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r the name of Bunyan. In this it is represented that he saw poor Hobbes in hell, and recognised an old acquaintance. The earliest edition of _The Visions_ which I have been able to discover, is at "London: printed for Edward Midwinter, at the Looking Glass upon London Bridge, price, bound, one shilling;" without date. It was printed early in the reign of George I.; this is seen in an advertisement of books at the end, among which is _The Lives of the Monarchs of England to his present Majesty King George_. It is entitled, _The Visions of John Bunyan, being his last remains_. There is no account of either of this, or the _Heart's Ease_, in _The Struggler for the Preservation of Mr. John Bunyan's Labours_. This gives a list of forty-three works published by him, and of seventeen left by him at his decease for publication. If _The Visions_ were written by him, it must have escaped the search of his widow and surviving friends; but the style at once proves that it was not a production of his prolific pen. Bunyan's style was remarkably simple and plain. The following phrases extracted from _The Visions_ will carry conviction to every reader:-- "Mormo's of a future state," "metempsychosis of nature," "nefandous villanies," "diurnal and annual," "my visive faculty," "soul-transparent and diaphonous," "translucid ray," "terrene enjoyments," "our minds are clarified," "types both of the ante and post-diluvian world," "the tenuity thereof," "the aereal heavens," "effluxes of divine glory," "all aenigmas," "corruscations of his divine nature," "Solomon's mystick epithalamium," "the epiphonema," "propinquity in nature," "diversified refractions," "too bright and too diaphonous," "sweet odes and eniphalamics," "amarantine crown," "bright corruscancy," "palinodies and elegies," "no cataplasm," "eccentricks quite exterminate," "mutual assassinates," &c. &c. Such phrases and terms plain John Bunyan utterly despised. They prove, as does the whole plan of the treatise, that it must have been a very different man to the author of the _Pilgrim's Progress_ who wrote these _Visions_. {90} It is not likely that Hobbes and Bunyan were acquainted; they lived in distant parts of the country. Bunyan's _Pilgrim_, which was the foundation of his wide-spread fame, was not published till 1678, when the Leviathan philosopher was ninety years of age; he died in 1679. Hobbes' company were the learned a
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