, that I would should be under debate.&nbsp;
+And there is more reason why this head should be debated, than why some
+other should; because upon this will turn the whole of what we shall
+attempt.&nbsp; If we time not our business well, our whole project may
+fail.&nbsp; Our friends, the Diabolonians, say that a market-day is
+best; for then will Mansoul be most busy, and have fewest thoughts of
+a surprise.&nbsp; But what if also they should double their guards on
+those days? (and methinks nature and reason should teach them to do
+it;) and what if they should keep such a watch on those days as the
+necessity of their present case doth require? yea, what if their men
+should be always in arms on those days? then you may, my lords, be disappointed
+in your attempts, and may bring our friends in the town to utter danger
+of unavoidable ruin.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said the great Beelzebub, &lsquo;There is something in what my
+lord hath said; but his conjecture may, or may not fall out.&nbsp; Nor
+hath my lord laid it down as that which must not be receded from; for
+I know that he said it only to provoke to a warm debate thereabout.&nbsp;
+Therefore we must understand, if we can, whether the town of Mansoul
+has such sense and knowledge of her decayed state, and of the design
+that we have on foot against her, as doth provoke her to set watch and
+ward at her gates, and to double them on market-days.&nbsp; But if,
+after inquiry made, it shall be found that they are asleep, then any
+day will do, but a market-day is best; and this is my judgment in this
+case.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then quoth Diabolus, &lsquo;How should we know this?&rsquo; and it was
+answered, &lsquo;Inquire about it at the mouth of Mr. Profane.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+So Profane was called in, and asked the question, and he made his answer
+as follows:-<br>
+<br>
+<i>Prof</i>.&nbsp; My lords, so far as I can gather, this is at present
+the condition of the town of Mansoul: they are decayed in their faith
+and love; Emmanuel, their Prince, has given them the back; they send
+often by petition to fetch him again, but he maketh not haste to answer
+their request, nor is there much reformation among them.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Diab</i>.&nbsp; I am glad that they are backward in a reformation,
+but yet I am afraid of their petitioning.&nbsp; However, their looseness
+of life is a sign that there is not much heart in what they do, and
+without the heart things are little worth.&nbsp; But go on, my masters;
+I will divert you, my lords, no longer.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Beel</i>.&nbsp; If the case be so with Mansoul, as Mr. Profane has
+described it to be, it will be no great matter what day we assault it;
+not their prayers, nor their power will do them much service.<br>
+<br>
+When Beelzebub had ended his oration, then Apollyon did begin.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;My opinion,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;concerning this matter, is,
+that we go on fair and softly, not doing things in a hurry.&nbsp; Let
+our friends in Mansoul go on still to pollute and defile it, by seeking
+to draw it yet more into sin (for there is nothing like sin to devour
+Mansoul).&nbsp; If this be done, and it takes effect, Mansoul, of itself,
+will leave off to watch, to petition, or anything else that should tend
+to her security and safety; for she will forget her Emmanuel, she will
+not desire his company, and can she be gotten thus to live, her Prince
+will not come to her in haste.&nbsp; Our trusty friend, Mr. Carnal-Security,
+with one of his tricks did drive him out of the town; and why may not
+my Lord Covetousness, and my Lord Lasciviousness, by what they may do,
+keep him out of the town?&nbsp; And this I will tell you, (not because
+you know it not,) that two or three Diabolonians, if entertained and
+countenanced by the town of Mansoul, will do more to the keeping of
+Emmanuel from them, and towards making the town of Mansoul your own,
+than can an army of a legion that should be sent out from us to withstand
+him.&nbsp; Let, therefore, this first project that our friends in Mansoul
+have set on foot, be strongly and diligently carried on, with all cunning
+and craft imaginable; and let them send continually, under one guise
+or another, more and other of their men to play with the people of Mansoul;
+and then, perhaps, we shall not need to be at the charge of making a
+war upon them; or if that must of necessity be done, yet the more sinful
+they are, the more unable, to be sure, they will be to resist us, and
+then the more easily we shall overcome them.&nbsp; And besides, suppose
+(and that is the worst that can be supposed) that Emmanuel should come
+to them again, why may not the same means, or the like, drive him from
+them once more?&nbsp; Yea, why may he not, by their lapse into that
+sin again, be driven from them for ever, for the sake of which he was
+at the first driven from them for a season?&nbsp; And if this should
+happen, then away go with him his rams, his slings, his captains, his
+soldiers, and he leaveth Mansoul naked and bare.&nbsp; Yea, will not
+this town, when she sees herself utterly forsaken of her Prince, of
+her own accord open her gates again unto you, and make of you as in
+the days of old?&nbsp; But this must be done by time, a few days will
+not effect so great a work as this.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+So soon as Apollyon had made an end of speaking, Diabolus began to blow
+out his own malice, and to plead his own cause; and he said, &lsquo;My
+lords, and powers of the cave, my true and trusty friends, I have with
+much impatience, as becomes me, given ear to your long and tedious orations.&nbsp;
+But my furious gorge, and empty paunch, so lusteth after a repossession
+of my famous town of Mansoul, that whatever comes out, I can wait no
+longer to see the events of lingering projects.&nbsp; I must, and that
+without further delay, seek, by all means I can, to fill my insatiable
+gulf with the soul and body of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Therefore
+lend me your heads, your hearts, and your help, now I am going to recover
+my town of Mansoul.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+When the lords and princes of the pit saw the flaming desire that was
+in Diabolus to devour the miserable town of Mansoul, they left off to
+raise any more objections, but consented to lend him what strength they
+could, though had Apollyon&rsquo;s advice been taken, they had far more
+fearfully distressed the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; But, I say, they were
+willing to lend him what strength they could, not knowing what need
+they might have of him, when they should engage for themselves, as he.&nbsp;
+Wherefore they fell to advising about the next thing propounded, namely,
+what soldiers they were, and also how many, with whom Diabolus should
+go against the town of Mansoul to take it; and after some debate, it
+was concluded, according as in the letter the Diabolonians had suggested,
+that none were more fit for that expedition than an army of terrible
+doubters.&nbsp; They therefore concluded to send against Mansoul an
+army of sturdy doubters.&nbsp; The number thought fit to be employed
+in that service was between twenty and thirty thousand.&nbsp; So then
+the result of that great council of those high and mighty lords was
+- That Diabolus should even now, out of hand, beat up his drum for men
+in the land of Doubting, which land lieth upon the confines of the place
+called Hell-Gate Hill, for men that might be employed by him against
+the miserable town of Mansoul.&nbsp; It was also concluded, that these
+lords themselves should help him in the war, and that they would to
+that end head and manage his men.&nbsp; So they drew up a letter, and
+sent back to the Diabolonians that lurked in Mansoul, and that waited
+for the back-coming of Mr. Profane, to signify to them into what method
+and forwardness they at present had put their design.&nbsp; The contents
+whereof now follow:-<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;From the dark and horrible dungeon of hell, Diabolus with all
+the society of the princes of darkness, sends to our trusty ones, in
+and about the walls of the town of Mansoul, now impatiently waiting
+for our most devilish answer to their venomous and most poisonous design
+against the town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Our native ones, in whom from day to day we boast, and in whose
+actions all the year long we do greatly delight ourselves, we received
+your welcome, because highly esteemed letter, at the hand of our trusty
+and greatly beloved, the old gentleman, Mr. Profane.&nbsp; And do give
+you to understand, that when we had broken it up, and had read the contents
+thereof, to your amazing memory be it spoken, our yawning hollow-bellied
+place, where we are, made so hideous and yelling a noise for joy, that
+the mountains that stand round about Hell-Gate Hill, had like to have
+been shaken to pieces at the sound thereof.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;We could also do no less than admire your faithfulness to us,
+with the greatness of that subtilty that now hath showed itself to be
+in your heads to serve us against the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; For you
+have invented for us so excellent a method for our proceeding against
+that rebellious people, a more effectual cannot be thought of by all
+the wits of hell.&nbsp; The proposals, therefore, which now, at last,
+you have sent us, since we saw them, we have done little else but highly
+approved and admired them.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Nay, we shall, to encourage you in the profundity of your craft,
+let you know, that, at a full assembly and conclave of our princes and
+principalities of this place, your project was discoursed and tossed
+from one side of our cave to the other by their mightinesses; but a
+better, and as was by themselves judged, a more fit and proper way by
+all their wits, could not be invented, to surprise, take, and make our
+own, the rebellious town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Wherefore, in fine, all that was said that varied from what you
+had in your letter propounded, fell of itself to the ground, and yours
+only was stuck to by Diabolus, the prince; yea, his gaping gorge and
+yawning paunch was on fire to put your invention into execution.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;We therefore give you to understand that our stout, furious,
+and unmerciful Diabolus is raising, for your relief, and the ruin of
+the rebellious town of Mansoul, more than twenty thousand doubters to
+come against that people.&nbsp; They are all stout and sturdy men, and
+men that of old have been accustomed to war, and that can therefore
+well endure the drum.&nbsp; I say, he is doing this work of his with
+all the possible speed he can; for his heart and spirit is engaged in
+it.&nbsp; We desire, therefore, that, as you have hitherto stuck to
+us, and given us both advice and encouragement thus far, you still will
+prosecute our design; nor shall you lose, but be gainers thereby; yea,
+we intend to make you the lords of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;One thing may not by any means be omitted, that is, those with
+us do desire that every one of you that are in Mansoul would still use
+all your power, cunning, and skill, with delusive persuasions, yet to
+draw the town of Mansoul into more sin and wickedness, even that sin
+may be finished and bring forth death.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;For thus it is concluded with us, that the more vile, sinful,
+and debauched the town of Mansoul is, more backward will be their Emmanuel
+to come to their help, either by presence or other relief; yea, the
+more sinful, the more weak, and so the more unable will they be to make
+resistance when we shall make our assault upon them to swallow them
+up.&nbsp; Yea, that may cause that their mighty Shaddai himself may
+cast them out of his protection; yea, and send for his captains and
+soldiers home, with his slings and rams, and leave them naked and bare;
+and then the town of Mansoul will of itself open to us, and fall as
+the fig into the mouth of the eater.&nbsp; Yea, to be sure. that we
+then with a great deal of ease shall come upon her and overcome her.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;As to the time of our coming upon Mansoul, we, as yet, have not
+fully resolved upon that, though at present some of us think as you,
+that a market-day, or a market-day at night, will certainly be the best.&nbsp;
+However, do you be ready, and when you shall hear our roaring drum without,
+do you be as busy to make the most horrible confusion within.&nbsp;
+So shall Mansoul certainly be distressed before and behind, and shall
+not know which way to betake herself for help.&nbsp; My Lord Lucifer,
+my Lord Beelzebub, my Lord Apollyon, my Lord Legion, with the rest,
+salute you, as does also my Lord Diabolus; and we wish both you, with
+all that you do, or shall possess, the very self-same fruit and success
+for their doing as we ourselves at present enjoy for ours.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;From our dreadful confines in the most fearful pit, we salute
+you, and so do those many legions here with us, wishing you may be as
+hellishly prosperous as we desire to be ourselves.&nbsp; By the letter-carrier,
+Mr. Profane.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then Mr. Profane addressed himself for his return to Mansoul, with his
+errand from the horrible pit to the Diabolonians that dwelt in that
+town.&nbsp; So he came up the stairs from the deep to the mouth of the
+cave where Cerberus was.&nbsp; Now when Cerberus saw him, he asked how
+did matters go below, about and against the town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Prof</i>.&nbsp; Things go as well as we can expect.&nbsp; The letter
+that I carried thither was highly approved, and well liked by all my
+lords, and I am returning to tell our Diabolonians so.&nbsp; I have
+an answer to it here in my bosom, that I am sure will make our masters
+that sent me glad; for the contents thereof are to encourage them to
+pursue their design to the utmost, and to be ready also to fall on within,
+when they shall see my Lord Diabolus beleaguering the town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Cerb</i>.&nbsp; But does he intend to go against them himself?<br>
+<br>
+<i>Prof</i>.&nbsp; Does he!&nbsp; Ay! and he will take along with him
+more than twenty thousand, all sturdy Doubters, and men of war, picked
+men from the land of Doubting, to serve him in the expedition.<br>
+<br>
+Then was Cerberus glad, and said, &lsquo;And is there such brave preparations
+a-making to go against the miserable town of Mansoul?&nbsp; And would
+I might be put at the head of a thousand of them, that I might also
+show my valour against the famous town of Mansoul.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+<i>Prof</i>.&nbsp; Your wish may come to pass; you look like one that
+has mettle enough, and my lord will have with him those that are valiant
+and stout.&nbsp; But my business requires haste.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Cerb</i>.&nbsp; Ay, so it does.&nbsp; Speed thee to the town of Mansoul,
+with all the deepest mischiefs that this place can afford thee.&nbsp;
+And when thou shalt come to the house of Mr. Mischief, the place where
+the Diabolonians meet to plot, tell them that Cerberus doth wish them
+his service, and that if he may, he will with the army come up against
+the famous town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+<i>Prof</i>.&nbsp; That I will.&nbsp; And I know that my lords that
+are there will be glad to hear it, and to see you also.<br>
+<br>
+So after a few more such kind of compliments, Mr. Profane took his leave
+of his friend Cerberus; and Cerberus again, with a thousand of their
+pit-wishes, bid him haste, with all speed, to his masters.&nbsp; The
+which when he had heard, he made obeisance, and began to gather up his
+heels to run.<br>
+<br>
+Thus, therefore, he returned, and went and came to Mansoul; and going,
+as afore, to the house of Mr. Mischief, there he found the Diabolonians
+assembled, and waiting for his return.&nbsp; Now when he was come, and
+had presented himself, he also delivered to them his letter, and adjoined
+this compliment to them therewith: &lsquo;My lords, from the confines
+of the pit, the high and mighty principalities and powers of the den
+salute you here, the true Diabolonians of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+Wishing you always the most proper of their benedictions, for the great
+service, high attempts, and brave achievements that you have put yourselves
+upon, for the restoring to our prince Diabolus the famous town of Mansoul.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+This was therefore the present state of the miserable town of Mansoul:
+she had offended her Prince, and he was gone; she had encouraged the
+powers of hell, by her foolishness, to come against her to seek her
+utter destruction.<br>
+<br>
+True, the town of Mansoul was somewhat made sensible of her sin, but
+the Diabolonians were gotten into her bowels; she cried, but Emmanuel
+was gone, and her cries did not fetch him as yet again.&nbsp; Besides,
+she knew not now whether, ever or never, he would return and come to
+his Mansoul again; nor did they know the power and industry of the enemy,
+nor how forward they were to put in execution that plot of hell that
+they had devised against her.<br>
+<br>
+They did, indeed, still send petition after petition to the Prince,
+but he answered all with silence.&nbsp; They did neglect reformation,
+and that was as Diabolus would have it; for he knew, if they regarded
+iniquity in their heart, their King would not hear their prayer; they
+therefore did still grow weaker and weaker, and were as a rolling thing
+before the whirlwind.&nbsp; They cried to their King for help, and laid
+Diabolonians in their bosoms: what therefore should a King do to them?&nbsp;
+Yea, there seemed now to be a mixture in Mansoul; the Diabolonians and
+the Mansoulians would walk the streets together.&nbsp; Yea, they began
+to seek their peace; for they thought that, since the sickness had been
+so mortal in Mansoul, it was in vain to go to handygripes with them.&nbsp;
+Besides, the weakness of Mansoul was the strength of their enemies;
+and the sins of Mansoul, the advantage of the Diabolonians.&nbsp; The
+foes of Mansoul did also now begin to promise themselves the town for
+a possession: there was no great difference now betwixt Mansoulians
+and Diabolonians: both seemed to be masters of Mansoul.&nbsp; Yea, the
+Diabolonians increased and grew, but the town of Mansoul diminished
+greatly.&nbsp; There were more than eleven thousand men, women, and
+children that died by the sickness in Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+But now, as Shaddai would have it, there was one whose name was Mr.
