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ILLUSTRATIONS FERDINAND AND ARIEL _Sir John Everett Millais_ CHRISTIAN IS HARNESSED FOR THE PILGRIMAGE _David Scott, R.S.A._ CAUGHT CHRISTIAN AND HOPEFUL ASLEEP _David Scott, R.S.A._ THE SECOND RAFT _J. Finnemore_ THE PRINT OF A MAN'S NAKED FOOT ON THE SHORE _J. Finnemore_ PRODUCING HIS CREDENTIALS _T. Morten_ THE HUGE CREATURE TROD SHORT _T. Morten_ HURLED AWAY BOTH KNIGHT AND HORSE _Gustave Dore_ A HIDEOUS GENIE OF GIGANTIC SIZE APPEARED _Robert Smirke, R.A._ THE GREAT HEAPS OF GOLD DAZZLED HER EYES _Robert Smirke, R.A._ PURSUED BY THE ROCS _J.D. Batten_ THE LION JUMPED FORWARD INTO THE CROCODILE'S MOUTH _Gustave Dore_ THE VESSEL WILL BE DASHED TO PIECES _G. Romney_ TO THE CHILDREN This volume is made up of stories from seven famous books. These books are as different as they can possibly be; and yet there are not many boys and girls who do not like every one of them. The chief reason for this is because they seem so true, so much more "real" than most other stories. When you read about Tom Thumb, for instance, you do not really believe that there ever was a little boy no bigger than his mother's thumb; at least, you do not believe it in the same way that you believe the sun shines or the wind blows; but when you read "Robinson Crusoe," you feel as if every word of it must be true. The first of these books is "The Pilgrim's Progress." In one way it is a little like a fable; that is, when you read it the first time, it is simply a good story. Afterwards--sometimes a long while afterwards--you read it again or sit thinking about it, and suddenly you see that it has another meaning, that it is more than the story of a man who makes a wonderful journey. This book was written in jail by a man named John Bunyan. The English laws of that time would not allow any one to preach except clergymen of the Church of England. Bunyan, however, felt that it would be wicked for him to obey these laws, so he kept on preaching. He was thrown into prison, and the prisons of those days were horrible places. "If you will promise not to preach again, you shall be free," said the officers. "If you let me out to-day I wi
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