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The Pilgrim's Progress 
Penguin Classics ¤Ó John Bunyan ¤Ó Penguin Classic
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2009³â 01¿ù 27ÀÏ
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400page/140*196*23/293g
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9780141439716/0141439718
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ÀÌ »óÇ°À» Æ÷ÇÔÇÏ¿© 1¸¸¿ø ÀÌ»ó ±¸¸ÅÇÏ½Ã¸é ¹«·á¹è¼Û

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Penguin Classics(ÃÑ148°Ç)
The Divine Comedy Vol.3 : Paradise (Penguin Classics) :     8,900¿ø (0%¡é)
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Penguin Classics(ÃÑ134°Ç)
The Divine Comedy Vol.3 : Paradise (Penguin Classics) :     8,900¿ø (0%¡é)
Faust Part 1 : The First Part of the Tragedy     7,120¿ø (20%¡é)
A Short History of the World (Penguin Classics)     8,900¿ø (0%¡é)
Women in Love     7,120¿ø (20%¡é)
Cat's Cradle     7,150¿ø (20%¡é)
  • »ó¼¼Á¤º¸
  • The First Part The Author's Apology 5 The Pilgrim's Progress, in the Similitude of a Dream 13 The Conclusion 168 The Second Part The Author's Apology 171 The Pilgrim's Progress, in the Similitude of a Dream 179 The Author's Vindication of his Pilgrim, Found at the End of his Holy War 323
  • Chapter One
    In my journey through the wilderness of this world there came a time when I found myself caged up in a very dreary dungeon. Now how I came to be in that place, and what befell me there, is not for me to relate in this little book. What is for me to tell is the story of my dream. For, you see, while I was shut up in that most loathsome place surrounded by profligates and felons, I seemed to breathe the very atmosphere of heaven. Yea, 'twas there that I laid me down to sleep; and, as I slept, I dreamed a most wonderful dream. In this amazing dream I saw before me the most miserable man I have ever seen. He stood before the front door of a very tumble-down and miserable excuse of a house. He was dressed in garments that would scarcely merit the title of clothing in the genteel place where you dwell. Rags is what they really were! More frayed and tattered than the clothing on any bag-man beggar you are ever like to see. His face was very sad and was, for the better part of the time, turned away from his house. In his right hand he held a little black book, and upon his back he bore a huge burden?a great big black bundle of a burden that looked as if it must shortly press him down to the ground. 'Twas a very mysterious burden that he carried, for, as large and heavy as it looked to me, I soon perceived that it was invisible to those about him. But you can be sure that it was quite real to him; aye, just as real to him as the burdens of your soul are real to you. Now, as I beheld in my dream, I saw him open the book and read; and, as he read, he began to weep and tremble. He bowed lower andlower, as if his weighty burden was somehow growing even heavier. Finally, unable to endure any longer, he cried out with the most mournful voice I have ever heard, saying, "Oh, alas! Woe is me. Woe, woe, woe! Is there no one to help me?" But to his despairing cry there came neither answer nor reply. He looked left, down the winding, twisting lanes of his tumble-down town and saw nothing but other people clothed in rags just as patched and worn as his own. He looked right, up the twisting, winding streets of his tumble-down town, and again saw nothing but more people in the same miserable state. In this dejected frame of mind he turned to enter his little tottering shack of a house. Once within that dreary little one-candle cottage, he tried his very best to act as normal as possible, lest he should alarm his wife and young children. But, try as he might, he could not contain the moans and groans that forced themselves from unwilling lips. Finally, noticing that his wife and children kept stealing quick, sideways glances at him, and seeing that keeping his silence only seemed to add to his sorrows, he decided to open his heart to his loved ones. And this is what he said: "Oh, my dear wife, and you, my tender children! I, your poor father, am all lost and undone. And why all lost and undone, do you ask? 'Tis becau...
  • John Bunyan [Àú]
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