+Prywell, a great lover of the people of Mansoul.&nbsp; And he, as his
+manner was, did go listening up and down in Mansoul to see, and to hear,
+if at any time he might, whether there was any design against it or
+no.&nbsp; For he was always a jealous man, and feared some mischief
+sometime would befal it, either from the Diabolonians within, or from
+some power without.&nbsp; Now upon a time it so happened, as Mr. Prywell
+went listening here and there, that he lighted upon a place called Vilehill,
+in Mansoul, where Diabolonians used to meet; so hearing a muttering,
+(you must know that it was in the night,) he softly drew near to hear;
+nor had he stood long under the house-end, (for there stood a house
+there,) but he heard one confidently affirm, that it was not, or would
+not be long before Diabolus should possess himself again of Mansoul;
+and that then the Diabolonians did intend to put all Mansoulians to
+the sword, and would kill and destroy the King&rsquo;s captains, and
+drive all his soldiers out of the town.&nbsp; He said, moreover, that
+he knew there were above twenty thousand fighting men prepared by Diabolus
+for the accomplishing of this design, and that it would not be months
+before they all should see it.<br>
+<br>
+When Mr. Prywell had heard this story, he did quickly believe it was
+true: wherefore he went forthwith to my Lord Mayor&rsquo;s house, and
+acquainted him therewith; who, sending for the subordinate preacher,
+brake the business to him; and he as soon gave the alarm to the town;
+for he was now the chief preacher in Mansoul, because, as yet, my Lord
+Secretary was ill at ease.&nbsp; And this was the way that the subordinate
+preacher did take to alarm the town therewith.&nbsp; The same hour he
+caused the lecture bell to be rung; so the people came together: he
+gave them then a short exhortation to watchfulness, and made Mr. Prywell&rsquo;s
+news the argument thereof.&nbsp; &lsquo;For,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;an
+horrible plot is contrived against Mansoul, even to massacre us all
+in a day, nor is this story to be slighted; for Mr. Prywell is the author
+thereof.&nbsp; Mr. Prywell was always a lover of Mansoul, a sober and
+judicious man, a man that is no tattler, nor raiser of false reports,
+but one that loves to look into the very bottom of matters, and talks
+nothing of news, but by very solid arguments.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;I will call him, and you shall hear him your own selves;&rsquo;
+so he called him, and he came and told his tale so punctually, and affirmed
+its truth with such ample grounds, that Mansoul fell presently under
+a conviction of the truth of what he said.&nbsp; The preacher did also
+back him, saying, &lsquo;Sirs, it is not irrational for us to believe
+it, for we have provoked Shaddai to anger, and have sinned Emmanuel
+out of the town; we have had too much correspondence with Diabolonians,
+and have forsaken our former mercies: no marvel then, if the enemy both
+within and without should design and plot our ruin; and what time like
+this to do it?&nbsp; The sickness is now in the town, and we have been
+made weak thereby.&nbsp; Many a good meaning man is dead, and the Diabolonians
+of late grow stronger and stronger.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Besides,&rsquo; quoth the subordinate preacher, &lsquo;I have
+received from this good truth-teller this one inkling further, that
+he understood by those that he overheard, that several letters have
+lately passed between the furies and the Diabolonians in order to our
+destruction.&rsquo;&nbsp; When Mansoul heard all this, and not being
+able to gainsay it, they lift up their voice and wept.&nbsp; Mr. Prywell
+did also, in the presence of the townsmen, confirm all that their subordinate
+preacher had said.&nbsp; Wherefore they now set afresh to bewail their
+folly, and to a doubling of petitions to Shaddai and his Son.&nbsp;
+They also brake the business to the captains, high commanders, and men
+of war in the town of Mansoul, entreating them to use the means to be
+strong, and to take good courage; and that they would look after their
+harness, and make themselves ready to give Diabolus battle by night
+and by day, shall he come, as they are informed he will, to beleaguer
+the town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+When the captains heard this, they being always true lovers of the town
+of Mansoul, what do they but like so many Samsons they shake themselves,
+and come together to consult and contrive how to defeat those bold and
+hellish contrivances that were upon the wheel by the means of Diabolus
+and his friends against the now sickly, weakly, and much impoverished
+town of Mansoul; and they agreed upon these following particulars:-<br>
+<br>
+1. That the gates of Mansoul should be kept shut, and made fast with
+bars and locks, and that all persons that went out, or came in, should
+be very strictly examined by the captains of the guards, &lsquo;to the
+end,&rsquo; said they, &lsquo;that those that are managers of the plot
+amongst us, may, either coming or going, be taken; and that we may also
+find out who are the great contrivers, amongst us, of our ruin.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+2. The next thing was, that a strict search should be made for all kind
+of Diabolonians throughout the whole town of Mansoul; and that every
+man&rsquo;s house from top to bottom should be looked into, and that,
+too, house by house, that if possible a further discovery might be made
+of all such among them as had a hand in these designs.<br>
+<br>
+3. It was further concluded upon, that wheresoever or with whomsoever
+any of the Diabolonians were found, that even those of the town of Mansoul
+that had given them house and harbour, should to their shame, and the
+warning of others, take penance in the open place.<br>
+<br>
+4. It was, moreover, resolved by the famous town of Mansoul, that a
+public fast, and a day of humiliation, should be kept throughout the
+whole corporation, to the justifying of their Prince, the abasing of
+themselves before him for their transgressions against him, and against
+Shaddai, his Father.&nbsp; It was further resolved, that all such in
+Mansoul as did not on that day endeavour to keep that fast, and to humble
+themselves for their faults, but that should mind their worldly employs,
+or be found wandering up and down the streets, should be taken for Diabolonians,
+and should suffer as Diabolonians for such their wicked doings.<br>
+<br>
+5. It was further concluded then, that with what speed, and with what
+warmth of mind they could, they would renew their humiliation for sin,
+and their petitions to Shaddai for help; they also resolved, to send
+tidings to the court of all that Mr. Prywell had told them.<br>
+<br>
+6. It was also determined, that thanks should be given by the town of
+Mansoul to Mr. Prywell, for his diligent seeking of the welfare of their
+town: and further, that forasmuch as he was so naturally inclined to
+seek their good, and also to undermine their foes, they gave him a commission
+of scout-master-general, for the good of the town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+When the corporation, with their captains, had thus concluded, they
+did as they had said; they shut up their gates, they made for Diabolonians
+strict search, they made those with whom any were found to take penance
+in the open place: they kept their fast, and renewed their petitions
+to their Prince, and Mr. Prywell managed his charge and the trust that
+Mansoul had put in his hands, with great conscience and good fidelity;
+for he gave himself wholly up to his employ, and that not only within
+the town, but he went out to pry, to see, and to hear.<br>
+<br>
+And not many days after he provided for his journey, and went towards
+Hell-Gate Hill, into the country where the Doubters were, where he heard
+of all that had been talked of in Mansoul, and he perceived also that
+Diabolus was almost ready for his march, etc.&nbsp; So he came back
+with speed, and, calling the captains and elders of Mansoul together,
+he told them where he had been, what he had heard, and what he had seen.&nbsp;
+Particularly, he told them that Diabolus was almost ready for his march,
+and that he had made old Mr. Incredulity, that once brake prison in
+Mansoul, the, general of his army; that his army consisted all of Doubters,
+and that their number was above twenty thousand.&nbsp; He told, moreover,
+that Diabolus did intend to bring with him the chief princes of the
+infernal pit, and that he would make them chief captains over his Doubters.&nbsp;
+He told them, moreover, that it was certainly true that several of the
+black den would, with Diabolus, ride reformades to reduce the town of
+Mansoul to the obedience of Diabolus, their prince.<br>
+<br>
+He said, moreover, that he understood by the Doubters, among whom he
+had been, that the reason why old Incredulity was made general of the
+whole army, was because none truer than he to the tyrant; and because
+he had an implacable spite against the welfare of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+Besides, said he, he remembers the affronts that Mansoul has given him,
+and he is resolved to be revenged of them.<br>
+<br>
+But the black princes shall be made high commanders, only Incredulity
+shall be over them all; because, which I had almost forgot, he can more
+easily, and more dexterously, beleaguer the town of Mansoul, than can
+any of the princes besides.<br>
+<br>
+Now, when the captains of Mansoul, with the elders of the town, had
+heard the tidings that Mr. Prywell did bring, they thought it expedient,
+without further delay, to put into execution the laws that against the
+Diabolonians their Prince had made for them, and given them in commandment
+to manage against them.&nbsp; Wherefore, forthwith a diligent and impartial
+search was made in all houses in Mansoul, for all and all manner of
+Diabolonians.&nbsp; Now, in the house of Mr. Mind, and in the house
+of the great Lord Willbewill, were two Diabolonians found.&nbsp; In
+Mr. Mind&rsquo;s house was one Lord Covetousness found; but he had changed
+his name to Prudent-Thrifty.&nbsp; In my Lord Willbewill&rsquo;s house,
+one Lasciviousness was found; but he had changed his name to Harmless-Mirth.&nbsp;
+These two the captains and elders of the town of Mansoul took, and committed
+them to custody under the hand of Mr. Trueman, the gaoler; and this
+man handled them so severely, and loaded them so well with irons, that
+in time they both fell into a very deep consumption, and died in the
+prison-house; their masters also, according to the agreement of the
+captains and elders, were brought to take penance in the open place
+to their shame, and for a warning to the rest of the town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+Now, this was the manner of penance in those days: the persons offending
+being made sensible of the evil of their doings, were enjoined open
+confession of their faults, and a strict amendment of their lives.<br>
+<br>
+After this, the captains and elders of Mansoul sought yet to find out
+more Diabolonians, wherever they lurked, whether in dens, caves, holes,
+vaults, or where else they could, in or about the wall or town of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+But though they could plainly see their footing, and so follow them
+by their track and smell to their holds, even to the mouths of their
+caves and dens, yet take them, hold them, and do justice upon them,
+they could not; their ways were so crooked, their holds so strong, and
+they so quick to take sanctuary there.<br>
+<br>
+But Mansoul did now with so stiff an hand rule over the Diabolonians
+that were left, that they were glad to shrink into corners: time was
+when they durst walk openly, and in the day; but now they were forced
+to embrace privacy and the night: time was when a Mansoulian was their
+companion; but now they counted them deadly enemies.&nbsp; This good
+change did Mr. Prywell&rsquo;s intelligence make in the famous town
+of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+By this time, Diabolus had finished his army which he intended to bring
+with him for the ruin of Mansoul; and had set over them captains, and
+other field officers, such as liked his furious stomach best: himself
+was lord paramount, Incredulity was general of his army, their highest
+captains shall be named afterwards; but now for their officers, colours,
+and scutcheons.<br>
+<br>
+1. Their first captain was Captain Rage: he was captain over the election
+doubters, his were the red colours; his standard-bearer was Mr. Destructive,
+and the great red dragon he had for his scutcheon.<br>
+<br>
+2. The second captain was Captain Fury: he was captain over the vocation
+doubters; his standard-bearer was Mr. Darkness, his colours were those
+that were pale, and he had for his scutcheon the fiery flying serpent.<br>
+<br>
+3. The third captain was Captain Damnation: he was captain over the
+grace doubters; his were the red colours, Mr. No-Life bare them, and
+he had for his scutcheon the black den.<br>
+<br>
+4. The fourth captain was Captain Insatiable; he was captain over the
+faith doubters: his were the red colours, Mr. Devourer bare them, and
+he had for a scutcheon the yawning jaws.<br>
+<br>
+5. The fifth captain was Captain Brimstone: he was captain over the
+perseverance doubters; his also were the red colours, Mr. Burning bare
+them, and his scutcheon was the blue and stinking flame.<br>
+<br>
+6. The sixth captain was Captain Torment: he was captain over the resurrection
+doubters; his colours were those that were pale; Mr. Gnaw was his standard-bearer,
+and he had the black worm for his scutcheon.<br>
+<br>
+7. The seventh captain was Captain No-Ease; he was captain over the
+salvation doubters; his were the red colours, Mr. Restless bare them,
+and his scutcheon was the ghastly picture of death.<br>
+<br>
+8. The eighth captain was the Captain Sepulchre: he was captain over
+the glory doubters; his also were the pale colours, Mr. Corruption was
+his standard-bearer, and he had for his scutcheon a skull, and dead
+men&rsquo;s bones.<br>
+<br>
+9. The ninth captain was Captain Past-Hope; he was captain of those
+that are called the felicity doubters; his standard-bearer was Mr. Despair;
+his also were the red colours, and his scutcheon was a hot iron and
+the hard heart.<br>
+<br>
+These were his captains, and these were their forces, these were their
+standards, these were their colours, and these were their scutcheons.&nbsp;
+Now, over these did the great Diabolus make superior captains, and they
+were in number seven: as, namely, the Lord Beelzebub, the Lord Lucifer,
+the Lord Legion, the Lord Apollyon, the Lord Python, the Lord Cerberus,
+and the Lord Belial; these seven he set over the captains, and Incredulity
+was lord-general, and, Diabolus was king.&nbsp; The reformades also,
+such as were like themselves, were made some of them captains of hundreds,
+and some of them captains of more.&nbsp; And thus was the army of Incredulity
+completed.<br>
+<br>
+So they set out at Hell-Gate Hill, for there they had their rendezvous,
+from whence they came with a straight course upon their march toward
+the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Now, as was hinted before, the town had,
+as Shaddai would have it, received from the mouth of Mr. Prywell the
+alarm of their coming before.&nbsp; Wherefore they set a strong watch
+at the gates, and had also doubled their guards: they also mounted their
+slings in good places, where they might conveniently cast out their
+great stones to the annoyance of their furious enemy.<br>
+<br>
+Nor could those Diabolonians that were in the town do that hurt as was
+designed they should; for Mansoul was now awake.&nbsp; But alas! poor
+people, they were sorely affrighted at the first appearance of their
+foes, and at their sitting down before the town, especially when they
+heard the roaring of their drum.&nbsp; This, to speak truth, was amazingly
+hideous to hear; it frighted all men seven miles round, if they were
+but awake and heard it.&nbsp; The streaming of their colours was also
+terrible and dejecting to behold.<br>
+<br>
+When Diabolus was come up against the town, first he made his approach
+to Ear-gate, and gave it a furious assault, supposing, as it seems,
+that his friends in Mansoul had been ready to do the work within; but
+care was taken of that before, by the vigilance of the captains.&nbsp;
+Wherefore, missing of the help that he expected from them, and finding
+his army warmly attended with the stones that the slingers did sling,
+(for that I will say for the captains, that considering the weakness
+that yet was upon them by reason of the long sickness that had annoyed
+the town of Mansoul, they did gallantly behave themselves,) he was forced
+to make some retreat from Mansoul, and to entrench himself and his men
+in the field without the reach of the slings of the town.<br>
+<br>
+Now having entrenched himself, he did cast up four mounts against the
+town: the first he called Mount Diabolus, putting his own name thereon,
+the more to affright the town of Mansoul; the other three he called
+thus - Mount Alecto, Mount Megara, and Mount Tisiphone; for these are
+the names of the dreadful furies of hell.&nbsp; Thus he began to play
+his game with Mansoul, and to serve it as doth the lion his prey, even
+to make it fall before his terror.&nbsp; But, as I said, the captains
+and soldiers resisted so stoutly, and did do such execution with their
+stones, that they made him, though against stomach, to retreat, wherefore
+Mansoul began to take courage.<br>
+<br>
+Now upon Mount Diabolus, which was raised on the north side of the town,
+there did the tyrant set up his standard, and a fearful thing it was
+to behold; for he had wrought in it by devilish art, after the manner
+of a scutcheon, a flaming flame fearful to behold, and the picture of
+Mansoul burning in it.<br>
+<br>
+When Diabolus had thus done, he commanded that his drummer should every
+night approach the walls of the town of Mansoul, and so to beat a parley;
+the command was to do it at nights, for in the daytime they annoyed
+him with their slings; for the tyrant said, that he had a mind to parley
+with the now trembling town of Mansoul, and he commanded that the drums
+should beat every night, that through weariness they might at last,
+if possible, (at the first they were unwilling yet,) be forced to do
+it.<br>
+<br>
+So this drummer did as commanded: he arose, and did beat his drum.&nbsp;
+But when his drum did go, if one looked toward the town of Mansoul,
+&lsquo;Behold darkness and sorrow, and the light was darkened in the
+heaven thereof.&rsquo;&nbsp; No noise was ever heard upon earth more
+terrible, except the voice of Shaddai when he speaketh.&nbsp; But how
+did Mansoul tremble! it now looked for nothing but forthwith to be swallowed
+up.<br>
+<br>
+When this drummer had beaten for a parley, he made this speech to Mansoul:
+&lsquo;My master has bid me tell you, that if you will willingly submit,
+you shall have the good of the earth; but if you shall be stubborn,
+he is resolved to take you by force.&rsquo;&nbsp; But by that the fugitive
+had done beating his drum, the people of Mansoul had betaken themselves
+to the captains that were in the castle, so that there was none to regard,
+nor to give this drummer an answer; so he proceeded no further that
+night, but returned again to his master to the camp.<br>
+<br>
+When Diabolus saw that by drumming he could not work out Mansoul to
+his will, the next night he sendeth his drummer without his drum, still
+to let the townsmen know that he had a mind to parley with them.&nbsp;
+But when all came to all, his parley was turned into a summons to the
+town to deliver up themselves: but they gave him neither heed nor hearing:
+for they remembered what at first it cost them to hear him a few words.<br>
+<br>
+The next night he sends again, and then who should be his messenger
+to Mansoul but the terrible Captain Sepulchre; so Captain Sepulchre
+came up to the walls of Mansoul, and made this oration to the town:-<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;O ye inhabitants of the rebellious town of Mansoul!&nbsp; I summon
+you in the name of the Prince Diabolus, that, without any more ado,
+you set open the gates of your town, and admit the great lord to come
+in.&nbsp; But if you shall still rebel, when we have taken to us the
+town by force, we will swallow you up as the grave; wherefore if you
+will hearken to my summons, say so, and if not then let me know.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;The reason of this my summons,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;is, for
+that my lord is your undoubted prince and lord, as you yourselves have
+formerly owned.&nbsp; Nor shall that assault that was given to my lord,
+when Emmanuel dealt so dishonourably by him, prevail with him to lose
+his right, and to forbear to attempt to recover his own.&nbsp; Consider,
+then, O Mansoul, with thyself, wilt thou show thyself peaceable, or
+no?&nbsp; If thou shalt quietly yield up thyself, then our old friendship
+shall be renewed; but if thou shalt yet refuse and rebel, then expect
+nothing but fire and sword.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+When the languishing town of Mansoul had heard this summoner and his
+summons, they were yet more put to their dumps, but made to the captain
+no answer at all; so away he went as he came.<br>
+<br>
+But, after some consultation among themselves, as also with some of
+their captains, they applied themselves afresh to the Lord Secretary
+for counsel and advice from him; for this Lord Secretary was their chief
+preacher, (as also is mentioned some pages before,) only now he was
+ill at ease; and of him they begged favour in these two or three things
+-<br>
+<br>
+1. That he would look comfortably upon them, and not keep himself so
+much retired from them as formerly.&nbsp; Also, that he would be prevailed
+with to give them a hearing, while they should make known their miserable
+condition to him.&nbsp; But to this he told them as before, that &lsquo;as
+yet he was but ill at ease, and therefore could not do as he had formerly
+done.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+2. The second thing that they desired was, that he would be pleased
+to give them his advice about their now so important affairs, for that
+Diabolus was come and set down before the town with no less than twenty
+thousand doubters.&nbsp; They said, moreover, that both he and his captains
+were cruel men, and that they were afraid of them.&nbsp; But to this
+he said, &lsquo;You must look to the law of the Prince, and there see
+what is laid upon you to do.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+3. Then they desired that his highness would help them to frame a petition
+to Shaddai, and unto Emmanuel his Son, and that he would set his own
+hand thereto as a token that he was one with them in it: &lsquo;For,&rsquo;
+said they, &lsquo;my Lord, many a one have we sent, but can get no answer
+of peace; but now, surely, one with thy hand unto it may obtain good
+for Mansoul.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+But all the answer that he gave to this was, &lsquo;that they had offended
+their Emmanuel, and had also grieved himself, and that therefore they
+must as yet partake of their own devices.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+This answer of the Lord Secretary fell like a millstone upon them; yea,
+it crushed them so that they could not tell what to do; yet they durst
+not comply with the demands of Diabolus, nor with the demands of his
+captain.&nbsp; So then here were the straits that the town of Mansoul
+was betwixt, when the enemy came upon her: her foes were ready to swallow
+her up, and her friends did forbear to help her.<br>
+<br>
+Then stood up my Lord Mayor, whose name was my Lord Understanding, and
+he began to pick and pick, until he had picked comfort out of that seemingly
+bitter saying of the Lord Secretary; for thus he descanted upon it:
+&lsquo;First,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;this unavoidably follows upon the
+saying of my Lord, &ldquo;that we must yet suffer for our sins.&rdquo;&nbsp;
+Secondly, But,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;the words yet sound as if at
+last we should be saved from our enemies, and that after a few more
+sorrows, Emmanuel will come and be our help.&rsquo;&nbsp; Now the Lord
+Mayor was the more critical in his dealing with the Secretary&rsquo;s
+words, because my lord was more than a prophet, and because none of
+his words were such, but that at all times they were most exactly significant;
+and the townsmen were allowed to pry into them, and to expound them
+to their best advantage.<br>
+<br>
+So they took their leaves of my lord, and returned, and went, and came
+to the captains, to whom they did tell what my Lord High Secretary had
+said; who, when they had heard it, were all of the same opinion as was
+my Lord Mayor himself.&nbsp; The captains, therefore, began to take
+some courage unto them, and to prepare to make some brave attempt upon
+the camp of the enemy, and to destroy all that were Diabolonians, with
+the roving doubters that the tyrant had brought with him to destroy
+the poor town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+So all betook themselves forthwith to their places - the Captains to
+theirs, the Lord Mayor to his, the subordinate preacher to his, and
+my Lord Willbewill to his.&nbsp; The captains longed to be at some work
+for their prince; for they delighted in warlike achievements.&nbsp;
+The next day, therefore, they came together and consulted; and after
+consultation had, they resolved to give an answer to the captain of
+Diabolus with slings; and so they did at the rising of the sun on the
+morrow; for Diabolus had adventured to come nearer again, but the sling-stones
+were to him and his like hornets.&nbsp; For as there is nothing to the
+town of Mansoul so terrible as the roaring of Diabolus&rsquo;s drum,
+so there is nothing to Diabolus so terrible as the well playing of Emmanuel&rsquo;s
+slings.&nbsp; Wherefore Diabolus was forced to make another retreat,
+yet further off from the famous town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Then did the
+Lord Mayor of Mansoul cause the bells to be rung, &lsquo;and that thanks
+should be sent to the Lord High Secretary by the mouth of the subordinate
+preacher; for that by his words the captains and elders of Mansoul had
+been strengthened against Diabolus.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+When Diabolus saw that his captains and soldiers, high lords and renowned,
+were frightened, and beaten down by the stones that came from the golden
+slings of the Prince of the town of Mansoul, he bethought himself, and
+said, &lsquo;I will try to catch them by fawning, I will try to flatter
+them into my net.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Wherefore, after a while, he came down again to the wall, not now with
+his drum, nor with Captain Sepulchre; but having all besugared his lips,
+he seemed to be a very sweet-mouthed, peaceable prince, designing nothing
+for humour&rsquo;s sake, nor to be revenged on Mansoul for injuries
+by them done to him; but the welfare, and good, and advantage of the
+town and people therein was now, as he said, his only design.&nbsp;
+Wherefore, after he had called for audience, and desired that the townsfolk
+would give it to him, he proceeded in his oration, and said:-<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Oh, the desire of my heart, the famous town of Mansoul! how many
+nights have I watched, and how many weary steps have I taken, if perhaps
+I might do thee good!&nbsp; Far be it, far be it from me to desire to
+make a war upon you; if ye will but willingly and quietly deliver up
+yourselves unto me.&nbsp; You know that you were mine of old.&nbsp;
+Remember also, that so long as you enjoyed me for your lord, and that
+I enjoyed you for my subjects, you wanted for nothing of all the delights
+of the earth, that I, your lord and prince, could get for you, or that
+I could invent to make you bonny and blithe withal.&nbsp; Consider,
+you never had so many hard, dark, troublesome, and heart-afflicting
+hours, while you were mine, as you have had since you revolted from
+me; nor shall you ever have peace again, until you and I become one
+as before.&nbsp; But, be but prevailed with to embrace me again, and
+I will grant, yea, enlarge your old charter with abundance of privileges;
+so that your license and liberty shall be to take, hold, enjoy, and
+make your own all that is pleasant from the east to the west.&nbsp;
+Nor shall any of those incivilities, wherewith you have offended me,
+be ever charged upon you by me, so long as the sun and moon endure.&nbsp;
+Nor shall any of those dear friends of mine that now, for the fear of
+you, lie lurking in dens, and holes, and caves in Mansoul, be hurtful
+to you any more; yea, they shall be your servants, and shall minister
+unto you of their substance, and of whatever shall come to hand.&nbsp;
+I need speak no more; you know them, and have sometime since been much
+delighted in their company.&nbsp; Why, then, should we abide at such
+odds?&nbsp; Let us renew our old acquaintance and friendship again.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Bear with your friend; I take the liberty at this time to speak
+thus freely unto you.&nbsp; The love that I have to you presses me to
+do it, as also does the zeal of my heart for my friends with you: put
+me not therefore to further trouble, nor yourselves to further fears
+and frights.&nbsp; Have you I will, in a way of peace or war; nor do
+you flatter yourselves with the power and force of your captains, or
+that your Emmanuel will shortly come in to your help; for such strength
+will do you no pleasure.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;I am come against you with a stout and valiant army, and all
+the chief princes of the den are even at the head of it.&nbsp; Besides,
+my captains are swifter than eagles, stronger than lions, and more greedy
+of prey than are the evening wolves.&nbsp; What is Og of Bashan! what
+is Goliath of Gath! and what are an hundred more of them, to one of
+the least of my captains!&nbsp; How, then, shall Mansoul think to escape
+my hand and force?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Diabolus having thus handed his flattering, fawning, deceitful, and
+lying speech to the famous town of Mansoul, the Lord Mayor replied to
+him as follows: &lsquo;O Diabolus, prince of darkness, and master of
+all deceit; thy lying flatteries we have had and made sufficient probation
+of, and have tasted too deeply of that destructive cup already.&nbsp;
+Should we therefore again hearken unto thee, and so break the commandments
+of our great Shaddai, to join in affinity with thee, would not our Prince
+reject us, and cast us off for ever?&nbsp; And, being cast off by him,
+can the place that he has prepared for thee be a place of rest for us?&nbsp;
+Besides, O thou that art empty and void of all truth, we are rather
+ready to die by thy hand, than to fall in with thy flattering and lying
+deceits.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+When the tyrant saw that there was little to be got by parleying with
+my Lord Mayor, he fell into an hellish rage, and resolved that again,
+with his army of doubters, he would another time assault the town of
+Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+So he called for his drummer, who beat up for his men (and while he
+did beat, Mansoul did shake) to be in a readiness to give battle to
+the corporation: then Diabolus drew near with his army, and thus disposed
+of his men.&nbsp; Captain Cruel and Captain Torment, these he drew up
+and placed against Feel-gate, and commanded them to sit down there for
+the war.&nbsp; And he also appointed that, if need were, Captain No-Ease
+should come in to their relief.&nbsp; At Nose-gate he placed the Captain
+Brimstone and Captain Sepulchre, and bid them look well to their ward,
+on that side of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; But at Eye-gate he placed
+that grim-faced one, the Captain Past-Hope, and there also now he did
+set up his terrible standard.<br>
+<br>
+Now Captain Insatiable, he was to look to the carriages of Diabolus,
+and was also appointed to take into custody that, or those persons and
+things, that should at any time as prey be taken from the enemy.<br>
+<br>
+Now Mouth-gate the inhabitants of Mansoul kept for a sally-port; wherefore
+that they kept strong; for that it was it by and out at which the townsfolk
+did send their petitions to Emmanuel their Prince.&nbsp; That also was
+the gate from the top of which the captains did play their slings at
+the enemies; for that gate stood somewhat ascending, so that the placing
+of them there, and the letting of them fly from that place, did much
+execution against the tyrant&rsquo;s army.&nbsp; Wherefore, for these
+causes, with others, Diabolus sought, if possible, to land up Mouth-gate
+with dirt.<br>
+<br>
+Now, as Diabolus was busy and industrious in preparing to make his assault
+upon the town of Mansoul, without, so the captains and soldiers in the
+corporation were as busy in preparing within; they mounted their slings,
+they set up their banners, they sounded their trumpets, and put themselves
+in such order as was judged most for the annoyance of the enemy, and
+for the advantage of Mansoul, and gave to their soldiers orders to be
+ready at the sound of the trumpet for war.&nbsp; The Lord Willbewill
+also, he took the charge of watching against the rebels within, and
+to do what he could to take them while without, or to stifle them within
+their caves, dens, and holes in the town-wall of Mansoul.&nbsp; And,
+to speak the truth of him, ever since he took penance for his fault,
+he has showed as much honesty and bravery of spirit as any he in Mansoul;
+for he took one Jolly, and his brother Griggish, the two sons of his
+servant Harmless-Mirth, (for to that day, though the father was committed
+to ward, the sons had a dwelling in the house of my lord,) - I say,
+he took them, and with his own hands put them to the cross.&nbsp; And
+this was the reason why he hanged them up: after their father was put
+into the hands of Mr. True-Man the gaoler, they, his sons, began to
+play his pranks, and to be ticking and toying with the daughters of
+their lord; nay, it was jealoused that they were too familiar with them,
+the which was brought to his lordship&rsquo;s ear.&nbsp; Now his lordship
+being unwilling unadvisedly to put any man to death, did not suddenly
+fall upon them, but set watch and spies to see if the thing was true;
+of the which he was soon informed, for his two servants, whose names
+were Find-Out and Tell-All, catched them together in uncivil manner
+more than once or twice, and went and told their lord.&nbsp; So when
+my Lord Willbewill had sufficient ground to believe the thing was true,
+he takes the two young Diabolonians, (for such they were, for their
+father was a Diabolonian born,) and has them to Eye-gate, where he raised
+a very high cross, just in the face of Diabolus, and of his army, and
+there he hanged the young villains, in defiance to Captain Past-Hope,
+and of the horrible standard of the tyrant.<br>
+<br>
+Now this Christian act of the brave Lord Willbewill did greatly abash
+Captain Past-Hope, discouraged the army of Diabolus, put fear into the
+Diabolonian runagates in Mansoul, and put strength and courage into
+the captains that belonged to Emmanuel, the Prince; for they without
+did gather, and that by this very act of my Lord, that Mansoul was resolved
+to fight, and that the Diabolonians within the town could not do such
+things as Diabolus had hopes they would.&nbsp; Nor was this the only
+proof of the brave Lord Willbewill&rsquo;s honesty to the town, nor
+of his loyalty to his Prince, as will afterwards appear.<br>
+<br>
+Now, when the children of Prudent-Thrifty, who dwelt with Mr. Mind,
+(for Thrift left children with Mr. Mind, when he was also committed
+to prison, and their names were Gripe and Rake-All; these he begat of
+Mr. Mind&rsquo;s bastard daughter, whose name was Mrs. Hold-fast-Bad;)
+- I say, when his children perceived how the Lord Willbewill had served
+them that dwelt with him, what do they but, lest they should drink of
+the same cup, endeavour to make their escape.&nbsp; But Mr. Mind, being
+wary of it, took them and put them in hold in his house till morning;
+(for this was done over night;) and remembering that by the law of Mansoul
+all Diabolonians were to die, (and to be sure they were at least by
+father&rsquo;s side such, and some say by mother&rsquo;s side too,)
+what does he but takes them and puts them in chains, and carries them
+to the selfsame place where my lord hanged his two before, and there
+he hanged them.<br>
+<br>
+The townsmen also took great encouragement at this act of Mr. Mind,
+and did what they could to have taken some more of these Diabolonian
+troublers of Mansoul; but at that time the rest lay so squat and close,
+that they could not be apprehended; so they set against them a diligent
+watch, and went every man to his place.<br>
+<br>
+I told you a little before, that Diabolus and his army were somewhat
+abashed and discouraged at the sight of what my Lord Willbewill did,
+when he hanged up those two young Diabolonians; but his discouragement
+quickly turned itself into furious madness and rage against the town
+of Mansoul, and fight it he would.&nbsp; Also the townsmen and captains
+within, they had their hopes and their expectations heightened, believing
+at last the day would be theirs; so they feared them the less.&nbsp;
+Their subordinate preacher, too, made a sermon about it; and he took
+that theme for his text, &lsquo;Gad, a troop shall overcome him: but
+he shall overcome at the last.&rsquo;&nbsp; Whence he showed, that though
+Mansoul should be sorely put to it at the first, yet the victory should
+most certainly be Mansoul&rsquo;s at the last.<br>
+<br>
+So Diabolus commanded that his drummer should beat a charge against
+the town; and the captains also that were in the town sounded a charge
+against them, but they had no drum: they were trumpets of silver with
+which they sounded against them.&nbsp; Then they which were of the camp
+of Diabolus came down to the town to take it, and the captains in the
+castle, with the slingers at Mouth-gate, played upon them amain.&nbsp;
+And now there was nothing heard in the camp of Diabolus but horrible
+rage and blasphemy; but in the town good words, prayer, and singing
+of psalms.&nbsp; The enemy replied with horrible objections, and the
+terribleness of their drum; but the town made answer with the slapping
+of their slings, and the melodious noise of their trumpets.&nbsp; And
+thus the fight lasted for several days together, only now and then they
+had some small intermission, in the which the townsmen refreshed themselves,
+and the captains made ready for another assault.<br>
+<br>
+The captains of Emmanuel were clad in silver armour, and the soldiers
+in that which was of proof; the soldiers of Diabolus were clad in iron
+which was made to give place to Emmanuel&rsquo;s engine-shot.&nbsp;
+In the town, some were hurt, and some were greatly wounded.&nbsp; Now,
+the worst of it was, a chirurgeon was scarce in Mansoul, for that Emmanuel
+at present was absent.&nbsp; Howbeit, with the leaves of a tree the
+wounded were kept from dying; yet their wounds did greatly putrefy,
+and some did grievously stink.&nbsp; Of the townsmen, these were wounded,
+namely, my Lord Reason; he was wounded in the head.&nbsp; Another that
+was wounded was the brave Lord Mayor; he was wounded in the eye.&nbsp;
+Another that was wounded was Mr. Mind; he received his wound about the
+stomach.&nbsp; The honest subordinate preacher also, he received a shot
+not far off the heart but none of these were mortal.<br>
+<br>
+Many also of the inferior sort were not only wounded but slain outright.<br>
+<br>
+Now, in the camp of Diabolus were wounded and slain a considerable number;
+for instance, Captain Rage, he was wounded, and so was Captain Cruel.&nbsp;
+Captain Damnation was made to retreat, and to intrench himself further
+off of Mansoul.&nbsp; The standard also of Diabolus was beaten down,
+and his standard-bearer, Captain Much-Hurt, had his brains beat out
+with a sling-stone, to the no little grief and shame of his prince Diabolus.<br>
+<br>
+Many also of the doubters were slain outright, though enough of them
+were left alive to make Mansoul shake and totter.&nbsp; Now the victory
+that day being turned to Mansoul, did put great valour into the townsmen
+and captains, and did cover Diabolus&rsquo;s camp with a cloud, but
+withal it made them far more furious.&nbsp; So the next day Mansoul
+rested, and commanded that the bells should be rung; the trumpets also
+joyfully sounded, and the captains shouted round the town.<br>
+<br>
+My Lord Willbewill also was not idle, but did notable service within
+against the domestics, or the Diabolonians that were in the town, not
+only by keeping them in awe, for he lighted on one at last whose name
+was Mr. Anything, a fellow of whom mention was made before; for it was
+he, if you remember, that brought the three fellows to Diabolus, whom
+the Diabolonians took out of Captain Boanerges&rsquo;s companies, and
+that persuaded them to list themselves under the tyrant, to fight against
+the army of Shaddai.&nbsp; My Lord Willbewill did also take a notable
+Diabolonian, whose name was Loose-Foot: this Loose-Foot was a scout
+to the vagabonds in Mansoul, and that did use to carry tidings out of
+Mansoul to the camp, and out of the camp to those of the enemies in
+Mansoul.&nbsp; Both these my lord sent away safe to Mr. True-Man, the
+gaoler, with a commandment to keep them in irons; for he intended then
+to have them out to be crucified, when it would be for the best to the
+corporation, and most for the discouragement of the camp of the enemies.<br>
+<br>
+My Lord Mayor also, though he could not stir about so much as formerly,
+because of the wound that he lately received, yet gave he out orders
+to all that were the natives of Mansoul, to look to their watch, and
+stand upon their guard, and, as occasion should offer, to prove themselves
+men.<br>
+<br>
+Mr. Conscience, the preacher, he also did his utmost to keep all his
+good documents alive upon the hearts of the people of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+Well, awhile after, the captains and stout ones of the town of Mansoul
+agreed and resolved upon a time to make a sally out upon the camp of
+Diabolus, and this must be done in the night; and there was the folly
+of Mansoul, (for the night is always the best for the enemy, but the
+worst for Mansoul to fight in,) but yet they would do it, their courage
+was so high; their last victory also still stuck in their memories.<br>
+<br>
+So the night appointed being come, the Prince&rsquo;s brave captains
+cast lots who should lead the van in this new and desperate expedition
+against Diabolus, and against his Diabolonian army; and the lot fell
+to Captain Credence, to Captain Experience, and to Captain Good-Hope,
+to lead the forlorn hope.&nbsp; (This Captain Experience the Prince
+created such when himself did reside in the town of Mansoul.)&nbsp;
+So, as I said, they made their sally out upon the army that lay in the
+siege against them; and their hap was to fall in with the main body
+of their enemies.&nbsp; Now Diabolus and his men being expertly accustomed
+to night-work, took the alarm presently, and were as ready to give them
+battle, as if they had sent them word of their coming.&nbsp; Wherefore
+to it they went amain, and blows were hard on every side; the hell drum
+also was beat most furiously, while the trumpets of the Prince most
+sweetly sounded.&nbsp; And thus the battle was joined; and Captain Insatiable
+looked to the enemy&rsquo;s carriages, and waited when he should receive
+some prey.<br>
+<br>
+The Prince&rsquo;s captains fought it stoutly, beyond what indeed could
+be expected they should; they wounded many; they made the whole army
+of Diabolus to make a retreat.&nbsp; But I cannot tell how, but the
+brave Captain Credence, Captain Good-Hope, and Captain Experience, as
+they were upon the pursuit, cutting down, and following hard after the
+enemy in the rear, Captain Credence stumbled and fell, by which fall
+he caught so great a hurt, that he could not rise till Captain Experience
+did help him up, at which their men were put in disorder.&nbsp; The
+captain also was so full of pain, that he could not forbear but aloud
+to cry out: at this, the other two captains fainted, supposing that
+Captain Credence had received his mortal wound; their men also were
+more disordered, and had no list to fight.&nbsp; Now Diabolus being
+very observing, though at this time as yet he was put to the worst,
+perceiving that a halt was made among the men that were the pursuers,
+what does he but, taking it for granted that the captains were either
+wounded or dead, he therefore makes at first a stand, then faces about,
+and so comes up upon the Prince&rsquo;s army with as much of his fury
+as hell could help him to; and his hap was to fall in just among the
+three captains, Captain Credence, Captain Good-Hope, and Captain Experience,
+and did cut, wound, and pierce them so dreadfully, that what through
+discouragement, what through disorder, and what through the wounds that
+they had received, and also the loss of much blood, they scarce were
+able, though they had for their power the three best hands in Mansoul,
+to get safe into the hold again.<br>
+<br>
+Now, when the body of the Prince&rsquo;s army saw how these three captains
+were put to the worst, they thought it their wisdom to make as safe
+and good a retreat as they could, and so returned by the sally-port
+again; and so there was an end of this present action.&nbsp; But Diabolus
+was so flushed with this night&rsquo;s work, that he promised himself,
+in few days, an easy and complete conquest over the town of Mansoul;
+wherefore, on the day following, he comes up to the sides thereof with
+great boldness, and demands entrance, and that forthwith they deliver
+themselves up to his government.&nbsp; The Diabolonians, too, that were
+within, they began to be somewhat brisk, as we shall show afterward.<br>
+<br>
+But the valiant Lord Mayor replied, that what he got he must get by
+force; for as long as Emmanuel, their Prince, was alive, (though he
+at present was not so with them as they wished,) they should never consent
+to yield Mansoul up to another.<br>
+<br>
+And with that the Lord Willbewill stood up, and said, &lsquo;Diabolus,
+thou master of the den, and enemy to all that is good, we poor inhabitants
+of the town of Mansoul are too well acquainted with thy rule and government,
+and with the end of those things that for certain will follow submitting
+to thee, to do it.&nbsp; Wherefore though while we were without knowledge
+we suffered thee to take us, (as the bird that saw not the snare fell
+into the hands of the fowler,) yet since we have been turned from darkness
+to light, we have also been turned from the power of Satan to God.&nbsp;
+And though through thy subtlety, and also the subtlety of the Diabolonians
+within, we have sustained much loss, and also plunged ourselves into
+much perplexity, yet give up ourselves, lay down our arms, and yield
+to so horrid a tyrant as thou, we shall not; die upon the place we choose
+rather to do.&nbsp; Besides, we have hopes that in time deliverance
+will come from court unto us, and therefore we yet will maintain a war
+against thee.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+This brave speech of the Lord Willbewill, with that also of the Lord
+Mayor, did somewhat abate the boldness of Diabolus, though it kindled
+the fury of his rage.&nbsp; It also succoured the townsmen and captains;
+yea, it was as a plaster to the brave Captain Credence&rsquo;s wound;
+for you must know that a brave speech now (when the captains of the
+town with their men of war came home routed, and when the enemy took
+courage and boldness at the success that he had obtained to draw up
+to the walls, and demand entrance, as he did) was in season, and also
+advantageous.<br>
+<br>
+The Lord Willbewill also did play the man within; for while the captains
+and soldiers were in the field, he was in arms in the town, and wherever
+by him there was a Diabolonian found, they were forced to feel the weight
+of his heavy hand, and also the edge of his penetrating sword: many
+therefore of the Diabolonians he wounded, as the Lord Cavil, the Lord
+Brisk, the Lord Pragmatic, and the Lord Murmur; several also of the
+meaner sort he did sorely maim; though there cannot at this time an
+account be given you of any that he slew outright.&nbsp; The cause,
+or rather the advantage that my Lord Willbewill had at this time to
+do thus, was for that the captains were gone out to fight the enemy
+in the field.&nbsp; &lsquo;For now,&rsquo; thought the Diabolonians
+within, &lsquo;is our time to stir and make an uproar in the town.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+What do they therefore but quickly get themselves into a body, and fall
+forthwith to hurricaning in Mansoul, as if now nothing but whirlwind
+and tempest should be there.&nbsp; Wherefore, as I said, he takes this
+opportunity to fall in among them with his men, cutting and slashing
+with courage that was undaunted; at which the Diabolonians with all
+haste dispersed themselves to their holds, and my lord to his place
+as before.<br>
+<br>
+This brave act of my lord did somewhat revenge the wrong done by Diabolus
+to the captains, and also did let them know that Mansoul was not to
+be parted with for the loss of a victory or two; wherefore the wing
+of the tyrant was clipped again, as to boasting, - I mean in comparison
+of what he would have done, if the Diabolonians had put the town to
+the same plight to which he had put the captains.<br>
+<br>
+Well, Diabolus yet resolves to have the other bout with Mansoul.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;For,&rsquo; thought he, &lsquo;since I beat them once, I may
+beat them twice.&rsquo;&nbsp; Wherefore he commanded his men to be ready
+at such an hour of the night, to make a fresh assault upon the town;
+and he gave it out in special that they should bend all their force
+against Feel-gate, and attempt to break into the town through that.&nbsp;
+The word that then he did give to his officers and soldiers was Hell-fire.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;And,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;if we break in upon them, as I wish
+we do, either with some, or with all our force, let them that break
+in look to it, that they forget not the word.&nbsp; And let nothing
+be heard in the town of Mansoul but, &ldquo;Hell-fire!&nbsp; Hell-fire!
+Hell-fire!&rdquo;&rsquo;&nbsp; The drummer was also to beat without
+ceasing, and the standard-bearers were to display their colours; the
+soldiers, too, were to put on what courage they could, and to see that
+they played manfully their parts against the town.<br>
+<br>
+So when night was come, and all things by the tyrant made ready for
+the work, he suddenly makes his assault upon Feel-gate, and after he
+had awhile struggled there, he throws the gate wide open: for the truth
+is, those gates were but weak, and so most easily made to yield.&nbsp;
+When Diabolus had thus far made his attempt, he placed his captains
+(namely, Torment and No-Ease) there; so he attempted to press forward,
+but the Prince&rsquo;s captains came down upon him, and made his entrance
+more difficult than he desired.&nbsp; And, to speak truth, they made
+what resistance they could; but the three of their best and most valiant
+captains being wounded, and by their wounds made much incapable of doing
+the town that service they would, (and all the rest having more than
+their hands full of the doubters, and their captains that did follow
+Diabolus,) they were overpowered with force, nor could they keep them
+out of the town.&nbsp; Wherefore the Prince&rsquo;s men and their captains
+betook themselves to the castle, as to the stronghold of the town: and
+this they did partly for their own security, partly for the security
+of the town, and partly, or rather chiefly, to preserve to Emmanuel
+the prerogative-royal of Mansoul; for so was the castle of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+The captains therefore being fled into the castle, the enemy, without
+much resistance, possess themselves of the rest of the town, and spreading
+themselves as they went into every corner, they cried out as they marched,
+according to the command of the tyrant, &lsquo;Hell-fire! Hell-fire!
+Hell-fire!&rsquo; so that nothing for a while throughout the town of
+Mansoul could be heard but the direful noise of &lsquo;Hell-fire!&rsquo;
+together with the roaring of Diabolus&rsquo;s drum.&nbsp; And now did
+the clouds hang black over Mansoul, nor to reason did anything but ruin
+seem to attend it.&nbsp; Diabolus also quartered his soldiers in the
+houses of the inhabitants of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Yea, the subordinate
+preacher&rsquo;s house was as full of these outlandish doubters as ever
+it could hold, and so was my Lord Mayor&rsquo;s, and my Lord Willbewill&rsquo;s
+also.&nbsp; Yea, where was there a corner, a cottage, a barn, or a hogstye,
+that now was not full of these vermin?&nbsp; Yea, they turned the men
+of the town out of their houses, and would lie in their beds, and sit
+at their tables themselves.&nbsp; Ah, poor Mansoul! now thou feelest
+the fruits of sin, yea, what venom was in the flattering words of Mr.
+Carnal-Security!&nbsp; They made great havoc of whatever they laid their
+hands on; yea, they fired the town in several places; many young children
+also were by them dashed in pieces; and those that were yet unborn they
+destroyed in their mothers&rsquo; wombs: for you must needs think that
+it could not now be otherwise; for what conscience, what pity, what
+bowels of compassion can any expect at the hands of outlandish doubters?&nbsp;
+Many in Mansoul that were women, both young and old, they forced, ravished,
+and beastlike abused, so that they swooned, miscarried, and many of
+them died, and so lay at the top of every street, and in all by-places
+of the town.<br>
+<br>
+And now did Mansoul seem to be nothing but a den of dragons, an emblem
+of hell, and a place of total darkness.&nbsp; Now did Mansoul lie almost
+like the barren wilderness; nothing but nettles, briars, thorns, weeds,
+and stinking things seemed now to cover the face of Mansoul.&nbsp; I
+told you before, how that these Diabolonian doubters turned the men
+of Mansoul out of their beds, and now I will add, they wounded them,
+they mauled them, yea, and almost brained many of them.&nbsp; Many did
+I say, yea most, if not all of them.&nbsp; Mr. Conscience they so wounded,
+yea, and his wounds so festered, that he could have no ease day nor
+night, but lay as if continually upon a rack; but that Shaddai rules
+all, certainly they had slain him outright.&nbsp; Mr. Lord Mayor they
+so abused that they almost put out his eyes; and had not my Lord Willbewill
+got into the castle, they intended to have chopped him all to pieces;
+for they did look upon him, as his heart now stood, to be one of the
+very worst that was in Mansoul against Diabolus and his crew.&nbsp;
+And indeed he hath shown himself a man, and more of his exploits you
+will hear of afterwards.<br>
+<br>
+Now, a man might have walked for days together in Mansoul, and scarcely
+have seen one in the town that looked like a religious man.&nbsp; Oh,
+the fearful state of Mansoul now! now every corner swarmed with outlandish
+doubters; red-coats and black-coats walked the town by clusters, and
+filled up all the houses with hideous noises, vain songs, lying stories,
+and blasphemous language against Shaddai and his Son.&nbsp; Now also
+those Diabolonians that lurked in the walls and dens and holes that
+were in the town of Mansoul, came forth and showed themselves; yea,
+walked with open face in company with the doubters that were in Mansoul.&nbsp;
+Yea, they had more boldness now to walk the streets, to haunt the houses,
+and to show themselves abroad, than had any of the honest inhabitants
+of the now woful town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+But Diabolus and his outlandish men were not at peace in Mansoul; for
+they were not there entertained as were the captains and forces of Emmanuel:
+the townsmen did browbeat them what they could; nor did they partake
+or make stroy of any of the necessaries of Mansoul, but that which they
+seized on against the townsmen&rsquo;s will: what they could, they hid
+from them, and what they could not, they had with an ill-will.&nbsp;
+They, poor hearts! had rather have had their room than their company;
+but they were at present their captives, and their captives for the
+present they were forced to be.&nbsp; But, I say, they discountenanced
+them as much as they were able, and showed them all the dislike that
+they could.<br>
+<br>
+The captains also from the castle did hold them in continual play with
+their slings, to the chafing and fretting of the minds of the enemies.&nbsp;
+True, Diabolus made a great many attempts to have broken open the gates
+of the castle, but Mr. Godly-Fear was made the keeper of that; and he
+was a man of that courage, conduct, and valour, that it was in vain,
+as long as life lasted within him, to think to do that work, though
+mostly desired; wherefore all the attempts that Diabolus made against
+him were fruitless.&nbsp; I have wished sometimes that that man had
+had the whole rule of the town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+Well, this was the condition of the town of Mansoul for about two years
+and a half: the body of the town was the seat of war, the people of
+the town were driven into holes, and the glory of Mansoul was laid in
+the dust.&nbsp; What rest, then, could be to the inhabitants, what peace
+could Mansoul have, and what sun could shine upon it?&nbsp; Had the
+enemy lain so long without in the plain against the town, it had been
+enough to have famished them: but now, when they shall be within, when
+the town shall be their tent, their trench and fort against the castle
+that was in the town; when the town shall be against the town, and shall
+serve to be a defence to the enemies of her strength and life: I say,
+when they shall make use of the forts and town-holds to secure themselves
+in, even till they shall take, spoil, and demolish the castle, - this
+was terrible! and yet this was now the state of the town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+After the town of Mansoul had been in this sad and lamentable condition,
+for so long a time as I have told you, and no petitions that they presented
+their Prince with, all this while, could prevail, the inhabitants of
+the town, namely, the elders and chief of Mansoul, gathered together,
+and, after some time spent in condoling their miserable state and this
+miserable judgment coming upon them, they agreed together to draw up
+yet another petition, and to send it away to Emmanuel for relief.&nbsp;
+But Mr. Godly-Fear stood up and answered, that he knew that his Lord
+the Prince never did nor ever would receive a petition for these matters,
+from the hand of any whoever, unless the Lord Secretary&rsquo;s hand
+was to it; &lsquo;and this,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;is the reason that
+you prevailed not all this while.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then they said they would
+draw up one, and get the Lord Secretary&rsquo;s hand unto it.&nbsp;
+But Mr. Godly-Fear answered again, that he knew also that the Lord Secretary
+would not set his hand to any petition that himself had not an hand
+in composing and drawing up.&nbsp; &lsquo;And besides,&rsquo; said he,
+&lsquo;the Prince doth know my Lord Secretary&rsquo;s hand from all
+the hands in the world; wherefore he cannot be deceived by any pretence
+whatever.&nbsp; Wherefore my advice is that you go to my Lord, and implore
+him to lend you his aid.&rsquo;&nbsp; (Now he did yet abide in the castle,
+where all the captains and men-at-arms were.)<br>
+<br>
+So they heartily thanked Mr. Godly-Fear, took his counsel, and did as
+he had bidden them.&nbsp; So they went and came to my Lord, and made
+known the cause of their coming to him; namely, that since Mansoul was
+in so deplorable a condition, his Highness would be pleased to undertake
+to draw up a petition for them to Emmanuel, the Son of the mighty Shaddai,
+and to their King and his Father by him.<br>
+<br>
+Then said the Secretary to them, &lsquo;What petition is it that you
+would have me draw up for you?&rsquo;&nbsp; But they said, &lsquo;Our
+Lord knows best the state and condition of the town of Mansoul; and
+how we are backslidden and degenerated from the Prince: thou also knowest
+who is come up to war against us, and how Mansoul is now the seat of
+war.&nbsp; My Lord knows, moreover, what barbarous usages our men, women,
+and children have suffered at their hands; and how our homebred Diabolonians
+do walk now with more boldness than dare the townsmen in the streets
+of Mansoul.&nbsp; Let our Lord therefore, according to the wisdom of
+God that is in him, draw up a petition for his poor servants to our
+Prince Emmanuel.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Well,&rsquo; said the Lord Secretary,
+&lsquo;I will draw up a petition for you, and will also set my hand
+thereto.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then said they, &lsquo;But when shall we call
+for it at the hands of our Lord?&rsquo;&nbsp; But he answered, &lsquo;Yourselves
+must be present at the doing of it; yea, you must put your desires to
+it.&nbsp; True, the hand and pen shall be mine, but the ink and paper
+must be yours; else how can you say it is your petition?&nbsp; Nor have
+I need to petition for myself, because I have not offended.&rsquo; He
+also added as followeth: &lsquo;No petition goes from me in my name
+to the Prince, and so to his Father by him, but when the people that
+are chiefly concerned therein do join in heart and soul in the matter,
+for that must be inserted therein.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+So they did heartily agree with the sentence of the Lord, and a petition
+was forthwith drawn up for them.&nbsp; But now, who should carry it?
+that was next.&nbsp; But the Secretary advised that Captain Credence
+should carry it; for he was a well-spoken man.&nbsp; They therefore
+called for him, and propounded to him the business.&nbsp; &lsquo;Well,&rsquo;
+said the captain, &lsquo;I gladly accept of the motion; and though I
+am lame, I will do this business for you with as much speed, and as
+well as I can.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+The contents of the petition were to this purpose<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;O our Lord, and Sovereign Prince Emmanuel, the potent, the long-suffering
+Prince! grace is poured into thy lips, and to thee belong mercy and
+forgiveness, though we have rebelled against thee.&nbsp; We, who are
+no more worthy to be called thy Mansoul, nor yet fit to partake of common
+benefits, do beseech thee, and thy Father by thee, to do away our transgressions.&nbsp;
+We confess that thou mightest cast us away for them; but do it not for
+thy name&rsquo;s sake: let the Lord rather take an opportunity, at our
+miserable condition, to let out his bowels and compassions to us.&nbsp;
+We are compassed on every side, Lord; our own backslidings reprove us;
+our Diabolonians within our town fright us; and the army of the angel
+of the bottomless pit distresses us.&nbsp; Thy grace can be our salvation,
+and whither to go but to thee we know not.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Furthermore, O gracious Prince, we have weakened our captains,
+and they are discouraged, sick, and, of late, some of them grievously
+worsted and beaten out of the field by the power and force of the tyrant.&nbsp;
+Yea, even those of our captains, in whose valour we did formerly use
+to put most of our confidence, they are as wounded men.&nbsp; Besides,
+Lord, our enemies are lively, and they are strong; they vaunt and boast
+themselves, and do threaten to part us among themselves for a booty.&nbsp;
+They are fallen also upon us, Lord, with many thousand doubters, such
+as with whom we cannot tell what to do; they are all grim-looked and
+unmerciful ones, and they bid defiance to us and thee.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Our wisdom is gone, our power is gone, because thou art departed
+from us; nor have we what we may call ours but sin, shame, and confusion
+of face for sin.&nbsp; Take pity upon us, O Lord, take pity upon us,
+thy miserable town of Mansoul, and save us out of the hands of our enemies.&nbsp;
+Amen.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+This petition, as was touched afore, was handed by the Lord Secretary,
+and carried to the court by the brave and most stout Captain Credence.&nbsp;
+Now he carried it out at Mouth-gate, (for that, as I said, was the sally-port
+of the town,) and he went and came to Emmanuel with it.&nbsp; Now how
+it came out, I do not know; but for certain it did, and that so far
+as to reach the ears of Diabolus.&nbsp; Thus I conclude, because that
+the tyrant had it presently by the end, and charged the town of Mansoul
+with it, saying, &lsquo;Thou rebellious and stubborn-hearted Mansoul,
+I will make thee to leave off petitioning.&nbsp; Art thou yet for petitioning?&nbsp;
+I will make thee to leave.&rsquo;&nbsp; Yea, he also knew who the messenger
+was that carried the petition to the Prince, and it made him both to
+fear and rage.<br>
+<br>
+Wherefore he commanded that his drum should be beat again, a thing that
+Mansoul could not abide to hear: but when Diabolus will have his drum
+beat, Mansoul must abide the noise.&nbsp; Well, the drum was beat, and
+the Diabolonians were gathered together.<br>
+<br>
+Then said Diabolus, &lsquo;O ye stout Diabolonians, be it known unto
+you, that there is treachery hatched against us in the rebellious town
+of Mansoul; for albeit the town is in our possession, as you see, yet
+these miserable Mansoulians have attempted to dare, and have been so
+hardy as yet to send to the court to Emmanuel for help.&nbsp; This I
+give you to understand, that ye may yet know how to carry it to the
+wretched town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Wherefore, O my trusty Diabolonians,
+I command that yet more and more ye distress this town of Mansoul, and
+vex it with your wiles, ravish their women, deflower their virgins,
+slay their children, brain their ancients, fire their town, and what
+other mischief you can; and let this be the reward of the Mansoulians
+from me, for their desperate rebellions against me.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+This, you see, was the charge; but something stepped in betwixt that
+and execution, for as yet there was but little more done than to rage.<br>
+<br>
+Moreover, when Diabolus had done thus, he went the next way up to the
+castle gates, and demanded that, upon pain of death, the gates should
+be opened to him, and that entrance should be given him and his men
+that followed after.&nbsp; To whom Mr. Godly-Fear replied, (for he it
+was that had the charge of that gate,) that the gate should not be opened
+unto him, nor to the men that followed after him.&nbsp; He said, moreover,
+that Mansoul, when she had suffered awhile, should be made perfect,
+strengthened, settled.<br>
+<br>
+Then said Diabolus, &lsquo;Deliver me, then, the men that have petitioned
+against me, especially Captain Credence, that carried it to your Prince;
+deliver that varlet into my hands, and I will depart from the town.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then up starts a Diabolonian, whose name was Mr. Fooling, and said,
+&lsquo;My lord offereth you fair: it is better for you that one man
+perish, than that your whole Mansoul should be undone.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+But Mr. Godly-Fear made him this replication, &lsquo;How long will Mansoul
+be kept out of the dungeon, when she hath given up her faith to Diabolus!&nbsp;
+As good lose the town, as lose Captain Credence; for if one be gone
+the other must follow.&rsquo;&nbsp; But to that Mr. Fooling said nothing.<br>
+<br>
+Then did my Lord Mayor reply, and said, &lsquo;O thou devouring tyrant,
+be it known unto thee, we shall hearken to none of thy words; we are
+resolved to resist thee as long as a captain, a man, a sling, and a
+stone to throw at thee shall be found in the town of Mansoul.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+But Diabolus answered, &lsquo;Do you hope, do you wait, do you look
+for help and deliverance?&nbsp; You have sent to Emmanuel, but your
+wickedness sticks too close in your skirts, to let innocent prayers
+come out of your lips.&nbsp; Think you that you shall be prevailers
+and prosper in this design?&nbsp; You will fail in your wish, you will
+fail in your attempts; for it is not only I, but your Emmanuel is against
+you: yea, it is he that hath sent me against you to subdue you.&nbsp;
+For what, then, do you hope? or by what means will you escape?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said the Lord Mayor, &lsquo;We have sinned indeed; but that shall
+be no help to thee, for our Emmanuel hath said it, and that in great
+faithfulness, &ldquo;and him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast
+out.&rdquo;&nbsp; He hath also told us, O our enemy, that &ldquo;all
+manner of sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven&rdquo; to the sons of
+men.&nbsp; Therefore we dare not despair, but will look for, wait for,
+and hope for deliverance still.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Now, by this time, Captain Credence was returned and come from the court
+from Emmanuel to the castle of Mansoul, and he returned to them with
+a packet.&nbsp; So my Lord Mayor, hearing that Captain Credence was
+come, withdrew himself from the noise of the roaring of the tyrant,
+and left him to yell at the wall of the town, or against the gates of
+the castle.&nbsp; So he came up to the captain&rsquo;s lodgings, and
+saluting him, he asked him of his welfare, and what was the best news
+at court.&nbsp; But when he asked Captain Credence that, the water stood
+in his eyes.&nbsp; Then said the captain, &lsquo;Cheer up, my lord,
+for all will be well in time.&rsquo;&nbsp; And with that he first produced
+his packet, and laid it by; but that the Lord Mayor, and the rest of
+the captains, took for sign of good tidings.&nbsp; Now a season of grace
+being come, he sent for all the captains and elders of the town, that
+were here and there in their lodgings in the castle and upon their guard,
+to let them know that Captain Credence was returned from the court,
+and that he had something in general, and something in special, to communicate
+to them.&nbsp; So they all came up to him, and saluted him, and asked
+him concerning his journey, and what was the best news at the court.&nbsp;
+And he answered them as he had done the Lord Mayor before, that all
+would be well at last.&nbsp; Now, when the captain had thus saluted
+them, he opened his packet, and thence did draw out his several notes
+for those that he had sent for.<br>
+<br>
+And the first note was for my Lord Mayor, wherein was signified:- That
+the Prince Emmanuel had taken it well that my Lord Mayor had been so
+true and trusty in his office, and the great concerns that lay upon
+him for the town and people of Mansoul.&nbsp; Also, he bid him to know,
+that he took it well that he had been so bold for his Prince Emmanuel,
+and had engaged so faithfully in his cause against Diabolus.&nbsp; He
+also signified, at the close of his letter, that he should shortly receive
+his reward.<br>
+<br>
+The second note that came out, was for the noble Lord Willbewill, wherein
+there was signified:- That his Prince Emmanuel did well understand how
+valiant and courageous he had been for the honour of his Lord, now in
+his absence, and when his name was under contempt by Diabolus.&nbsp;
+There was signified also, that his Prince had taken it well that he
+had been so faithful to the town of Mansoul, in his keeping of so strict
+a hand and eye over and so strict a rein upon the neck of the Diabolonians,
+that did still lie lurking in their several holes in the famous town
+of Mansoul.&nbsp; He signified, moreover, how that he understood that
+my Lord had, with his own hand, done great execution upon some of the
+chief of the rebels there, to the great discouragement of the adverse
+party and to the good example of the whole town of Mansoul; and that
+shortly his lordship should have his reward.<br>
+<br>
+The third note came out for the subordinate preacher, wherein was signified:-
+That his Prince took it well from him, that he had so honestly and so
+faithfully performed his office, and executed the trust committed to
+him by his Lord, while he exhorted, rebuked, and forewarned Mansoul
+according to the laws of the town.&nbsp; He signified, moreover, that
+he took it well at his hand that he called to fasting, to sackcloth,
+and ashes, when Mansoul was under her revolt.&nbsp; Also, that he called
+for the aid of the Captain Boanerges to help in so weighty a work; and
+that shortly he also should receive his reward.<br>
+<br>
+The fourth note came out for Mr. Godly-Fear, wherein his Lord thus signified:-
+That his Lordship observed, that he was the first of all the men in
+Mansoul that detected Mr. Carnal-Security as the only one that, through
+his subtlety and cunning, had obtained for Diabolus a defection and
+decay of goodness in the blessed town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Moreover, his
+Lord gave him to understand, that he still remembered his tears and
+mourning for the state of Mansoul.&nbsp; It was also observed, by the
+same note, that his Lord took notice of his detecting of this Mr. Carnal-Security,
+at his own table among his guests, in his own house, and that in the
+midst of his jolliness, even while he was seeking to perfect his villanies
+against the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Emmanuel also took notice that this
+reverend person, Mr. Godly-Fear, stood stoutly to it, at the gates of
+the castle, against all the threats and attempts of the tyrant; and
+that he had put the townsmen in a way to make their petition to their
+Prince, so as that he might accept thereof, and as they might obtain
+an answer of peace; and that therefore shortly he should receive his
+reward.<br>
+<br>
+After all this, there was yet produced a note which was written to the
+whole town of Mansoul, whereby they perceived - That their Lord took
+notice of their so often repeating of petitions to him; and that they
+should see more of the fruits of such their doings in time to come.&nbsp;
+Their Prince did also therein tell them, that he took it well, that
+their heart and mind, now at last, abode fixed upon him and his ways,
+though Diabolus had made such inroads upon them; and that neither flatteries
+on the one hand, nor hardships on the other, could make them yield to
+serve his cruel designs.&nbsp; There was also inserted at the bottom
+of this note - That his Lordship had left the town of Mansoul in the
+hands of the Lord Secretary, and under the conduct of Captain Credence,
+saying, &lsquo;Beware that you yet yield yourselves unto their governance;
+and in due time you shall receive your reward.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+So, after the brave Captain Credence had delivered his notes to those
+to whom they belonged, he retired himself to my Lord Secretary&rsquo;s
+lodgings, and there spends time in conversing with him; for they too
+were very great one with another, and did indeed know more how things
+would go with Mansoul than did all the townsmen besides.&nbsp; The Lord
+Secretary also loved the Captain Credence dearly; yea, many a good bit
+was sent him from my Lord&rsquo;s table; also, he might have a show
+of countenance, when the rest of Mansoul lay under the clouds: so, after
+some time for converse was spent, the captain betook himself to his
+chambers to rest.&nbsp; But it was not long after when my Lord did send
+for the captain again; so the captain came to him, and they greeted
+one another with usual salutations.&nbsp; Then said the captain to the
+Lord Secretary, &lsquo;What hath my Lord to say to his servant?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+So the Lord Secretary took him and had him aside, and after a sign or
+two of more favour, he said, &lsquo;I have made thee the Lord&rsquo;s
+lieutenant over all the forces in Mansoul; so that, from this day forward,
+all men in Mansoul shall be at thy word; and thou shalt be he that shall
+lead in, and that shall lead out Mansoul.&nbsp; Thou shalt therefore
+manage, according to thy place, the war for thy Prince, and for the
+town of Mansoul, against the force and power of Diabolus; and at thy
+command shall the rest of the captains be.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Now the townsmen began to perceive what interest the captain had, both
+with the court, and also with the Lord Secretary in Mansoul; for no
+man before could speed when sent, nor bring such good news from Emmanuel
+as he.&nbsp; Wherefore what do they, after some lamentation that they
+made no more use of him in their distresses, but send by their subordinate
+preacher to the Lord Secretary, to desire him that all that ever they
+were and had might be put under the government, care, custody, and conduct
+of Captain Credence.<br>
+<br>
+So their preacher went and did his errand, and received this answer
+from the mouth of his Lord: that Captain Credence should be the great
+doer in all the King&rsquo;s army, against the King&rsquo;s enemies,
+and also for the welfare of Mansoul.&nbsp; So he bowed to the ground,
+and thanked his Lordship, and returned and told his news to the townsfolk.&nbsp;
+But all this was done with all imaginable secrecy, because the foes
+had yet great strength in the town.&nbsp; But to return to our story
+again.<br>
+<br>
+When Diabolus saw himself thus boldly confronted by the Lord Mayor,
+and perceived the stoutness of Mr. Godly-Fear, he fell into a rage,
+and forthwith called a council of war, that he might be revenged on
+Mansoul.&nbsp; So all the princes of the pit came together, and old
+Incredulity at the head of them, with all the captains of his army.&nbsp;
+So they consult what to do.&nbsp; Now the effect and conclusion of the
+council that day was how they might take the castle, because they could
+not conclude themselves masters of the town so long as that was in the
+possession of their enemies.<br>
+<br>
+So one advised this way, and another advised that; but when they could
+not agree in their verdict, Apollyon, that president of the council,
+stood up, and thus he began: &lsquo;My brotherhood,&rsquo; quoth he,
+&lsquo;I have two things to propound unto you; and my first is this.&nbsp;
+Let us withdraw ourselves from the town into the plain again, for our
+presence here will do us no good, because the castle is yet in our enemies&rsquo;
+hands; nor is it possible that we should take that, so long as so many
+brave captains are in it, and that this bold fellow, Godly-Fear, is
+made the keeper of the gates of it.&nbsp; Now, when we have withdrawn
+ourselves into the plain, they, of their own accord, will be glad of
+some little ease; and it may be, of their own accord, they again may
+begin to be remiss, and even their so being will give them a bigger
+blow than we can possibly give them ourselves.&nbsp; But if that should
+fail, our going forth of the town may draw the captains out after us;
+and you know what it cost them when we fought them in the field before.&nbsp;
+Besides, can we but draw them out into the field, we may lay an ambush
+behind the town, which shall, when they are come forth abroad, rush
+in and take possession of the castle.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+But Beelzebub stood up, and replied, saying: &lsquo;It is impossible
+to draw them all off from the castle; some, you may be sure, will lie
+there to keep that; wherefore it will be but in vain thus to attempt,
+unless we were sure that they will all come out.&rsquo;&nbsp; He therefore
+concluded that what was done must be done by some other means.&nbsp;
+And the most likely means that the greatest of their heads could invent,
+was that which Apollyon had advised to before, namely, to get the townsmen
+again to sin.&nbsp; &lsquo;For,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;it is not our
+being in the town, nor in the field, nor our fighting, nor our killing
+of their men, that can make us the masters of Mansoul; for so long as
+one in the town is able to lift up his finger against us, Emmanuel will
+take their parts; and if he shall take their parts, we know what time
+of day it will be with us.&nbsp; Wherefore, for my part,&rsquo; quoth
+he, &lsquo;there is, in my judgment, no way to bring them into bondage
+to us, like inventing a way to make them sin.&nbsp; Had we,&rsquo; said
+he, &lsquo;left all our doubters at home, we had done as well as we
+have done now, unless we could have made them the masters and governors
+of the castle; for doubters at a distance are but like objections refelled
+with arguments.&nbsp; Indeed, can we but get them into the hold, and
+make them possessors of that, the day will be our own.&nbsp; Let us,
+therefore, withdraw ourselves into the plain, (not expecting that the
+captains in Mansoul should follow us,) but yet, I say, let us do this,
+and before we so do, let us advise again with our trusty Diabolonians
+that are yet in their holds of Mansoul, and set them to work to betray
+the town to us; for they indeed must do it, or it will be left undone
+for ever.&rsquo;&nbsp; By these sayings of Beelzebub, (for I think it
+was he that gave this counsel,) the whole conclave was forced to be
+of his opinion, namely, that the way to get the castle was to get the
+town to sin.&nbsp; Then they fell to inventing by what means they might
+do this thing.<br>
+<br>
+Then Lucifer stood up, and said: &lsquo;The counsel of Beelzebub is
+pertinent.&nbsp; Now, the way to bring this to pass, in mine opinion,
+is this: let us withdraw our force from the town of Mansoul; let us
+do this, and let us terrify them no more, either with summons, or threats,
+or with the noise of our drum, or any other awakening means.&nbsp; Only
+let us lie in the field at a distance, and be as if we regarded them
+not; for frights, I see, do but awaken them, and make them more stand
+to their arms.&nbsp; I have also another stratagem in my head: you know
+Mansoul is a market-town, and a town that delights in commerce; what,
+therefore, if some of our Diabolonians shall feign themselves far-country
+men, and shall go out and bring to the market of Mansoul some of our
+wares to sell; and what matter at what rates they sell their wares,
+though it be but for half the worth?&nbsp; Now, let those that thus
+shall trade in their market be those that are witty and true to us,
+and I will lay my crown to pawn it will do.&nbsp; There are two that
+are come to my thoughts already, that I think will be arch at this work,
+and they are Mr. Penny-wise-pound-foolish, and Mr. Get-i&rsquo;the-hundred-and-lose-i&rsquo;the-shire;
+nor is this man with the long name at all inferior to the other.&nbsp;
+What, also, if you join with them Mr. Sweet-world and Mr. Present-good;
+they are men that are civil and cunning, but our true friends and helpers.&nbsp;
+Let these, with as many more, engage in this business for us, and let
+Mansoul be taken up in much business, and let them grow full and rich,
+and this is the way to get ground of them.&nbsp; Remember ye not that
+thus we prevailed upon Laodicea, and how many at present do we hold
+in this snare?&nbsp; Now, when they begin to grow full, they will forget
+their misery; and if we shall not affright them, they may happen to
+fall asleep, and so be got to neglect their town watch, their castle
+watch, as well as their watch at the gates.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Yea, may we not, by this means, so cumber Mansoul with abundance,
+that they shall be forced to make of their castle a warehouse, instead
+of a garrison fortified against us, and a receptacle for men of war.&nbsp;
+Thus, if we get our goods and commodities thither, I reckon that the
+castle is more than half ours.&nbsp; Besides, could we so order it that
+it shall be filled with such kind of wares, then if we made a sudden
+assault upon them, it would be hard for the captains to take shelter
+there.&nbsp; Do you not know that of the parable, &ldquo;The deceitfulness
+of riches choke the word&rdquo;? and again, &ldquo;When the heart is
+over-charged with surfeiting and drunkenness, and the cares of this
+life,&rdquo; all mischief comes upon them at unawares?<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Furthermore, my lords,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;you very well
+know that it is not easy for a people to be filled with our things,
+and not to have some of our Diabolonians as retainers to their houses
+and services.&nbsp; Where is a Mansoulian that is full of this world,
+that has not for his servants and waiting-men, Mr. Profuse, or Mr. Prodigality,
+or some other of our Diabolonian gang, as Mr. Voluptuous, Mr. Pragmatical,
+Mr. Ostentation, or the like?&nbsp; Now these can take the castle of
+Mansoul, or blow it up, or make it unfit for a garrison for Emmanuel,
+and any of these will do.&nbsp; Yea, these, for aught I know, may do
+it for us sooner than an army of twenty thousand men.&nbsp; Wherefore,
+to end as I began, my advice is, that we quietly withdraw ourselves,
+not offering any further force, or forcible attempts, upon the castle,
+at least at this time; and let us set on foot our new project, and let
+us see if that will not make them destroy themselves.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+This advice was highly applauded by them all, and was accounted the
+very masterpiece of hell, namely, to choke Mansoul with a fulness of
+this world, and to surfeit her heart with the good things thereof.&nbsp;
+But see how things meet together!&nbsp; Just as this Diabolonian council
+was broken up, Captain Credence received a letter from Emmanuel, the
+contents of which were these: That upon the third day he would meet
+him in the field in the plains about Mansoul.&nbsp; &lsquo;Meet me in
+the field!&rsquo; quoth the Captain; &lsquo;what meaneth my lord by
+this?&nbsp; I know not what he meaneth by meeting me in the field.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+So he took the note in his hand, and did carry it to my Lord Secretary,
+to ask his thoughts thereupon; for my Lord was a seer in all matters
+concerning the King, and also for the good and comfort of the town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; So he showed my Lord the note, and desired his opinion
+thereof.&nbsp; &lsquo;For my part,&rsquo; quoth Captain Credence, &lsquo;I
+know not the meaning thereof.&rsquo;&nbsp; So my lord did take and read
+it and, after a little pause, he said, &lsquo;The Diabolonians have
+had against Mansoul a great consultation to-day; they have, I say, this
+day been contriving the utter ruin of the town; and the result of their
+council is, to set Mansoul into such a way which, if taken, will surely
+make her destroy herself.&nbsp; And, to this end, they are making ready
+for their own departure out of the town, intending to betake themselves
+to the field again,&rsquo; and there to lie till they shall see whether
+this their project will take or no.&nbsp; But be thou ready with the
+men of thy Lord, (for on the third day they will be in the plain,) there
+to fall upon the Diabolonians; for the Prince will by that time be in
+the field; yea, by that it is break of day, sun-rising, or before, and
+that with a mighty force against them.&nbsp; So he shall be before them,
+and thou shalt be behind them, and betwixt you both their army shall
+be destroyed.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+When Captain Credence heard this, away goes he to the rest of the captains,
+and tells them what a note he had a while since received from the hand
+of Emmanuel.&nbsp; &lsquo;And,&rsquo; said he, &lsquo;that which was
+dark therein hath my lord the Lord Secretary expounded unto me.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+He told them, moreover, what by himself and by them must be done to
+answer the mind of their Lord.&nbsp; Then were the captains glad; and
+Captain Credence commanded that all the King&rsquo;s trumpeters should
+ascend to the battlements of the castle, and there, in the audience
+of Diabolus and of the whole town of Mansoul, make the best music that
+heart could invent.&nbsp; The trumpeters then did as they were commanded.&nbsp;
+They got themselves up to the top of the castle, and thus they began
+to sound.&nbsp; Then did Diabolus start, and said, &lsquo;What can be
+the meaning of this? they neither sound Boot-and-saddle, nor Horse-and-away,
+nor a charge.&nbsp; What do these madmen mean that yet they should be
+so merry and glad?&rsquo;&nbsp; Then answered one of themselves and
+said, &lsquo;This is for joy that their Prince Emmanuel is coming to
+relieve the town of Mansoul; and to this end he is at the head of an
+army, and that this relief is near.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+The men of Mansoul also were greatly concerned at this melodious charm
+of the trumpets; they said, yea, they answered one another, saying,
+&lsquo;This can be no harm to us; surely this can be no harm to us.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Then said the Diabolonians, &lsquo;What had we best to do?&rsquo; and
+it was answered, &lsquo;It was best to quit the town;&rsquo; and &lsquo;that,&rsquo;
+said one, &lsquo;ye may do in pursuance of your last counsel, and by
+so doing also be better able to give the enemy battle, should an army
+from without come upon us.&nbsp; So, on the second day, they withdrew
+themselves from Mansoul, and abode in the plains without; but they encamped
+themselves before Eye-gate, in what terrene and terrible manner they
+could.&nbsp; The reason why they would not abide in the town (besides
+the reasons that were debated in their late conclave) was, for that
+they were not possessed of the stronghold, and &lsquo;because,&rsquo;
+said they, &lsquo;we shall have more convenience to fight, and also
+to fly, if need be, when we are encamped in the open plains.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+Besides, the town would have been a pit for them rather than a place
+of defence, had the Prince come up and inclosed them fast therein.&nbsp;
+Therefore they betook themselves to the field, that they might also
+be out of the reach of the slings, by which they were much annoyed all
+the while that they were in the town.<br>
+<br>
+Well, the time that the captains were to fall upon the Diabolonians
+being come, they eagerly prepared themselves for action; for Captain
+Credence had told the captains over night, that they should meet their
+Prince in the field to-morrow.&nbsp; This, therefore, made them yet
+far more desirous to be engaging the enemy; for &lsquo;You shall see
+the Prince in the field to-morrow&rsquo; was like oil to a flaming fire,
+for of a long time they had been at a distance: they therefore were
+for this the more earnest and desirous of the work.&nbsp; So, as I said,
+the hour being come, Captain Credence, with the rest of the men of war,
+drew out their forces before it was day by the sally-port of the town.&nbsp;
+And, being all ready, Captain Credence went up to the head of the army,
+and gave to the rest of the captains the word, and so they to their
+under-officers and soldiers: the word was &lsquo;The sword of the Prince
+Emmanuel, and the shield of Captain Credence;&rsquo; which is, in the
+Mansoulian tongue, &lsquo;The word of God and faith.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then
+the captains fell on, and began roundly to front, and flank, and rear
+Diabolus&rsquo;s camp.<br>
+<br>
+Now, they left Captain Experience in the town, because he was yet ill
+of his wounds, which the Diabolonians had given him in the last fight.&nbsp;
+But when he perceived that the captains were at it, what does he but,
+calling for his crutches with haste, gets up, and away he goes to the
+battle, saying, &lsquo;Shall I lie here, when my brethren are in the
+fight, and when Emmanuel, the Prince, will show himself in the field
+to his servants?&rsquo;&nbsp; But when the enemy saw the man come with
+his crutches, they were daunted yet the more; &lsquo;for,&rsquo; thought
+they, &lsquo;what spirit has possessed these Mansoulians, that they
+fight us upon their crutches?&rsquo;&nbsp; Well, the captains, as I
+said, fell on, and did bravely handle their weapons, still crying out
+and shouting, as they laid on blows, &lsquo;The sword of the Prince
+Emmanuel, and the shield of Captain Credence!&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Now, when Diabolus saw that the captains were come out, and that so
+valiantly they surrounded his men, he concluded that, for the present,
+nothing from them was to be looked for but blows, and the dints of their
+&lsquo;two-edged sword.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Wherefore he also falls on upon the Prince&rsquo;s army with all his
+deadly force: so the battle was joined.&nbsp; Now who was it that at
+first Diabolus met with in the fight, but Captain Credence on the one
+hand, and the Lord Willbewill on the other: now Willbewill&rsquo;s blows
+were like the blows of a giant, for that man had a strong arm, and he
+fell in upon the election doubters, for they were the life-guard of
+Diabolus, and he kept them in play a good while, cutting and battering
+shrewdly.&nbsp; Now when Captain Credence saw my lord engaged, he did
+stoutly fall on, on the other hand, upon the same company also; so they
+put them to great disorder.&nbsp; Now Captain Good-Hope had engaged
+the vocation doubters, and they were sturdy men; but the captain was
+a valiant man: Captain Experience did also send him some aid; so he
+made the vocation doubters to retreat.&nbsp; The rest of the armies
+were hotly engaged, and that on every side, and the Diabolonians did
+fight stoutly.&nbsp; Then did my Lord Secretary command that the slings
+from the castle should be played; and his men could throw stones at
+an hair&rsquo;s breadth.&nbsp; But, after a while, those that were made
+to fly before the captains of the Prince, did begin to rally again,
+and they came up stoutly upon the rear of the Prince&rsquo;s army: wherefore
+the Prince&rsquo;s army began to faint; but, remembering that they should
+see the face of their Prince by-and-by, they took courage, and a very
+fierce battle was fought.&nbsp; Then shouted the captains, saying, &lsquo;The
+sword of the Prince Emmanuel, and the shield of Captain Credence!&rsquo;
+and with that Diabolus gave back, thinking that more aid had been come.&nbsp;
+But no Emmanuel as yet appeared.&nbsp; Moreover, the battle did hang
+in doubt; and they made a little retreat on both sides.&nbsp; Now, in
+the time of respite, Captain Credence bravely encouraged his men to
+stand to it; and Diabolus did the like, as well as he could.&nbsp; But
+Captain Credence made a brave speech to his soldiers, the contents whereof
+here follow:-<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Gentlemen soldiers, and my brethren in this design, it rejoiceth
+me much to see in the field for our Prince, this day, so stout and so
+valiant an army, and such faithful lovers of Mansoul.&nbsp; You have
+hitherto, as hath become you, shown yourselves men of truth and courage
+against the Diabolonian forces; so that, for all their boast, they have
+not yet much cause to boast of their gettings.&nbsp; Now take to yourselves
+your wonted courage, and show yourselves men even this once only; for
+in a few minutes after the next engagement, this time, you shall see
+your Prince show himself in the field; for we must make this second
+assault upon this tyrant Diabolus, and then Emmanuel comes.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+No sooner had the captain made this speech to his soldiers, but one
+Mr. Speedy came post to the captain from the Prince, to tell him that
+Emmanuel was at hand.&nbsp; This news when the captain had received,
+he communicated to the other field-officers, and they again to their
+soldiers and men of war.&nbsp; Wherefore, like men raised from the dead,
+so the captains and their men arose, made up to the enemy, and cried
+as before, &lsquo;The sword of the Prince Emmanuel, and the shield of
+Captain Credence!&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+The Diabolonians also bestirred themselves, and made resistance as well
+as they could; but in this last engagement the Diabolonians lost their
+courage, and many of the doubters fell down dead to the ground.&nbsp;
+Now, when they had been in heat of battle about an hour or more, Captain
+Credence lift up his eyes and saw, and, behold, Emmanuel came; and he
+came with colours flying, trumpets sounding, and the feet of his men
+scarce touched the ground, they hasted with that celerity towards the
+captains that were engaged.&nbsp; Then did Credence wind with his men
+to the townward, and gave to Diabolus the field: so Emmanuel came upon
+him on the one side, and the enemies&rsquo; place was betwixt them both.&nbsp;
+Then again they fell to it afresh; and now it was but a little while
+more but Emmanuel and Captain Credence met, still trampling down the
+slain as they came.<br>
+<br>
+But when the captains saw that the Prince was come, and that he fell
+upon the Diabolonians on the other side, and that Captain Credence and
+his Highness had got them up betwixt them, they shouted, (they so shouted
+that the ground rent again,) saying, &lsquo;The sword of Emmanuel, and
+the shield of Captain Credence!&rsquo;&nbsp; Now, when Diabolus saw
+that he and his forces were so hard beset by the Prince and his princely
+army, what does he, and the lords of the pit that were with him, but
+make their escape, and forsake their army, and leave them to fall by
+the hand of Emmanuel, and of his noble Captain Credence: so they fell
+all down slain before them, before the Prince, and before his royal
+army; there was not left so much as one doubter alive; they lay spread
+upon the ground dead men, as one would spread dung upon the land.<br>
+<br>
+When the battle was over, all things came into order in the camp.&nbsp;
+Then the captains and elders of Mansoul came together to salute Emmanuel,
+while without the corporation: so they saluted him, and welcomed him,
+and that with a thousand welcomes, for that he was come to the borders
+of Mansoul again.&nbsp; So he smiled upon them, and said, &lsquo;Peace
+be to you.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then they addressed themselves to go to the
+town; they went then to go up to Mansoul, they, the Prince, with all
+the new forces that now he had brought with him to the war.&nbsp; Also
+all the gates of the town were set open for his reception, so glad were
+they of his blessed return.&nbsp; And this was the manner and order
+of this going of his into Mansoul:<br>
+<br>
+First.&nbsp; As I said, all the gates of the town were set open, yea,
+the gates of the castle also; the elders, too, of the town of Mansoul
+placed themselves at the gates of the town, to salute him at his entrance
+thither: and so they did; for, as he drew near, and approached towards
+the gates, they said, &lsquo;Lift up your heads, O ye gates; and be
+ye lift up, ye everlasting doors; and the King of glory shall come in.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+And they answered again, &lsquo;Who is the King of glory?&rsquo; and
+they made return to themselves, &lsquo;The Lord, strong and mighty;
+the Lord mighty in battle.&nbsp; Lift up your heads, O ye gates; even
+lift them up, ye everlasting doors,&rsquo; etc.<br>
+<br>
+Secondly.&nbsp; It was ordered also, by those of Mansoul, that all the
+way from the town gates to those of the castle, his blessed Majesty
+should be entertained with the song, by them that had the best skill
+in music in all the town of Mansoul: then did the elders, and the rest
+of the men of Mansoul, answer one another as Emmanuel entered the town,
+till he came at the castle gates, with songs and sound of trumpets,
+saying, &lsquo;They have seen thy goings, O God; even the goings of
+my God, my King, in the sanctuary.&nbsp; So the singers went before,
+the players on instruments followed after, and among them were the damsels
+playing on timbrels.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Thirdly.&nbsp; Then the captains, (for I would speak a word of them,)
+they in their order waited on the Prince, as he entered into the gates
+of Mansoul.&nbsp; Captain Credence went before, and Captain Good-Hope
+with him; Captain Charity came behind with other of his companions,
+and Captain Patience followed after all; and the rest of the captains,
+some on the right hand, and some on the left, accompanied Emmanuel into
+Mansoul.&nbsp; And all the while the colours were displayed, the trumpets
+sounded, and continual shoutings were among the soldiers.&nbsp; The
+Prince himself rode into the town in his armour, which was all of beaten
+gold, and in his chariot - the pillars of it were of silver, the bottom
+thereof of gold, the covering of it was of purple, the midst thereof
+being paved with love for the daughters of the town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+Fourthly.&nbsp; When the Prince was come to the entrance of Mansoul,
+he found all the streets strewed with lilies and flowers, curiously
+decked with boughs and branches from the green trees that stood round
+about the town.&nbsp; Every door also was filled with persons, who had
+adorned every one their fore-part against their house with something
+of variety and singular excellency, to entertain him withal as he passed
+in the streets: they also themselves, as Emmanuel passed by, did welcome
+him with shouts and acclamations of joy, saying, &lsquo;Blessed be the
+Prince that cometh in the name of his Father Shaddai.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Fifthly.&nbsp; At the castle gates the elders of Mansoul, namely, the
+Lord Mayor, the Lord Willbewill, the subordinate preacher, Mr. Knowledge,
+and Mr. Mind, with other of the gentry of the place, saluted Emmanuel
+again.&nbsp; They bowed before him, they kissed the dust of his feet,
+they thanked, they blessed, and praised his Highness for not taking
+advantage against them for their sins, but rather had pity upon them
+in their misery, and returned to them with mercies, and to build up
+their Mansoul for ever.&nbsp; Thus was he had up straightway to the
+castle; for that was the royal palace, and the place where his honour
+was to dwell; the which was ready prepared for his Highness by the presence
+of the Lord Secretary, and the work of Captain Credence.&nbsp; So he
+entered in.<br>
+<br>
+Sixthly.&nbsp; Then the people and commonalty of the town of Mansoul
+came to him into the castle to mourn, and to weep, and to lament for
+their wickedness, by which they had forced him out of the town.&nbsp;
+So when they were come, bowed themselves to the ground seven times;
+they also wept, they wept aloud, and asked forgiveness of the Prince,
+and prayed that he would again, as of old, confirm his love to Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+To the which the great Prince replied, &lsquo;Weep not, but go your
+way, eat the fat, and drink the sweet, and send portions to them for
+whom nought is prepared; for the joy of your Lord is your strength.&nbsp;
+I am returned to Mansoul with mercies, and my name shall be set up,
+exalted, and magnified by it.&rsquo;&nbsp; He also took these inhabitants,
+and kissed them, and laid them in his bosom.<br>
+<br>
+Moreover, he gave to the elders of Mansoul, and to each town officer,
+a chain of gold and a signet.&nbsp; He also sent to their wives earrings
+and jewels, and bracelets, and other things.&nbsp; He also bestowed
+upon the true-born children of Mansoul many precious things.<br>
+<br>
+When Emmanuel, the Prince, had done all these things for the famous
+town of Mansoul, then he said unto them, first, &lsquo;Wash your garments,
+then put on your ornaments, and then come to me into the castle of Mansoul.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+So they went to the fountain that was set open for Judah and Jerusalem
+to wash in; and there they washed, and there they made their &lsquo;garments
+white,&rsquo; and came again to the Prince into the castle, and thus
+they stood before him.<br>
+<br>
+And now there was music and dancing throughout the whole town of Mansoul,
+and that because their Prince had again granted to them his presence
+and the light of his countenance; the bells also did ring, and the sun
+shone comfortably upon them for a great while together.<br>
+<br>
+The town of Mansoul did also now more thoroughly seek the destruction
+and ruin of all remaining Diabolonians that abode in the walls, and
+the dens that they had in the town of Mansoul; for there was of them
+that had, to this day, escaped with life and limb from the hand of their
+suppressors in the famous town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+But my Lord Willbewill was a greater terror to them now than ever he
+had been before; forasmuch as his heart was yet more fully bent to seek,
+contrive, and pursue them to the death; he pursued them night and day,
+and did put them now to sore distress, as will afterwards appear.<br>
+<br>
+After things were thus far put into order in the famous town of Mansoul,
+care was taken, and order given by the blessed Prince Emmanuel, that
+the townsmen should, without further delay, appoint some to go forth
+into the plain to bury the dead that were there, - the dead that fell
+by the sword of Emmanuel, and by the shield of the Captain Credence,
+- lest the fumes and ill savours that would arise from them might infect
+the air, and so annoy the famous town of Mansoul.&nbsp; This also was
+a reason of this order, namely, that, as much as in Mansoul lay, they
+might cut off the name, and being, and remembrance of those enemies
+from the thought of the famous town of Mansoul and its inhabitants.<br>
+<br>
+So order was given out by the Lord Mayor, that wise and trusty friend
+of the town of Mansoul, that persons should be employed about this necessary
+business; and Mr. Godly-Fear, and one Mr. Upright, were to be overseers
+about this matter: so persons were put under them to work in the fields,
+and to bury the slain that lay dead in the plains.&nbsp; And these were
+their places of employment: some were to make the graves, some to bury
+the dead, and some were to go to and fro in the plains, and also round
+about the borders of Mansoul, to see if a skull, or a bone, or a piece
+of a bone of a doubter, was yet to be found above ground anywhere near
+the corporation; and if any were found, it was ordered, that the searchers
+that searched should set up a mark thereby, and a sign, that those that
+were appointed to bury them might find it, and bury it out of sight,
+that the name and remembrance of a Diabolonian doubter might be blotted
+out from under heaven; and that the children, and they that were to
+be born in Mansoul, might not know, if possible, what a skull, what
+a bone, or a piece of a bone of a doubter was.&nbsp; So the buriers,
+and those that were appointed for that purpose, did as they were commanded:
+they buried the doubters, and all the skulls and bones, and pieces of
+bones of doubters, wherever they found them; and so they cleansed the
+plains.&nbsp; Now also Mr. God&rsquo;s-Peace took up his commission,
+and acted again as in former days.<br>
+<br>
+Thus they buried in the plains about Mansoul the election doubters,
+the vocation doubters, the grace doubters, the perseverance doubters,
+the resurrection doubters, the salvation doubters, and the glory doubters;
+whose captains were Captain Rage, Captain Cruel, Captain Damnation,
+Captain Insatiable, Captain Brimstone, Captain Torment, Captain No-Ease,
+Captain Sepulchre, and Captain Past-Hope; and old Incredulity was, under
+Diabolus, their general.&nbsp; There were also the seven heads of their
+army; and they were the Lord Beelzebub, the Lord Lucifer, the Lord Legion,
+the Lord Apollyon, the Lord Python, the Lord Cerberus, and the Lord
+Belial.&nbsp; But the princes and the captains, with old Incredulity,
+their general, did all of them make their escape: so their men fell
+down slain by the power of the Prince&rsquo;s forces, and by the hands
+of the men of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; They also were buried as is
+afore related, to the exceeding great joy of the now famous town of
+Mansoul.&nbsp; They that buried them buried also with them their arms,
+which were cruel instruments of death: (their weapons were arrows, darts,
+mauls, firebrands, and the like).&nbsp; They buried also their armour,
+their colours, banners, with the standard of Diabolus, and what else
+soever they could find that did but smell of a Diabolonian doubter.<br>
+<br>
+Now when the tyrant had arrived at Hell-Gate Hill, with his old friend
+Incredulity, they immediately descended the den, and having there with
+their fellows for a while condoled their misfortune and great loss that
+they sustained against the town of Mansoul, they fell at length into
+a passion, and revenged they would be for the loss that they sustained
+before the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Wherefore they presently call a council
+to contrive yet further what was to be done against the famous town
+of Mansoul; for their yawning paunches could not wait to see the result
+of their Lord Lucifer&rsquo;s and their Lord Apollyon&rsquo;s counsel
+that they had given before; for their raging gorge thought every day,
+even as long as a short for ever, until they were filled with the body
+and soul, with the flesh and bones, and with all the delicates of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+They therefore resolve to make another attempt upon the town of Mansoul,
+and that by an army mixed and made up partly of doubters, and partly
+of blood-men.&nbsp; A more particular account now take of both.<br>
+<br>
+The doubters are such as have their name from their nature, as well
+as from the land and kingdom where they are born: their nature is to
+put a question upon every one of the truths of Emmanuel; and their country
+is called the land of Doubting, and that land lieth off, and farthest
+remote to the north, between the land of Darkness and that called the
+&lsquo;valley of the shadow of death.&rsquo;&nbsp; For though the land
+of Darkness, and that called &lsquo;the valley of the shadow of death,&rsquo;
+be sometimes called as if they were one and the self-same place, yet
+indeed they are two, lying but a little way asunder, and the land of
+Doubting points in, and lieth between them.&nbsp; This is the land of
+Doubting; and these that came with Diabolus to ruin the town of Mansoul
+are the natives of that country.<br>
+<br>
+The blood-men are a people that have their name derived from the malignity
+of their nature, and from the fury that is in them to execute it upon
+the town of Mansoul: their land lieth under the dog-star, and by that
+they are governed as to their intellectuals.&nbsp; The name of their
+country is the province of Loath-good: the remote parts of it are far
+distant from the land of Doubting, yet they do both butt and bound upon
+the hill called Hell-Gate Hill.&nbsp; These people are always in league
+with the doubters, for they jointly do make question of the faith and
+fidelity of the men of the town of Mansoul, and so are both alike qualified
+for the service of their prince.<br>
+<br>
+Now of these two countries did Diabolus, by the beating of his drum,
+raise another army against the town of Mansoul, of five-and-twenty thousand
+strong.&nbsp; There were ten thousand doubters, and fifteen thousand
+blood-men, and they were put under several captains for the war; and
+old Incredulity was again made general of the army.<br>
+<br>
+As for the doubters, their captains were five of the seven that were
+heads of the last Diabolonian army, and these are their names: Captain
+Beelzebub, Captain Lucifer, Captain Apollyon, Captain Legion, and Captain
+Cerberus; and the captains that they had before were some of them made
+lieutenants, and some ensigns of the army.<br>
+<br>
+But Diabolus did not count that, in this expedition of his, these doubters
+would prove his principal men, for their manhood had been tried before;
+also the Mansoulians had put them to the worst: only he did bring them
+to multiply a number, and to help, if need was, at a pinch.&nbsp; But
+his trust he put in his blood-men, for that they were all rugged villains,
+and he knew that they had done feats heretofore.<br>
+<br>
+As for the blood-men, they also were under command and the names of
+their captains were, Captain Cain, Captain Nimrod, Captain Ishmael,
+Captain Esau, Captain Saul, Captain Absalom, Captain Judas, and Captain
+Pope.<br>
+<br>
+1. Captain Cain was over two bands, namely, the zealous and the angry
+blood-men: his standard-bearer bare the red colours, and his scutcheon
+was the murdering club.<br>
+<br>
+2. Captain Nimrod was captain over two bands, namely, the tyrannical
+and encroaching blood-men: his standard-bearer bare the red colours,
+and his scutcheon was the great bloodhound.<br>
+<br>
+3. Captain Ishmael was captain over two bands, namely, the mocking and
+scorning blood-men: his standard-bearer bare the red colours, and his
+scutcheon was one mocking at Abraham&rsquo;s Isaac.<br>
+<br>
+4. Captain Esau was captain over two bands, namely, the blood-men that
+grudged that another should have the blessing; also over the blood-men
+that are for executing their private revenge upon others: his standard-bearer
+bare the red colours, and his scutcheon was one privately lurking to
+murder Jacob.<br>
+<br>
+5. Captain Saul was captain over two bands, namely, the groundlessly
+jealous and the devilishly furious blood-men: his standard-bearer bare
+the red colours, and his scutcheon was three bloody darts cast at harmless
+David.<br>
+<br>
+6. Captain Absalom was captain over two bands, namely, over the blood-men
+that will kill a father or a friend for the glory of this world; also
+over those blood-men that will hold one fair in hand with words, till
+they shall have pierced him with their swords: his standard-bearer did
+bear the red colours, and his scutcheon was the son pursuing the father&rsquo;s
+blood.<br>
+<br>
+7. Captain Judas was over two bands, namely, the blood-men that will
+sell a man&rsquo;s life for money, and those also that will betray their
+friend with a kiss: his standard-bearer bare the red colours, and his
+scutcheon was thirty pieces of silver and the halter.<br>
+<br>
+8. Captain Pope was captain over one band, for all these spirits are
+joined in one under him: his standard-bearer bare the red colours, and
+his scutcheon was the stake, the flame, and the good man in it.<br>
+<br>
+Now, the reason why Diabolus did so soon rally another force, after
+he had been beaten out of the field, was, for that he put mighty confidence
+in this army of blood-men; for he put a great deal of more trust in
+them than he did before in his army of doubters; though they had also
+often done great service for him in the strengthening of him in his
+kingdom.&nbsp; But these blood-men, he had proved them often, and their
+sword did seldom return empty.&nbsp; Besides, he knew that these, like
+mastiffs, would fasten upon any; upon father, mother, brother, sister,
+prince, or governor, yea upon the Prince of princes.&nbsp; And that
+which encouraged him the more was, for that they once did force Emmanuel
+out of the kingdom of Universe; &lsquo;And why,&rsquo; thought he, &lsquo;may
+they not also drive him from the town of Mansoul?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+So this army of five-and-twenty thousand strong was, by their general,
+the great Lord Incredulity, led up against the town of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+Now Mr. Prywell, the scoutmaster-general, did himself go out to spy,
+and he did bring Mansoul tidings of their coming.&nbsp; Wherefore they
+shut up their gates, and put themselves in a posture of defence against
+these new Diabolonians that came up against the town.<br>
+<br>
+So Diabolus brought up his army, and beleaguered the town of Mansoul;
+the doubters were placed about Feel-gate, and the blood-men set down
+before Eye-gate and Ear-gate.<br>
+<br>
+Now when this army had thus encamped themselves, Incredulity did, in
+the name of Diabolus, his own name, and in the name of the blood-men
+and the rest that were with him, send a summons as hot as a red-hot
+iron to Mansoul, to yield to their demands; threatening, that if they
+still stood it out against them, they would presently burn down Mansoul
+with fire.&nbsp; For you must know that, as for the blood-men, they
+were not so much that Mansoul should be surrendered, as that Mansoul
+should be destroyed, and cut off out of the land of the living.&nbsp;
+True, they send to them to surrender; but should they so do, that would
+not stench or quench the thirsts of these men.&nbsp; They must have
+blood, the blood of Mansoul, else they die; and it is from hence that
+they have their name.&nbsp; Wherefore these blood-men he reserved while
+now that they might, when all his engines proved ineffectual, as his
+last and sure card be played against the town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+Now, when the townsmen had received this red-hot summons, it begat in
+them at present some changing and interchanging thoughts; but they jointly
+agreed, in less than half an hour, to carry the summons to the Prince,
+the which they did when they had writ at the bottom of it, &lsquo;Lord,
+save Mansoul from bloody men!&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+So he took it, and looked upon it, and considered it, and took notice
+also of that short petition that the men of Mansoul had written at the
+bottom of it, and called to him the noble Captain Credence, and bid
+him go and take Captain Patience with him, and go and take care of that
+side of Mansoul that was beleaguered by the blood-men.&nbsp; So they
+went and did as they were commanded: the Captain Credence went and took
+Captain Patience, and they both secured that side of Mansoul that was
+besieged by the blood-men.<br>
+<br>
+Then he commanded that Captain Good-hope and Captain Charity, and my
+Lord Willbewill, should take charge of the other side of the town.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;And I,&rsquo; said the Prince, &lsquo;will set my standard upon
+the battlements of your castle, and do you three watch against the doubters.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+This done, he again commanded that the brave captain, the Captain Experience,
+should draw up his men in the market-place, and that there he should
+exercise them day by day before the people of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp;
+Now this siege was long, and many a fierce attempt did the enemy, especially
+those called the blood-men, make upon the town of Mansoul; and many
+a shrewd brush did some of the townsmen meet with from them, especially
+Captain Self-Denial, who, I should have told you before, was commanded
+to take the care of Ear-gate and Eye-gate now against the blood-men.&nbsp;
+This Captain Self-Denial was a young man, but stout, and a townsman
+in Mansoul, as Captain Experience also was.&nbsp; And Emmanuel, at his
+second return to Mansoul, made him a captain over a thousand of the
+Mansoulians, for the good of the corporation.&nbsp; This captain, therefore,
+being an hardy man, and a man of great courage, and willing to venture
+himself for the good of the town of Mansoul, would now and then sally
+out upon the blood-men, and give them many notable alarms, and entered
+several brisk skirmishes with them, and also did some execution upon
+them; but you must think that this could not easily be done, but he
+must meet with brushes himself, for he carried several of their marks
+in his face; yea, and some in some other parts of his body.<br>
+<br>
+So, after some time spent for the trial of the faith, and hope, and
+love of the town of Mansoul, the Prince Emmanuel upon a day calls his
+captains and men of war together, and divides them into two companies;
+this done, he commands them at a time appointed, and that in the morning
+very early, to sally out upon the enemy, saying: &lsquo;Let half of
+you fall upon the doubters, and half of you fall upon the blood-men.&nbsp;
+Those of you that go out against the doubters, kill and slay, and cause
+to perish so many of them as by any means you can lay hands on; but
+for you that go out against the blood-men, slay them not, but take them
+alive.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+So, at the time appointed, betimes in the morning, the captains went
+out as they were commanded, against the enemies.&nbsp; Captain Good-Hope,
+Captain Charity, and those that were joined with them, as Captain Innocent
+and Captain Experience, went out against the doubters; and Captain Credence,
+and Captain Patience, with Captain Self-Denial, and the rest that were
+to join with them, went out against the blood-men.<br>
+<br>
+Now, those that went out against the doubters drew up into a body before
+the plain, and marched on to bid them battle.&nbsp; But the doubters,
+remembering their last success, made a retreat, not daring to stand
+the shock, but fled from the Prince&rsquo;s men; wherefore they pursued
+them, and in their pursuit slew many, but they could not catch them
+all.&nbsp; Now those that escaped went some of them home; and the rest
+by fives, nines, and seventeens, like wanderers, went straggling up
+and down the country, where they upon the barbarous people showed and
+exercised many of their Diabolonian actions: nor did these people rise
+up in arms against them, but suffered themselves to be enslaved by them.&nbsp;
+They would also after this show themselves in companies before the town
+of Mansoul, but never to abide in it; for if Captain Credence, Captain
+Good-Hope, or Captain Experience did but show themselves, they fled.<br>
+<br>
+Those that went out against the blood-men did as they were commanded:
+they forbore to slay any, but sought to compass them about.&nbsp; But
+the blood-men, when they saw that no Emmanuel was in the field, concluded
+also that no Emmanuel was in Mansoul; wherefore they, looking upon what
+the captains did to be, as they called it, a fruit of the extravagancy
+of their wild and foolish fancies, rather despised them than feared
+them.&nbsp; But the captains, minding their business, at last did compass
+them round; they also that had routed the doubters came in amain to
+their aid: so, in fine, after some little struggling, (for the blood-men
+also would have run for it, only now it was too late; for though they
+are mischievous and cruel, where they can overcome, yet all blood-men
+are chicken-hearted men, when they once come to see themselves matched
+and equalled,) - so the captains took them, and brought them to the
+Prince.<br>
+<br>
+Now when they were taken, had before the Prince, and examined, he found
+them to be of three several counties, though they all came out of one
+land.<br>
+<br>
+1. One sort of them came out of Blind-man-shire, and they were such
+as did ignorantly what they did.<br>
+<br>
+2. Another sort of them came out of Blind-zeal-shire, and they did superstitiously
+what they did.<br>
+<br>
+3. The third sort of them came out of the town of Malice, in the county
+of Envy, and they did what they did out of spite and implacableness.<br>
+<br>
+For the first of these, namely, they that came out of Blind-man-shire,
+when they saw where they were, and against whom they had fought, they
+trembled and cried, as they stood before him; and as many of these as
+asked him mercy, he touched their lips with his golden sceptre.<br>
+<br>
+They that came out of Blind-zeal-shire, they did not as their fellows
+did; for they pleaded that they had a right to do what they did, because
+Mansoul was a town whose laws and customs were diverse from all that
+dwelt thereabouts.&nbsp; Very few of these could be brought to see their
+evil; but those that did, and asked mercy, they also obtained favour.<br>
+<br>
+Now, they that came out of the town of Malice, that is in the county
+of Envy, they neither wept, nor disputed, nor repented, but stood gnawing
+their tongues before him for anguish and madness, because they could
+not have their will upon Mansoul.&nbsp; Now these last, with all those
+of the other two sorts that did not unfeignedly ask pardon for their
+faults, - those he made to enter into sufficient bond to answer for
+what they had done against Mansoul, and against her King, at the great
+and general assizes to be holden for our Lord the King, where he himself
+should appoint for the country and kingdom of Universe.&nbsp; So they
+became bound each man for himself, to come in, when called upon, to
+answer before our Lord the King for what they had done as before.<br>
+<br>
+And thus much concerning this second army that was sent by Diabolus
+to overthrow Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+But there were three of those that came from the land of Doubting, who,
+after they had wandered and ranged the country a while, and perceived
+that they had escaped, were so hardy as to thrust themselves, knowing
+that yet there were in the town Diabolonians, - I say, they were so
+hardy as to thrust themselves into Mansoul among them.&nbsp; (Three,
+did I say?&nbsp; I think there were four.)&nbsp; Now, to whose house
+should these Diabolonian doubters go, but to the house of an old Diabolonian
+in Mansoul, whose name was Evil-Questioning, a very great enemy he was
+to Mansoul, and a great doer among the Diabolonians there.&nbsp; Well,
+to this Evil-Questioning&rsquo;s house, as was said, did these Diabolonians
+come (you may be sure that they had directions how to find the way thither),
+so he made them welcome, pitied their misfortune, and succoured them
+with the best that he had in his house.&nbsp; Now, after a little acquaintance
+(and it was not long before they had that), this old Evil-Questioning
+asked the doubters if they were all of a town (he knew that they were
+all of one kingdom), and they answered: &lsquo;No, nor not of one shire
+neither; for I,&rsquo; said one, &lsquo;am an election doubter:&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;I,&rsquo; said another, &lsquo;am a vocation doubter:&rsquo;
+then said the third, &lsquo;I am a salvation doubter:&rsquo; and the
+fourth said he was a grace doubter.&nbsp; &lsquo;Well,&rsquo; quoth
+the old gentleman, &lsquo;be of what shire you will, I am persuaded
+that you are down, boys: you have the very length of my foot, are one
+with my heart, and shall be welcome to me.&rsquo;&nbsp; So they thanked
+him, and were glad that they had found themselves an harbour in Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+Then said Evil-Questioning to them: &lsquo;How many of your company
+might there be that came with you to the siege of Mansoul?&rsquo; and
+they answered: &lsquo;There were but ten thousand doubters in all, for
+the rest of the army consisted of fifteen thousand blood-men.&nbsp;
+These blood-men,&rsquo; quoth they, &lsquo;border upon our country;
+but, poor men! as we hear, they were every one taken by Emmanuel&rsquo;s
+forces.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Ten thousand!&rsquo; quoth the old gentleman;
+&lsquo;I will promise you, that is a round company.&nbsp; But how came
+it to pass, since you were so mighty a number, that you fainted, and
+durst not fight your foes?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Our general,&rsquo; said
+they, &lsquo;was the first man that did run for it.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Pray,&rsquo;
+quoth their landlord, &lsquo;who was that, your cowardly general?&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;He was once the Lord Mayor of Mansoul,&rsquo; said they: &lsquo;but
+pray call him not a cowardly general; for whether any from the east
+to the west has done more service for our prince Diabolus, than has
+my Lord Incredulity, will be a hard question for you to answer.&nbsp;
+But had they catched him, they would for certain have hanged him; and
+we promise you, hanging is but a bad business.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then said
+the old gentleman, &lsquo;I would that all the ten thousand doubters
+were now well armed in Mansoul, and myself at the head of them; I would
+see what I could do.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Ay,&rsquo; said they, &lsquo;that
+would be well if we could see that; but wishes, alas! what are they?&rsquo;
+and these words were spoken aloud.&nbsp; &lsquo;Well,&rsquo; said old
+Evil-Questioning, &lsquo;take heed that you talk not too loud; you must
+be quat and close, and must take care of yourselves while you are here,
+or, I will assure you, you will be snapped.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Why?&rsquo;
+quoth the doubters.&nbsp; &lsquo;Why!&rsquo; quoth the old gentleman;
+&lsquo;why! because both the Prince and Lord Secretary, and their captains
+and soldiers, are all at present in town; yea, the town is as full of
+them as ever it can hold.&nbsp; And besides, there is one whose name
+is Willbewill, a most cruel enemy of ours, and him the Prince has made
+keeper of the gates, and has commanded him that, with all the diligence
+he can, he should look for, search out, and destroy all, and all manner
+of Diabolonians.&nbsp; And if he lighteth upon you, down you go, though
+your heads were made of gold.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+And now, to see how it happened, one of the Lord Willbewill&rsquo;s
+faithful soldiers, whose name was Mr. Diligence, stood all this while
+listening under old Evil-Questioning&rsquo;s eaves, and heard all the
+talk that had been betwixt him and the doubters that he entertained
+under his roof.<br>
+<br>
+The soldier was a man that my lord had much confidence in, and that
+he loved dearly; and that both because he was a man of courage, and
+also a man that was unwearied in seeking after Diabolonians to apprehend
+them.<br>
+<br>
+Now this man, as I told you, heard all the talk that was between old
+Evil-Questioning and these Diabolonians; wherefore what does he but
+goes to his lord, and tells him what he had heard.&nbsp; &lsquo;And
+sayest thou so, my trusty?&rsquo; quoth my lord.&nbsp; &lsquo;Ay,&rsquo;
+quoth Diligence, &lsquo;that I do; and if your lordship will be pleased
+to go with me, you shall find it as I have said.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;And
+are they there?&rsquo; quoth my lord.&nbsp; &lsquo;I know Evil-Questioning
+well, for he and I were great in the time of our apostasy: but I know
+not now where he dwells.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;But I do,&rsquo; said his
+man, &lsquo;and if your lordship will go, I will lead you the way to
+his den.&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Go!&rsquo; quoth my lord, &lsquo;that I
+will.&nbsp; Come, my Diligence, let us go find them out.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+So my lord and his man went together the direct way to his house.&nbsp;
+Now his man went before to show him his way, and they went till they
+came even under old Mr. Evil-Questioning&rsquo;s wall.&nbsp; Then said
+Diligence, &lsquo;Hark! my lord, do you know the old gentleman&rsquo;s
+tongue when you hear it?&rsquo;&nbsp; &lsquo;Yes,&rsquo; said my lord,
+&lsquo;I know it well, but I have not seen him many a day.&nbsp; This
+I know, he is cunning; I wish he doth not give us the slip.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+&lsquo;Let me alone for that,&rsquo; said his servant Diligence.&nbsp;
+&lsquo;But how shall we find the door?&rsquo; quoth my lord.&nbsp; &lsquo;Let
+me alone for that, too,&rsquo; said his man.&nbsp; So he had my Lord
+Willbewill about, and showed him the way to the door.&nbsp; Then my
+lord, without more ado, broke open the door, rushed into the house,
+and caught them all five together, even as Diligence his man had told
+him.&nbsp; So my lord apprehended them, and led them away, and committed
+them to the hand of Mr. Trueman, the gaoler, and commanded, and he did
+put them in ward.&nbsp; This done, my Lord Mayor was acquainted in the
+morning with what my Lord Willbewill had done over night, and his lordship
+rejoiced much at the news, not only because there were doubters apprehended,
+but because that old Evil-Questioning was taken; for he had been a very
+great trouble to Mansoul, and much affliction to my Lord Mayor himself.&nbsp;
+He had also been sought for often, but no hand could ever be laid upon
+him till now.<br>
+<br>
+Well, the next thing was to make preparation to try these five that
+by my lord had been apprehended, and that were in the hands of Mr. Trueman,
+the gaoler.&nbsp; So the day was set, and the court called and come
+together, and the prisoners brought to the bar.&nbsp; My Lord Willbewill
+had power to have slain them when at first he took them, and that without
+any more ado; but he thought it at this time more for the honour of
+the Prince, the comfort of Mansoul, and the discouragement of the enemy,
+to bring them forth to public judgment.<br>
+<br>
+But, I say, Mr. Trueman brought them in chains to the bar; to the town-hall,
+for that was the place of judgment.&nbsp; So, to be short, the jury
+was panelled, the witnesses sworn, and the prisoners tried for their
+lives: the jury was the same that tried Mr. No-Truth, Pitiless, Haughty,
+and the rest of their companions.<br>
+<br>
+And, first, old Questioning himself was set to the bar for he was the
+receiver, the entertainer, and comforter of these doubters, that by
+nation were outlandish men: then he was bid to hearken to his charge,
+and was told that he had liberty to object, if he had ought to say for
+himself.&nbsp; So his indictment was read: the manner and form here
+follows.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Mr. Questioning, Thou art here indicted by the name of Evil-Questioning,
+an intruder upon the town of Mansoul, for that thou art a Diabolonian
+by nature, and also a hater of the Prince Emmanuel, and one that hast
+studied the ruin of the town of Mansoul.&nbsp; Thou art also here indicted
+for countenancing the King&rsquo;s enemies, after wholesome laws made
+to the contrary: for, 1. Thou hast questioned the truth of her doctrine
+and state: 2. In wishing that ten thousand doubters were in her: 3.
+In receiving, in entertaining, and encouraging of her enemies, that
+came from their army unto thee.&nbsp; What sayest thou to this indictment?
+art thou guilty or not guilty?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;My lord,&rsquo; quoth he, &lsquo;I know not the meaning of this
+indictment, forasmuch as I am not the man concerned in it; the man that
+standeth by this charge accused before this bench is called by the name
+of Evil-Questioning, which name I deny to be mine, mine being Honest-Inquiry.&nbsp;
+The one indeed sounds like the other; but, I trow, your lordships know
+that between these two there is a wide difference; for I hope that a
+man, even in the worst of times, and that, too, amongst the worst of
+men, may make an honest inquiry after things, without running the danger
+of death.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then spake my Lord Willbewill, for he was one of the witnesses: &lsquo;My
+lord, and you the honourable bench and magistrates of the town of Mansoul,
+you all have heard with your ears that the prisoner at the bar has denied
+his name, and so thinks to shift from the charge of the indictment.&nbsp;
+But I know him to be the man concerned, and that his proper name is
+Evil-Questioning.&nbsp; I have known him, my lord, above these thirty
+years, for he and I (a shame it is for me to speak it) were great acquaintance,
+when Diabolus, that tyrant, had the government of Mansoul; and I testify
+that he is a Diabolonian by nature, an enemy to our Prince, and a hater
+of the blessed town of Mansoul.&nbsp; He has, in times of rebellion,
+been at and lain in my house, my lord, not so little as twenty nights
+together, and we did use to talk then, for the substance of talk, as
+he and his doubters have talked of late: true, I have not seen him many
+a day.&nbsp; I suppose that the coming of Emmanuel to Mansoul has made
+him change his lodgings, as this indictment has driven him to change
+his name; but this is the man, my lord.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said the court unto him, &lsquo;Hast thou any more to say?&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Yes,&rsquo; quoth the old gentleman, &lsquo;that I have; for
+all that as yet has been said against me, is but by the mouth of one
+witness; and it is not lawful for the famous town of Mansoul, at the
+mouth of one witness, to put any man to death.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then stood forth Mr. Diligence, and said, &lsquo;My lord, as I was upon
+my watch such a night at the head of Bad Street, in this town, I chanced
+to hear a muttering within this gentleman&rsquo;s house.&nbsp; Then,
+thought I, what is to do here?&nbsp; So I went up close, but very softly,
+to the side of the house to listen, thinking, as indeed it fell out,
+that there I might light upon some Diabolonian conventicle.&nbsp; So,
+as I said, I drew nearer and nearer; and when I was got up close to
+the wall, it was but a while before I perceived that there were outlandish
+men in the house; but I did well understand their speech, for I have
+been a traveller myself.&nbsp; Now, hearing such language in such a
+tottering cottage as this old gentleman dwelt in, I clapped mine ear
+to a hole in the window, and there heard them talk as followeth.&nbsp;
+This old Mr. Questioning asked these doubters what they were, whence
+they came, and what was their business in these parts; and they told
+him to all these questions, yet he did entertain them.&nbsp; He also
+asked what numbers there were of them; and they told him ten thousand
+men.&nbsp; He then asked them, why they made no more manly assault upon
+Mansoul; and they told him: so he called their general coward, for marching
+off when he should have fought for his prince.&nbsp; Further, this old
+Evil-Questioning wished, and I heard him wish, would all the ten thousand
+doubters were now in Mansoul, and himself at the head of them.&nbsp;
+He bid them also to take heed and lie quat; for if they were taken they
+must die, although they had heads of gold.&rsquo;&nbsp; Then said the
+court: &lsquo;Mr. Evil-Questioning, here is now another witness against
+you, and his testimony is full: 1. He swears that you did receive these
+men into your house, and that you did nourish them there, though you
+knew that they were Diabolonians, and the King&rsquo;s enemies.&nbsp;
+2. He swears that you did wish ten thousand of them in Mansoul.&nbsp;
+3. He swears that you did give them advice to be quat and close, lest
+they were taken by the King&rsquo;s servants.&nbsp; All which manifesteth
+that thou art a Diabolonian; but hadst thou been a friend to the King,
+thou wouldst have apprehended them.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said Evil-Questioning: &lsquo;To the first of these I answer, The
+men that came into mine house were strangers, and I took them in; and
+is it now become a crime in Mansoul for a man to entertain strangers?&nbsp;
+That I did also nourish them is true; and why should my charity be blamed?&nbsp;
+As for the reason why I wished ten thousand of them in Mansoul, I never
+told it to the witnesses, nor to themselves.&nbsp; I might wish them
+to be taken, and so my wish might mean well to Mansoul, for aught that
+any yet knows.&nbsp; I did also bid them take heed that they fell not
+into the captains&rsquo; hands; but that might be because I am unwilling
+that any man should be slain, and not because I would have the King&rsquo;s
+enemies as such escape.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+My Lord Mayor then replied: &lsquo;That though it was a virtue to entertain
+strangers, yet it was treason to entertain the King&rsquo;s enemies.&nbsp;
+And for what else thou hast said, thou dost by words but labour to evade
+and defer the execution of judgment.&nbsp; But could there be no more
+proved against thee but that thou art a Diabolonian, thou must for that
+die the death by the law; but to be a receiver, a nourisher, a countenancer,
+and a harbourer of others of them, yea, of outlandish Diabolonians,
+yea, of them that came from far on purpose to cut off and destroy our
+Mansoul - this must not be borne.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said Evil-Questioning: &lsquo;I see how the game will go: I must
+die for my name, and for my charity.&rsquo;&nbsp; And so he held his
+peace.<br>
+<br>
+Then they called the outlandish doubters to the bar, and the first of
+them that was arraigned was the election doubter.&nbsp; So his indictment
+was read; and because he was an outlandish man, the substance of it
+was told him by an interpreter; namely, &lsquo;That he was there charged
+with being an enemy of Emmanuel the Prince, a hater of the town of Mansoul,
+and an opposer of her most wholesome doctrine.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then the judge asked him if he would plead? but he said only this -
+That he confessed that he was an election doubter, and that that was
+the religion that he had ever been brought up in.&nbsp; And said, moreover,
+&lsquo;If I must die for my religion, I trow, I shall die a martyr,
+and so I care the less.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+<i>Judge</i>.&nbsp; Then it was replied: &lsquo;To question election,
+is to overthrow a great doctrine of the gospel, namely, the omnisciency,
+and power, and will of God; to take away the liberty of God with his
+creature, to stumble the faith of the town of Mansoul, and to make salvation
+to depend upon works, and not upon grace.&nbsp; It also belied the word,
+and disquieted the minds of the men of Mansoul; therefore by the best
+of laws he must die.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then was the vocation doubter called, and set to the bar; and his indictment
+for substance was the same with the other, only he was particularly
+charged with denying the calling of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+The judge asked him also what he had to say for himself?<br>
+<br>
+So he replied: &lsquo;That he never believed that there was any such
+thing as a distinct and powerful call of God to Mansoul; otherwise than
+by the general voice of the word, nor by that neither, otherwise than
+as it exhorted them to forbear evil, and to do that which is good, and
+in so doing a promise of happiness is annexed.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said the judge: &lsquo;Thou art a Diabolonian, and hast denied
+a great part of one of the most experimental truths of the Prince of
+the town of Mansoul; for he has called, and she has heard a most distinct
+and powerful call of her Emmanuel, by which she has been quickened,
+awakened, and possessed with heavenly grace to desire to have communion
+with her Prince, to serve him, and to do his will, and to look for her
+happiness merely of his good pleasure.&nbsp; And for thine abhorrence
+of this good doctrine, thou must die the death.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then the grace doubter was called, and his indictment was read and he
+replied thereto: &lsquo;That though he was of the land of doubting,
+his father was the offspring of a Pharisee, and lived in good fashion
+among his neighbours, and that he taught him to believe, and believe
+it I do, and will, that Mansoul shall never be saved freely by grace.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+Then said the judge: &lsquo;Why, the law of the Prince is plain: 1.
+Negatively, &ldquo;not of works:&rdquo; 2. Positively, &ldquo;by grace
+you are saved.&rdquo;&nbsp; And thy religion settleth in and upon the
+works of the flesh; for the works of the law are the works of the flesh.&nbsp;
+Besides, in saying as thou hast done, thou hast robbed God of His glory,
+and given it to a sinful man; thou hast robbed Christ of the necessity
+of His undertaking, and the sufficiency thereof, and hast given both
+these to the works of the flesh.&nbsp; Thou hast despised the work of
+the Holy Ghost, and hast magnified the will of the flesh, and of the
+legal mind.&nbsp; Thou art a Diabolonian, the son of a Diabolonian;
+and for thy Diabolonian principles thou must die.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+The court then, having proceeded thus far with them, sent out the jury,
+who forthwith brought them in guilty of death.&nbsp; Then stood up the
+Recorder, and addressed himself to the prisoners: &lsquo;You, the prisoners
+at the bar, you have been here indicted, and proved guilty of high crimes
+against Emmanuel our Prince, and against the welfare of the famous town
+of Mansoul, crimes for which you must be put to death, and die ye accordingly.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+So they were sentenced to the death of the cross.&nbsp; The place assigned
+them for execution, was that where Diabolus drew up his last army against
+Mansoul; save only that old Evil-Questioning was hanged at the top of
+Bad Street, just over against his own door.<br>
+<br>
+When the town of Mansoul had thus far rid themselves of their enemies,
+and of the troublers of their peace, in the next place a strict commandment
+was given out, that yet my Lord Willbewill should, with Diligence his
+man, search for, and do his best to apprehend what town Diabolonians
+were yet left alive in Mansoul.&nbsp; The names of several of them were,
+Mr. Fooling, Mr. Let-Good-Slip, Mr. Slavish-Fear, Mr. No-Love, Mr. Mistrust,
+Mr. Flesh, and Mr. Sloth.&nbsp; It was also commanded, that he should
+apprehend Mr. Evil-Questioning&rsquo;s children, that he left behind
+him, and that they should demolish his house.&nbsp; The children that
+he left behind him were these: Mr. Doubt, and he was his eldest son;
+the next to him was Legal-Life, Unbelief, Wrong-Thoughts-of-Christ,
+Clip-Promise, Carnal-Sense, Live-by-Feeling, Self-Love.&nbsp; All these
+he had by one wife, and her name was No-Hope; she was the kinswoman
+of old Incredulity, for he was her uncle; and when her father, old Dark,
+was dead, he took her and brought her up, and when she was marriageable,
+he gave her to this old Evil-Questioning to wife.<br>
+<br>
+Now the Lord Willbewill did put into execution his commission, with
+great Diligence, his man.&nbsp; He took Fooling in the streets, and
+hanged him up in Want-wit-Alley, over against his own house.&nbsp; This
+Fooling was he that would have had the town of Mansoul deliver up Captain
+Credence into the hands of Diabolus, provided that then he would have
+withdrawn his force out of the town.&nbsp; He also took Mr. Let-Good-Slip
+one day as he was busy in the market, and executed him according to
+law.&nbsp; Now there was an honest poor man in Mansoul, and his name
+was Mr. Meditation, one of no great account in the days of apostasy,
+but now of repute with the best of the town.&nbsp; This man, therefore,
+they were willing to prefer.&nbsp; Now Mr. Let-Good-Slip had a great
+deal of wealth heretofore in Mansoul, and, at Emmanuel&rsquo;s coming,
+it was sequestered to the use of the Prince: this, therefore, was now
+given to Mr. Meditation, to improve for the common good, and after him
+to his son, Mr. Think-Well; this Think-Well he had by Mrs. Piety his
+wife, and she was the daughter of Mr. Recorder.<br>
+<br>
+After this, my lord apprehended Clip-Promise: now because he was a notorious
+villain, for by his doings much of the King&rsquo;s coin was abused,
+therefore he was made a public example.&nbsp; He was arraigned and judged
+to be first set in the pillory, then to be whipped by all the children
+and servants in Mansoul, and then to be hanged till he was dead.&nbsp;
+Some may wonder at the severity of this man&rsquo;s punishment; but
+those that are honest traders in Mansoul, are sensible of the great
+abuse that one clipper of promises in little time may do to the town
+of Mansoul.&nbsp; And truly my judgment is, that all those of his name
+and life should be served even as he.<br>
+<br>
+He also apprehended Carnal-Sense, and put him in hold; but how it came
+about, I cannot tell, but he brake prison, and made his escape: yea,
+and the bold villain will not yet quit the town, but lurks in the Diabolonian
+dens a days, and haunts like a ghost honest men&rsquo;s houses a nights.&nbsp;
+Wherefore, there was a proclamation set up in the market-place in Mansoul,
+signifying that whosoever could discover Carnal-Sense, and apprehend
+him and slay him, should be admitted daily to the Prince&rsquo;s table,
+and should be made keeper of the treasure of Mansoul.&nbsp; Many, therefore,
+did bend themselves to do this thing, but take him and slay him they
+could not, though often he was discovered.<br>
+<br>
+But my lord took Mr. Wrong-Thoughts-of-Christ, and put him in prison,
+and he died there; though it was long first, for he died of a lingering
+consumption.<br>
+<br>
+Self-Love was also taken and committed to custody; but there were many
+that were allied to him in Mansoul, so his judgment was deferred.&nbsp;
+But at last Mr. Self-Denial stood up, and said: &lsquo;If such villains
+as these may be winked at in Mansoul, I will lay down my commission.&rsquo;&nbsp;
+He also took him from the crowd, and had him among his soldiers, and
+there he was brained.&nbsp; But some in Mansoul muttered at it, though
+none durst speak plainly, because Emmanuel was in town.&nbsp; But this
+brave act of Captain Self-Denial came to the Prince&rsquo;s ears; so
+he sent for him, and made him a lord in Mansoul.&nbsp; My Lord Willbewill
+also obtained great commendations of Emmanuel, for what he had done
+for the town of Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+Then my Lord Self-Denial took courage, and set to the pursuing of the
+Diabolonians, with my Lord Willbewill; and they took Live-by-Feeling,
+and they took Legal-Life, and put them in hold till they died.&nbsp;
+But Mr. Unbelief was a nimble Jack: him they could never lay hold of,
+though they attempted to do it often.&nbsp; He therefore, and some few
+more of the subtlest of the Diabolonian tribe, did yet remain in Mansoul,
+to the time that Mansoul left off to dwell any longer in the kingdom
+of Universe.&nbsp; But they kept them to their dens and holes: if one
+of them did appear, or happen to be seen in any of the streets of the
+town of Mansoul, the whole town would be up in arms after them; yea,
+the very children in Mansoul would cry out after them as after a thief,
+and would wish that they might stone them to death with stones.&nbsp;
+And now did Mansoul arrive to some good degree of peace and quiet; her
+Prince also did abide within her borders; her captains, also, and her
+soldiers did their duties; and Mansoul minded her trade that she had
+with the country that was afar off; also she was busy in her manufacture.<br>
+<br>
+When the town of Mansoul had thus far rid themselves of so many of their
+enemies, and the troublers of their peace, the Prince sent to them,
+and appointed a day wherein he would, at the market-place, meet the
+whole people, and there give them in charge concerning some further
+matters, that, if observed, would tend to their further safety and comfort,
+and to the condemnation and destruction of their home-bred Diabolonians.&nbsp;
+So the day appointed was come, and the townsmen met together; Emmanuel
+also came down in his chariot, and all his captains in their state attending
+him, on the right hand and on the left.&nbsp; Then was an oyes made
+for silence, and, after some mutual carriages of love, the Prince began,
+and thus proceeded:-<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;You, my Mansoul, and the beloved of mine heart, many and great
+are the privileges that I have bestowed upon you; I have singled you
+out from others, and have chosen you to myself, not for your worthiness,
+but for mine own sake.&nbsp; I have also redeemed you, not only from
+the dread of my Father&rsquo;s law, but from the hand of Diabolus.&nbsp;
+This I have done because I loved you, and because I have set my heart
+upon you to do you good.&nbsp; I have also, that all things, that might
+hinder thy way to the pleasures of paradise might be taken out of the
+way, laid down for thee for thy soul a plenary satisfaction, and have
+bought thee to myself; a price not of corruptible things, as of silver
+and gold, but a price of blood, mine own blood, which I have freely
+spilled upon the ground to make thee mine.&nbsp; So I have reconciled
+thee, O my Mansoul, to my Father, and entrusted thee in the mansion
+houses that are with my Father in the royal city, where things are,
+O my Mansoul, that eye hath not seen, nor hath entered into the heart
+of man to conceive.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Besides, O my Mansoul, thou seest what I have done, and how I
+have taken thee out of the hands of thine enemies: unto whom thou hadst
+deeply revolted from my Father, and by whom thou wast content to be
+possessed, and also to be destroyed.&nbsp; I came to thee first by my
+law, then by my gospel, to awaken thee, and show thee my glory.&nbsp;
+And thou knowest what thou wast, what thou saidst, what thou didst,
+and how many times thou rebelledst against my Father and me; yet I left
+thee not as thou seest this day, but came to thee, have borne thy manners,
+have waited upon thee, and, after all, accepted of thee, even of my
+mere grace and favour; and would not suffer thee to be lost, as thou
+most willingly wouldst have been.&nbsp; I also compassed thee about,
+and afflicted thee on every side, that I might make thee weary of thy
+ways, and bring down thy heart with molestation to a willingness to
+close with thy good and happiness.&nbsp; And when I had gotten a complete
+conquest over thee, I turned it to thy advantage.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Thou seest, also, what a company of my Father&rsquo;s host I
+have lodged within thy borders: captains and rulers, soldiers and men
+of war, engines and excellent devices to subdue and bring down thy foes;
+thou knowest my meaning, O Mansoul.&nbsp; And they are my servants,
+and thine, too, Mansoul.&nbsp; Yea, my design of possessing of thee
+with them, and the natural tendency of each of them is to defend, purge,
+strengthen, and sweeten thee for myself, O Mansoul, and to make thee
+meet for my Father&rsquo;s presence, blessing, and glory; for thou,
+my Mansoul, art created to be prepared unto these.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Thou seest, moreover, my Mansoul, how I have passed by thy backslidings,
+and have healed thee.&nbsp; Indeed I was angry with thee, but I have
+turned mine anger away from thee, because I loved thee still, and mine
+anger and mine indignation is ceased in the destruction of thine enemies,
+O Mansoul.&nbsp; Nor did thy goodness fetch me again unto thee, after
+that I for thy transgressions have hid my face, and withdrawn my presence
+from thee.&nbsp; The way of backsliding was thine, but the way and means
+of thy recovery was mine.&nbsp; I invented the means of thy return;
+it was I that made an hedge and a wall, when thou wast beginning to
+turn to things in which I delighted not.&nbsp; It was I that made thy
+sweet bitter, thy day night, thy smooth way thorny, and that also confounded
+all that sought thy destruction.&nbsp; It was I that set Mr. Godly-Fear
+to work in Mansoul.&nbsp; It was I that stirred up thy conscience and
+understanding, thy will and thy affections, after thy great and woful
+decay.&nbsp; It was I that put life into thee, O Mansoul, to seek me,
+that thou mightest find me, and in thy finding find thine own health,
+happiness, and salvation.&nbsp; It was I that fetched the second time
+the Diabolonians out of Mansoul; and it was I that overcame them, and
+that destroyed them before thy face.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;And now, my Mansoul, I am returned to thee in peace, and thy
+transgressions against me are as if they had not been.&nbsp; Nor shall
+it be with thee as in former days, but I will do better for thee than
+at thy beginning.<br>
+<br>
+For yet a little while, O my Mansoul, even after a few more times are
+gone over thy head, I will (but be not thou troubled at what I say)
+take down this famous town of Mansoul, stick and stone, to the ground.&nbsp;
+And I will carry the stones thereof, and the timber thereof, and the
+walls thereof, and the dust thereof, and the inhabitants thereof, into
+mine own country, even into a kingdom of my Father; and will there set
+it up in such strength and glory, as it never did see in the kingdom
+where now it is placed.&nbsp; I will even there set it up for my Father&rsquo;s
+habitation; for for that purpose it was at first erected in the kingdom
+of Universe; and there will I make it a spectacle of wonder, a monument
+of mercy, and the admirer of its own mercy.&nbsp; There shall the natives
+of Mansoul see all that, of which they have seen nothing here: there
+shall they be equal to those unto whom they have been inferior here.&nbsp;
+And there shalt thou, O my Mansoul, have such communion with me, with
+my Father, and with your Lord Secretary, as it is not possible here
+to be enjoyed, nor ever could be, shouldest thou live in Universe the
+space of a thousand years.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;And there, O my Mansoul, thou shalt be afraid of murderers no
+more; of Diabolonians, and their threats, no more.&nbsp; There, there
+shall be no more plots, nor contrivances, nor designs against thee,
+O my Mansoul.&nbsp; There thou shalt no more hear the evil-tidings,
+or the noise of the Diabolonian drum.&nbsp; There thou shalt not see
+the Diabolonian standard-bearers, nor yet behold Diabolus&rsquo;s standard.&nbsp;
+No Diabolonian mount shall be cast up against thee there; nor shall
+there the Diabolonian standard be set up to make thee afraid.&nbsp;
+There thou shalt not need captains, engines, soldiers, and men of war.&nbsp;
+There thou shalt meet with no sorrow, nor grief, nor shall it be possible
+that any Diabolonian should again, for ever, be able to creep into thy
+skirts, burrow in thy walls, or be seen again within thy borders all
+the days of eternity.&nbsp; Life shall there last longer than here you
+are able to desire it should; and yet it shall always be sweet and new,
+nor shall any impediment attend it for ever.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;There, O Mansoul, thou shalt meet with many of those that have
+been like thee, and that have been partakers of thy sorrows; even such
+as I have chosen, and redeemed, and set apart, as thou, for my Father&rsquo;s
+court and city-royal.&nbsp; All they will be glad in thee, and thou,
+when thou seest them, shalt be glad in thine heart.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;There are things, O Mansoul, even things of my Father&rsquo;s
+providing, and mine, that never were seen since the beginning of the
+world; and they are laid up with my Father, and sealed up among his
+treasures for thee, till thou shalt come thither to enjoy them.&nbsp;
+I told you before, that I would remove my Mansoul, and set it up elsewhere;
+and where I will set it, there are those that love thee, and those that
+rejoice in thee now; but how much more, when they shall see thee exalted
+to honour!&nbsp; My Father will then send them for you to fetch you;
+and their bosoms are chariots to put you in.&nbsp; And you, O my Mansoul,
+shall ride upon the wings of the wind.&nbsp; They will come to convey,
+conduct, and bring you to that, when your eyes see more, that will be
+your desired haven.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;And thus, O my Mansoul, I have showed unto thee what shall be
+done to thee hereafter, if thou canst hear, if thou canst understand;
+and now I will tell thee what at present must be thy duty and practice,
+until I come and fetch thee to myself, according as is related in the
+Scriptures of truth.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;First, I charge thee that thou dost hereafter keep more white
+and clean the liveries which I gave thee before my last withdrawing
+from thee.&nbsp; Do it, I say, for this will be thy wisdom.&nbsp; They
+are in themselves fine linen, but thou must keep them white and clean.&nbsp;
+This will be your wisdom, your honour, and will be greatly for my glory.&nbsp;
+When your garments are white, the world will count you mine.&nbsp; Also,
+when your garments are white, then I am delighted in your ways; for
+then your goings to and fro will be like a flash of lightning, that
+those that are present must take notice of; also their eyes will be
+made to dazzle thereat.&nbsp; Deck thyself, therefore, according to
+my bidding, and make thyself by my law straight steps for thy feet;
+so shall thy King greatly desire thy beauty, for he is thy Lord, and
+worship thou him.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Now, that thou mayest keep them as I bid thee, I have, as I before
+did tell thee, provided for thee an open fountain to wash thy garments
+in.&nbsp; Look, therefore, that thou wash often in my fountain, and
+go not in defiled garments; for as it is to my dishonour and my disgrace,
+so it will be to thy discomfort, when you shall walk in filthy garments.&nbsp;
+Let not, therefore, my garments, your garments, the garments that I
+gave thee, be defiled or spotted by the flesh.&nbsp; Keep thy garments
+always white, and let thy head lack no ointment.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;My Mansoul, I have ofttimes delivered thee from the designs,
+plots, attempts, and conspiracies of Diabolus; and for all this I ask
+thee nothing, but that thou render not to me evil for my good; but that
+thou bear in mind my love, and the continuation of my kindness to my
+beloved Mansoul, so as to provoke thee to walk in thy measure according
+to the benefit bestowed on thee.&nbsp; Of old, the sacrifices were bound
+with coords to the horns of the altar.&nbsp; Consider what is said to
+thee, O my blessed Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;O my Mansoul, I have lived, I have died, I live, and will die
+no more for thee.&nbsp; I live, that thou mayest not die.&nbsp; Because
+I live, thou shalt live also.&nbsp; I reconciled thee to my Father by
+the blood of my cross; and being reconciled, thou shalt live through
+me.&nbsp; I will pray for thee; I will fight for thee; I will yet do
+thee good.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Nothing can hurt thee but sin; nothing can grieve me but sin;
+nothing can make thee base before thy foes but sin: take heed of sin,
+my Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;And dost thou know why I at first, and do still, suffer Diabolonians
+to dwell in thy walls, O Mansoul?&nbsp; It is to keep thee wakening,
+to try thy love, to make thee watchful, and to cause thee yet to prize
+my noble captains, their soldiers, and my mercy.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;It is also, that yet thou mayest be made to remember what a deplorable
+condition thou once wast in.&nbsp; I mean when, not some, but all did
+dwell, not in thy walls, but in thy castle, and in thy stronghold, O
+Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;O my Mansoul, should I slay all them within, many there be without,
+that would bring thee into bondage; for were all these within cut off,
+those without would find thee sleeping; and then, as in a moment, they
+would swallow up my Mansoul.&nbsp; I therefore left them in thee, not
+to do thee hurt (the which they yet will, if thou hearken to them, and
+serve them,) but to do thee good, the which they must, if thou watch
+and fight against them.&nbsp; Know, therefore, that whatever they shall
+tempt thee to, my design is, that they should drive thee, not further
+off, but nearer to my father, to learn thee war, to make petitioning
+desirable to thee, and to make thee little in thine own eyes.&nbsp;
+Hearken diligently to this, my Mansoul.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Show me, then, thy love, my Mansoul, and let not those that are
+within thy walls, take thy affections off from him that hath redeemed
+thy soul.&nbsp; Yea, let the sight of a Diabolonian heighten thy love
+to me.&nbsp; I came once, and twice, and thrice, to save thee from the
+poison of those arrows that would have wrought thy death: stand for
+me, thy Friend, my Mansoul, against the Diabolonians, and I will stand
+for thee before my Father, and all his court.&nbsp; Love me against
+temptation, and I will love thee notwithstanding thine infirmities.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;O my Mansoul, remember what my captains, my soldiers, and mine
+engines have done for thee.&nbsp; They have fought for thee, they have
+suffered by thee, they have borne much at thy hands to do thee good,
+O Mansoul.&nbsp; Hadst thou not had them to help thee, Diabolus had
+certainly made a hand of thee.&nbsp; Nourish them, therefore, my Mansoul.&nbsp;
+When thou dost well, they will be well; when thou dost ill, they will
+be ill, and sick, and weak.&nbsp; Make not my captains sick, O Mansoul;
+for if they be sick, thou canst not be well; if they be weak, thou canst
+not be strong; if they be faint, thou canst not be stout and valiant
+for thy King, O Mansoul.&nbsp; Nor must thou think always to live by
+sense: thou must live upon my word.&nbsp; Thou must believe, O my Mansoul,
+when I am from thee, that yet I love thee, and bear thee upon mine heart
+for ever.<br>
+<br>
+&lsquo;Remember, therefore, O my Mansoul, that thou art beloved of me:
+as I have, therefore, taught thee to watch, to fight, to pray, and to
+make war against my foes; so now I command thee to believe that my love
+is constant to thee.&nbsp; O my Mansoul, how have I set my heart, my
+love upon thee!&nbsp; Watch.&nbsp; Behold, I lay none other burden upon
+thee, than what thou hast already.&nbsp; Hold fast, till I come.&rsquo;<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK, THE HOLY WAR ***<br>
+<pre>
+
+******This file should be named hlywr10h.htm or hlywr10h.zip******
+Corrected EDITIONS of our EBooks get a new NUMBER, hlywr11h.htm
+VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, hlywr10ah.htm
+
+Project Gutenberg eBooks are often created from several printed
+editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the US
+unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we usually do not
+keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.
+
+We are now trying to release all our eBooks one year in advance
+of the official release dates, leaving time for better editing.
+Please be encouraged to tell us about any error or corrections,
+even years after the official publication date.
+
+Please note neither this listing nor its contents are final til
+midnight of the last day of the month of any such announcement.
+The official release date of all Project Gutenberg eBooks is at
+Midnight, Central Time, of the last day of the stated month. A
+preliminary version may often be posted for suggestion, comment
+and editing by those who wish to do so.
+
+Most people start at our Web sites at:
+http://gutenberg.net or
+http://promo.net/pg
+
+These Web sites include award-winning information about Project
+Gutenberg, including how to donate, how to help produce our new
+eBooks, and how to subscribe to our email newsletter (free!).
+
+
+Those of you who want to download any eBook before announcement
+can get to them as follows, and just download by date. This is
+also a good way to get them instantly upon announcement, as the
+indexes our cataloguers produce obviously take a while after an
+announcement goes out in the Project Gutenberg Newsletter.
+
+http://www.ibiblio.org/gutenberg/etext04 or
+ftp://ftp.ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/etext04
+
+Or /etext03, 02, 01, 00, 99, 98, 97, 96, 95, 94, 93, 92, 92, 91 or 90
+
+Just search by the first five letters of the filename you want,
+as it appears in our Newsletters.
+
+
+Information about Project Gutenberg (one page)
+
+We produce about two million dollars for each hour we work. The
+time it takes us, a rather conservative estimate, is fifty hours
+to get any eBook selected, entered, proofread, edited, copyright
+searched and analyzed, the copyright letters written, etc. Our
+projected audience is one hundred million readers. If the value
+per text is nominally estimated at one dollar then we produce $2
+million dollars per hour in 2002 as we release over 100 new text
+files per month: 1240 more eBooks in 2001 for a total of 4000+
+We are already on our way to trying for 2000 more eBooks in 2002
+If they reach just 1-2% of the world's population then the total
+will reach over half a trillion eBooks given away by year's end.
+
+The Goal of Project Gutenberg is to Give Away 1 Trillion eBooks!
+This is ten thousand titles each to one hundred million readers,
+which is only about 4% of the present number of computer users.
+
+Here is the briefest record of our progress (* means estimated):
+
+eBooks Year Month
+
+ 1 1971 July
+ 10 1991 January
+ 100 1994 January
+ 1000 1997 August
+ 1500 1998 October
+ 2000 1999 December
+ 2500 2000 December
+ 3000 2001 November
+ 4000 2001 October/November
+ 6000 2002 December*
+ 9000 2003 November*
+10000 2004 January*
+
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been created
+to secure a future for Project Gutenberg into the next millennium.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+As of February, 2002, contributions are being solicited from people
+and organizations in: Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Connecticut,
+Delaware, District of Columbia, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois,
+Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts,
+Michigan, Mississippi, Missouri, Montana, Nebraska, Nevada, New
+Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, North Carolina, Ohio,
+Oklahoma, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, South Carolina, South
+Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, West
+Virginia, Wisconsin, and Wyoming.
+
+We have filed in all 50 states now, but these are the only ones
+that have responded.
+
+As the requirements for other states are met, additions to this list
+will be made and fund raising will begin in the additional states.
+Please feel free to ask to check the status of your state.
+
+In answer to various questions we have received on this:
+
+We are constantly working on finishing the paperwork to legally
+request donations in all 50 states. If your state is not listed and
+you would like to know if we have added it since the list you have,
+just ask.
+
+While we cannot solicit donations from people in states where we are
+not yet registered, we know of no prohibition against accepting
+donations from donors in these states who approach us with an offer to
+donate.
+
+International donations are accepted, but we don't know ANYTHING about
+how to make them tax-deductible, or even if they CAN be made
+deductible, and don't have the staff to handle it even if there are
+ways.
+
+Donations by check or money order may be sent to:
+
+Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
+PMB 113
+1739 University Ave.
+Oxford, MS 38655-4109
+
+Contact us if you want to arrange for a wire transfer or payment
+method other than by check or money order.
+
+The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation has been approved by
+the US Internal Revenue Service as a 501(c)(3) organization with EIN
+[Employee Identification Number] 64-622154. Donations are
+tax-deductible to the maximum extent permitted by law. As fund-raising
+requirements for other states are met, additions to this list will be
+made and fund-raising will begin in the additional states.
+
+We need your donations more than ever!
+
+You can get up to date donation information online at:
+
+http://www.gutenberg.net/donation.html
+
+
+***
+
+If you can't reach Project Gutenberg,
+you can always email directly to:
+
+Michael S. Hart hart@pobox.com
+
+Prof. Hart will answer or forward your message.
+
+We would prefer to send you information by email.
+
+
+**The Legal Small Print**
+
+
+(Three Pages)
+
+***START**THE SMALL PRINT!**FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS**START***
+Why is this "Small Print!" statement here? You know: lawyers.
+They tell us you might sue us if there is something wrong with
+your copy of this eBook, even if you got it for free from
+someone other than us, and even if what's wrong is not our
+fault. So, among other things, this "Small Print!" statement
+disclaims most of our liability to you. It also tells you how
+you may distribute copies of this eBook if you want to.
+
+*BEFORE!* YOU USE OR READ THIS EBOOK
+By using or reading any part of this PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm
+eBook, you indicate that you understand, agree to and accept
+this "Small Print!" statement. If you do not, you can receive
+a refund of the money (if any) you paid for this eBook by
+sending a request within 30 days of receiving it to the person
+you got it from. If you received this eBook on a physical
+medium (such as a disk), you must return it with your request.
+
+ABOUT PROJECT GUTENBERG-TM EBOOKS
+This PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook, like most PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBooks,
+is a "public domain" work distributed by Professor Michael S. Hart
+through the Project Gutenberg Association (the "Project").
+Among other things, this means that no one owns a United States copyright
+on or for this work, so the Project (and you!) can copy and
+distribute it in the United States without permission and
+without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, set forth
+below, apply if you wish to copy and distribute this eBook
+under the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark.
+
+Please do not use the "PROJECT GUTENBERG" trademark to market
+any commercial products without permission.
+
+To create these eBooks, the Project expends considerable
+efforts to identify, transcribe and proofread public domain
+works. Despite these efforts, the Project's eBooks and any
+medium they may be on may contain "Defects". Among other
+things, Defects may take the form of incomplete, inaccurate or
+corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other
+intellectual property infringement, a defective or damaged
+disk or other eBook medium, a computer virus, or computer
+codes that damage or cannot be read by your equipment.
+
+LIMITED WARRANTY; DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES
+But for the "Right of Replacement or Refund" described below,
+[1] Michael Hart and the Foundation (and any other party you may
+receive this eBook from as a PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm eBook) disclaims
+all liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including
+legal fees, and [2] YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE OR
+UNDER STRICT LIABILITY, OR FOR BREACH OF WARRANTY OR CONTRACT,
+INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE
+OR INCIDENTAL DAMAGES, EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE
+POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
+
+If you discover a Defect in this eBook within 90 days of
+receiving it, you can receive a refund of the money (if any)
+you paid for it by sending an explanatory note within that
+time to the person you received it from. If you received it
+on a physical medium, you must return it with your note, and
+such person may choose to alternatively give you a replacement
+copy. If you received it electronically, such person may
+choose to alternatively give you a second opportunity to
+receive it electronically.
+
+THIS EBOOK IS OTHERWISE PROVIDED TO YOU "AS-IS". NO OTHER
+WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, ARE MADE TO YOU AS
+TO THE EBOOK OR ANY MEDIUM IT MAY BE ON, INCLUDING BUT NOT
+LIMITED TO WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
+PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
+
+Some states do not allow disclaimers of implied warranties or
+the exclusion or limitation of consequential damages, so the
+above disclaimers and exclusions may not apply to you, and you
+may have other legal rights.
+
+INDEMNITY
+You will indemnify and hold Michael Hart, the Foundation,
+and its trustees and agents, and any volunteers associated
+with the production and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm
+texts harmless, from all liability, cost and expense, including
+legal fees, that arise directly or indirectly from any of the
+following that you do or cause: [1] distribution of this eBook,
+[2] alteration, modification, or addition to the eBook,
+or [3] any Defect.
+
+DISTRIBUTION UNDER "PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm"
+You may distribute copies of this eBook electronically, or by
+disk, book or any other medium if you either delete this
+"Small Print!" and all other references to Project Gutenberg,
+or:
+
+[1] Only give exact copies of it. Among other things, this
+ requires that you do not remove, alter or modify the
+ eBook or this "small print!" statement. You may however,
+ if you wish, distribute this eBook in machine readable
+ binary, compressed, mark-up, or proprietary form,
+ including any form resulting from conversion by word
+ processing or hypertext software, but only so long as
+ *EITHER*:
+
+ [*] The eBook, when displayed, is clearly readable, and
+ does *not* contain characters other than those
+ intended by the author of the work, although tilde
+ (~), asterisk (*) and underline (_) characters may
+ be used to convey punctuation intended by the
+ author, and additional characters may be used to
+ indicate hypertext links; OR
+
+ [*] The eBook may be readily converted by the reader at
+ no expense into plain ASCII, EBCDIC or equivalent
+ form by the program that displays the eBook (as is
+ the case, for instance, with most word processors);
+ OR
+
+ [*] You provide, or agree to also provide on request at
+ no additional cost, fee or expense, a copy of the
+ eBook in its original plain ASCII form (or in EBCDIC
+ or other equivalent proprietary form).
+
+[2] Honor the eBook refund and replacement provisions of this
+ "Small Print!" statement.
+
+[3] Pay a trademark license fee to the Foundation of 20% of the
+ gross profits you derive calculated using the method you
+ already use to calculate your applicable taxes. If you
+ don't derive profits, no royalty is due. Royalties are
+ payable to "Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation"
+ the 60 days following each date you prepare (or were
+ legally required to prepare) your annual (or equivalent
+ periodic) tax return. Please contact us beforehand to
+ let us know your plans and to work out the details.
+
+WHAT IF YOU *WANT* TO SEND MONEY EVEN IF YOU DON'T HAVE TO?
+Project Gutenberg is dedicated to increasing the number of
+public domain and licensed works that can be freely distributed
+in machine readable form.
+
+The Project gratefully accepts contributions of money, time,
+public domain materials, or royalty free copyright licenses.
+Money should be paid to the:
+"Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."
+
+If you are interested in contributing scanning equipment or
+software or other items, please contact Michael Hart at:
+hart@pobox.com
+
+[Portions of this eBook's header and trailer may be reprinted only
+when distributed free of all fees. Copyright (C) 2001, 2002 by
+Michael S. Hart. Project Gutenberg is a TradeMark and may not be
+used in any sales of Project Gutenberg eBooks or other materials be
+they hardware or software or any other related product without
+express permission.]
+
+*END THE SMALL PRINT! FOR PUBLIC DOMAIN EBOOKS*Ver.02/11/02*END*
+</pre></body>
+</html>
diff --git a/old/hlywr10h.zip b/old/hlywr10h.zip
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..deb3121
--- /dev/null
+++ b/old/hlywr10h.zip
Binary files differ